This depends on which men you are talking about.
Most of the men Odysseus kills, he kills in war against the Trojans.
Odysseus kills many fellow Ithacans for wooing his wife Penelope.
There are also many men that Odysseus 'sacrifices', such as the 6 men he loses to Scylla.
Because it wasn't his style. If Odysseus DID kill the cyclops, then they would have been stuck in the cave foreveer. Remember, Only Polyphemus (the cyclops) was strong enough to open the cave's "door", a huge boulder. So when Polyphemus let his little sheepies outside to have breakfast, he opened the door, and felt the backs of each sheep. HAHA! but Odi and his men hid under the sheep and got out.
Because Odysseus defeated Cyclops by tricking him, then after that Odyssues got away, but not before taunting Cyclops.
because ... that`s the truth :)
The battle with the Cyclops.
His Men.
Cause he just does
A whole lot of people and Gods and 'things'. This is going to be a long list so I'll just start off. * Lotus eaters * cyclops * Casandra * Mercury * Athena *
Odysseus was not tricked by the Cyclops's question.
The Greek myths have no chronology. Odysseus did not kill the cyclops Polyphemus.
Odysseus did not kill the cyclops Polyphemus.
Odysseus and his men blinded Polyphemus, but did not kill him.
No he does not kill the cyclops (Polyphemus) he merely blinds him in his only eye
If Odysseus kills the cyclops, he will not be able to get out of the cave. Only the cyclops can move the rock that blocks the exit.
because he was not that smart
Odysseus refrains from killing the Cyclops while he is asleep because the Cyclops is the only one who can move the large stone blocking the cave's entrance. If Odysseus were to kill the Cyclops while he slept, he and his men would be trapped in the cave with no way to escape. By keeping the Cyclops alive, Odysseus increases their chances of making a successful escape.
Odysseus hesitates to kill the cyclops because he knows that he needs the cyclops's strength to move the heavy boulder blocking the cave entrance. If he were to kill the cyclops without a plan to escape, he and his men would be trapped inside the cave with no way out.
Odysseus does not kill the cyclops when he had the chance because he needed the cyclops to move the large stone blocking the exit of the cave. If he had killed the cyclops, he and his men would have been trapped inside the cave with no way out. Odysseus also wanted to learn the cyclops' name and establish a sense of hospitality before revealing his true identity.
Odysseus did not kill the cyclops. Polyphemus, Poseidon's one eyed son, was blinded by Odysseus and his men in "The Odyssey" by Homer, Part 1.
Odysseus doesn't kill the sleeping cyclops because he realizes that if he kills him, he won't be able to move the huge boulder blocking the cave's entrance. This means they would all be trapped inside with no chance of escape. Odysseus cleverly devises a plan to blind the cyclops instead and uses this opportunity to outwit him and escape.
Odysseus chose not to kill the cyclops after it ate two of his men because he realized that the cyclops was the only one who could move the massive boulder blocking the cave's entrance, enabling his escape with his remaining men. By blinding the cyclops instead of killing him, Odysseus was able to achieve his goal of escaping the cave.