While both groups could bring an expedition to a grinding halt, at least with the Lotus-Eaters, the crew was still alive. The Sirens lured sailors to a death on the rocky coast.
The song of the Sirens hypnotized his men into yearning to sail toward the island at which they resided luring them to their doom.
Because the song of the siren could lure a sailor to death by drowning or into wrecking his ship along the cliffs that the sirens often sang from.
He was warned about the Sirens by one of the spirits he met in the underworld.
He plugged the sirens ears and avoided the Charybdis
he is brave through the sirens
Circe
The sirens are a danger that Odysseus and his men must pass to return home.
Scylla and Charybdis are encountered.
The Wandering Rocks; the strait of Scylla and Charybdis.
The sailors ears were plugged so that they could not hear and Odysseus was lashed to the mast.
The song of the Sirens hypnotized his men into yearning to sail toward the island at which they resided luring them to their doom.
Some may view Odysseus as selfish when he listens to the sirens because he prioritizes his own desires for knowledge and adventure over the safety and well-being of his crew. By choosing to hear the sirens' song, he puts his men in danger of succumbing to the lure of the sirens' voices.
Because the song of the siren could lure a sailor to death by drowning or into wrecking his ship along the cliffs that the sirens often sang from.
Odysseus goes through the Sirens by putting beeswax in their ears. Odysseus is tied to the mast while the Sirens are surrounding them and is begging for his soilders to untie him but they don't. He goes through Scylla by just going past it, letting 6 of his men get eaten by Scylla. And he sailed closer to Scylla to get past Charybdis.
In the Odyssey, the sirens are mythical creatures who use their enchanting voices to lure sailors to their deaths by shipwreck. Odysseus and his crew encounter the sirens on their journey home, and Odysseus, aware of the danger, has his crew plug their ears with beeswax while he himself listens to the sirens' song by being tied to the mast of the ship. This allows them to pass by safely without succumbing to the sirens' deadly allure.
The Sirens pose is they could trick Odysseus into going to their island and getting killed. The sirens could kill Odysseus's men and then Odysseus would end up going home with none of his men left.
In the Odyssey, the sirens were mythical creatures who lured sailors to their doom with their enchanting voices. They tempted Odysseus and his crew by singing irresistible songs that promised knowledge and pleasure, causing the sailors to be drawn towards them despite the danger.