poking out his eye.
Odysseus and his men escape Polyphemus' cave by cleverly deceiving the Cyclops. After blinding him with a sharpened wooden stake while he is drunk, they hide underneath the sheep as Polyphemus lets them out to graze. As they make their escape, Odysseus reveals his true identity to the blinded giant, provoking Polyphemus to curse him, which leads to further troubles for Odysseus on his journey home.
Only 6 of the original 12 men return with Odysseus from Polyphemus' cave.
Odysseus and his men escape from the Cyclops Polyphemus by employing cunning and deception. After getting Polyphemus drunk on wine, Odysseus tells him that his name is "Nobody." When the Cyclops falls asleep, Odysseus and his men drive a sharpened stake into his eye, blinding him. When Polyphemus cries for help, he tells other Cyclopes that "Nobody" is hurting him, allowing Odysseus and his men to sneak out beneath the sheep as they leave the cave.
Polyphemus, the Cyclops, ate two of Odysseus's men during the initial encounter in Homer's "Odyssey." After Odysseus and his crew entered his cave, Polyphemus trapped them and devoured two of the men each night. In total, he consumed a total of six men before Odysseus devised a plan to escape.
Odysseus and his men escaped Polyphemus by using his sheep. The men hid on the underside of the sheep, and when Polyphemus let his sheep out into the pasture, they rode away.
Odysseus blinded Polyphemus so that him and his men could escape.
Odysseus and his men escape Polyphemus' cave by cleverly deceiving the Cyclops. After blinding him with a sharpened wooden stake while he is drunk, they hide underneath the sheep as Polyphemus lets them out to graze. As they make their escape, Odysseus reveals his true identity to the blinded giant, provoking Polyphemus to curse him, which leads to further troubles for Odysseus on his journey home.
Only 6 of the original 12 men return with Odysseus from Polyphemus' cave.
they poke out his eye.
Odysseus and his men escape from the Cyclops Polyphemus by employing cunning and deception. After getting Polyphemus drunk on wine, Odysseus tells him that his name is "Nobody." When the Cyclops falls asleep, Odysseus and his men drive a sharpened stake into his eye, blinding him. When Polyphemus cries for help, he tells other Cyclopes that "Nobody" is hurting him, allowing Odysseus and his men to sneak out beneath the sheep as they leave the cave.
Polyphemus was blinded by Odysseus and his men during their escape from the cyclops' cave. They heated a wooden stake and drove it into Polyphemus' single eye while he was asleep, blinding him and allowing the group to escape.
The cave that Odysseus and his men found when they landed on the Island of the Cyclopes belongs to Polyphemus. Odysseus decided to stay in the cave until its owner returned. When Polyphemus returned and saw the intruders, he ate Odysseus' men.
Odysseus and his men find the Cyclops Polyphemus in a cave. The Cyclops traps them inside and proceeds to eat some of the men before Odysseus devises a plan to blind Polyphemus and escape.
hiding under his flock of sheep.
Polyphemus, the Cyclops, ate two of Odysseus's men during the initial encounter in Homer's "Odyssey." After Odysseus and his crew entered his cave, Polyphemus trapped them and devoured two of the men each night. In total, he consumed a total of six men before Odysseus devised a plan to escape.
Polyphemus is a Cyclops who traps Odysseus and his men in a cave in Homer's epic poem The Odyssey. He is blinded by Odysseus and his men as they escape, leading to Poseidon's anger towards Odysseus. Polyphemus is a symbol of the dangers that the hero faces on his journey home.
In the story of Odysseus and Polyphemus from Greek mythology, Odysseus and his men blind Polyphemus by stabbing a large wooden stake into his eye while he is sleeping. This causes Polyphemus great pain and allows Odysseus and his men to escape from the cyclops' cave.