Oddysseus met Aeolus on the island of Aeolia
Odysseus stayed with Aeolus on his island for a month.
Odysseus regales Aeolus with stories of the war at Troy for a month, before leaving. When he returns, Odysseus begs Aeolus for more help, but he is denied.
hes the keeper of winds where Aeolus gives him a bag of wind. Odysseus men think hes hiding something from them so they open the bag and the winds rush out where it brings them back to Aeolus who refuses to help them again :)
King Aeolus gave Odysseus a bag of winds.
Oddysseus met Aeolus on the island of Aeolia
Odysseus stayed with Aeolus on his island for a month.
Odysseus regales Aeolus with stories of the war at Troy for a month, before leaving. When he returns, Odysseus begs Aeolus for more help, but he is denied.
Aeolus bottled up all winds but the west winds and put them in an ox-hide bag for Odysseus.
Aeolus gives Odysseus a bag full of wind. He instructs Odysseus not to open it right away. The wind will take him in the direction of Ithaca, but if he opens it early, it would have the opposite effect.
Odysseus ends up back at Aeoli, the island of Aeolus, keeper of the winds and son of Hippotas.
Aeolus refuses to help Odysseus a second time, believing that the gods must be against him if he encountered such misfortune after being given a fair wind the first time. He then advises Odysseus to leave immediately.
To the island Aeoli to see Aeolus god of the winds
hes the keeper of winds where Aeolus gives him a bag of wind. Odysseus men think hes hiding something from them so they open the bag and the winds rush out where it brings them back to Aeolus who refuses to help them again :)
King Aeolus gave Odysseus a bag of winds.
Odysseus remained with Aeolus for a month out of hospitality. Further, Aeolus wished to know about the war of Troy, and asked Odysseus many questions on the subject.
In Homer's "Odyssey," Aeolus refuses to help Odysseus a second time because he believes that Odysseus's misfortunes are a sign that he is cursed by the gods. After initially providing Odysseus with a bag of winds to assist his journey home, Aeolus sees that Odysseus and his crew squander their chance and end up back at his island. Convinced that Odysseus's plight is due to divine disfavor, Aeolus tells him that he cannot aid someone whom the gods have turned against.