His Wife Remarried.
I think its Odysseus's son Telemachus
In Homer's "Odyssey," Circe instructs Odysseus to visit the Underworld to seek the guidance of the blind prophet Teiresias. She tells him to make a sacrifice to the spirits of the dead and to find Teiresias' spirit, who will provide him with crucial information for his journey home. This encounter is essential for Odysseus to navigate the challenges that lie ahead.
That Penelope will be courting with ignorant foolish men eating his food
Odysseus went to Ithaca where he was traveling with the Phaeacians, when they dropped them on the island of Ithaca because Poseidon was mad that they were helping some one that he did not like. so they dropped him there!if you do some research you will find the answer!!
Teiresias tell Odysseus many things about his journey home.The journey home will be tough for Odysseus because Poseidon still bears a grudge against Odysseus for blinding Polyphemus.When Odysseus reaches the isle of Thrinacia, he will find the Cattle of Helios.If Odysseus and his men touch the Cattle of Helios, Odysseus men will all die, and Odysseus will only return home in someone else's ship, with trouble at home. Circe later repeats this prediction.There will be many suitors in Ithaca, whom Odysseus must kill.Odysseus must make a journey with an oar until he reaches a place so far from the sea that people do not recognize the oar. There he shall set the oar as a shrine, and sacrifice to appease Poseidon.Odysseus will then die of old age, with a blessed kingdom.
His daughter, Athena. She likes Odysseus because he fought for the Athenians.
Athena advises Telemachus to leave Ithaca and travel on a journey to find his father, Odysseus
Odysseus ventures into the underworld on the orders of Circe. She tells him to find the ghost of Tiresias, a seer, and ask him how to return to Ithaca.
The goddess who goes in disguise to Ithaca is Athena. In Homer's "Odyssey," she takes on the appearance of a mentor, specifically a man named Mentes, to assist Telemachus, the son of Odysseus, in his quest to find his father. Athena's guidance is crucial in helping him navigate the challenges he faces while seeking information about Odysseus's whereabouts.
At the beginning of the book, Odysseus has already met Calypso. In book 5, the plot jumps to Calypso and Odysseus on Ogygia, Calypso's island. In book 11, Odysseus recounts how he ended up on Calypso's island.
Book 11: lines 115 -121 of the Odyssey. Odysseus converses with Teiresias, the blind prophet, who gives him the knowledge of the suitors "You will find trouble too in your house - insolent men eating up your livelihood, courting your royal wife and offering wedding gifts".
A wanderer. Ulysses is the Latin name of Odysseus, king of Ithaca who, as told in Homer's epic poem The Odyssey, took ten years to find his way home after the Trojan War.