They open the bag of wind, because they have no idea whats in it. The shipmates think it contains gold, silver, food, etc. Once the bag is opened, instead of bringing them home like it was supposed to, the winds send the ship away from Ithaca.
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 :)
Aeolus gives Odysseus and his men a bag of wind to help them sail safely back to Ithaca. He instructs them not to open it, but due to distrust and curiosity, they open it prematurely, causing a storm that blows them off course.
He gave them some hospitality for a month and then provided a west wind to carry them home. The problem was that he gave him a bag of the 4 winds. His crew thought it was treasure and opened it. That blew them back. Aeolus was the keeper of the winds and he bottled up a bag of winds for Odysseus so he could reach Ithaca, his home, faster. Ulysses asked Aeolus to get him and his men home quickly and safely.
Aeolus, the Greek god of the wind, helped Odysseus to return home to Ithaca by putting the north, south and easterly winds in a bag, leaving only a westward wind to blow Odysseus and his men home. He did all this purely to annoy his brother, Poseidon, Greek god of the sea, who was his cousin. Aeolus told Odysseus never to open the bag, for the winds will be released. Odysseus had no intention to open the bag, but while he was sleeping, one of his crew did, thinking it was some sort of treasure, while Ithaca was in sight. The winds blew Odysseus far off course and closer to other dangers.
A sack containing all the winds except the favorable west wind. this ends up pushing him back because his men open the bag when finally in sight of Ithaca.
A sack containing all the winds except the favorable west wind. this ends up pushing him back because his men open the bag when finally in sight of Ithaca.
In "The Odyssey," Aeolus is the god of the winds who helps Odysseus by providing him with a bag that contains all the winds except for the gentle west wind, which would guide him home to Ithaca. However, while Odysseus and his crew are close to reaching their destination, his men, curious about the bag's contents, open it, releasing the winds and driving them off course. When Odysseus returns to Aeolus for help again, Aeolus refuses, believing that Odysseus is cursed by the gods. This episode highlights themes of trust, temptation, and the capricious nature of divine assistance.
The god of winds in the Odyssey is Aeolus son of Hellen and the founder of the Aeolian race. The second version is that Aeolus was son of Poseidon who lived on an island of the Tyrrhenian sea and the third is the one mentioned in Odyssey the epic poem of Homer the keeper of winds son of Hippotes who gave to Odysseus the bag with the captured winds except the west which would lead him safely to Ithaca.
Aeolus, the Greek god of the wind, helped Odysseus to return home to Ithaca by putting the north, south and easterly winds in a bag, leaving only a westward wind to blow Odysseus and his men home. He did all this purely to annoy his brother, Poseidon, Greek god of the sea, who was his cousin. Aeolus told Odysseus never to open the bag, for the winds will be released. Odysseus had no intention to open the bag, but while he was sleeping, one of his crew did, thinking it was some sort of treasure, while Ithaca was in sight. The winds blew Odysseus far off course and closer to other dangers.
In Book 10 of the Odyssey, the goal was for Odysseus and his men to seek information about their journey home from Aeolus, the god of wind. Aeolus gifted Odysseus with a bag containing the winds that would help them sail safely back to Ithaca.
It's not so much the actual gift that's unlucky as it is what Odysseus' men do to it. When Aiolus gives Odysseus the wind bag, he tell him to make sure that no one opens it all the way, or all the wind will escape. Odysseus' men, however think that there is gold and treasure in the bag, so they open it against Odysseus' commands, and they get sent back to where the came from.
Odysseus' men thwart Aeolus' help by succumbing to their greed and curiosity. After receiving a bag of winds from Aeolus to aid their journey home, they distrust Odysseus and, while he sleeps, they open the bag, releasing the winds. This results in being blown off course back to Aeolia, ultimately causing them to lose the chance to return home successfully. Their actions illustrate the themes of temptation and disobedience in the epic.