What does Odysseus say after their escape
He warned the Cyclops Polyphemus that the giant would lose his sight to a man named Odysseus.
Telemus, son of Eurymus, foretold to Polyphemus that Odysseus would one day blind him.
Telemus, son of Eurymus, foretold to Polyphemus that Odysseus would one day blind him.
The oracle of Telemus, a seer who was blind, prophesied that Odysseus would return to Ithaca after a long absence and that he would take vengeance on the suitors who had overrun his home. He warned that Odysseus would come back in disguise, and that the suitors' fate was sealed due to their disrespect and mistreatment of his household. This prophecy ultimately foreshadowed the climactic events of Odysseus's return in Homer's "Odyssey."
Telemus.
A soothsayer once predicted that the Cyclops would be blinded by a man named Odysseus. This prophecy came to fruition when Odysseus, using cunning and strategy, tricked the Cyclops named Polyphemus and ultimately blinded him. The prediction highlighted the theme of fate and the power of intellect over brute strength in "The Odyssey."
To be correct what did Odyessus do to the cyclops. He poked the cyclops in the eye.
The cyclops that Odysseus encountered was Polyphemus; in Greek Mythology there were many cyclops.
A cyclops has one eye.
cyclops
Polyphemus laments, recalling when the seer Telemus told him that he would one day be blinded by Odysseus. The cyclops then calls out to his father Poseidon, and asks him to curse Odysseus. He asks him to kill Odysseus before he returns home or if Odysseus is fated to return home, then to ensure that he arrives alone on someone else's ship, having lost all of his crew, and with trouble in his home.
In the cyclops cave