Odysseus instructs Telemachus to hide the weapons in their hall. He does this to protect them from the suitors who have overrun his home and to prepare for the confrontation that is to come. By removing the weapons, Odysseus ensures that the suitors will be at a disadvantage when he reveals his true identity.
Odysseus instructs Telemachus to hide the suitors' weapons in a secure place, specifically in the storeroom, to prevent the suitors from using them against them. This strategic move is meant to disarm the suitors and give Odysseus an advantage when he confronts them. By doing so, Telemachus helps to ensure their safety and prepare for the impending conflict.
hide all the wooers' weapons
Odysseus claimed that he and his men had been shipwrecked. He said this to hide the location of his ship from Polyphemus.
Odysseus' bow and a quiver full of arrows. He used these weapons to kill Penelope's suitors.
From the movie ?
1. Odysseus goes to the castle 2. Athena will signal then Odysseus will nod at Telemachus 3. Telemachus will go hide the weapons 4. Assess the Suitors 5. Athena will Daze the Suitors 6. Assess the Women 6. Lead those that are loyal out of the castle 7. Telemachus goes to retrieve the weapons 8. They kill the suitors.
Odysseus tells Telemachus to hid the weapons so that the suitors can't use them. Telemachus has to say that the weapons are getting "smoke damaged" and he is afraid that the suitors will start hurting themselves with them if they have too much to drink.
Athena instructs Odysseus that he must tell Telemachus his story. She said to Odysseus: "High-born son of Laertes, ready Odysseus, tell now your story to your son. Hide it no longer. Then having planned the suitors' death and doom, go forward both of you into the famous city. And I myself will not be far away, for I am eager for the combat."
a tear.
hard question!
Odysseus did not warn hiscrew about Scylla because he was afraid they would all hide under the decks and not fight the monster. He needed them to be brave, so they could escape the narrow passage between Scylla and Charybdis
Odysseus hides under Polyphemus' largest ram as it exits the cave.