The Qualities Of Odysseus In Homer's The Odyssey

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In The Odyssey by Homer, Odysseus, a man who left his home for twenty years to fight in the Trojan War. Him and his men go on a long journey to Penelope. Throughout his peregrination, he has to fight and overcome the land and sea’s creatures, monsters, and gods. Some of Odysseus’s attributes bring him to a flawed hero. His imperfections are the reason for vexation of gods and monsters, like Poseidon, who comes to hate Odysseus after the Trojan War, and protracts his return back to Ithaca. Some of Odysseus' imperfections are pride, curiosity, and lack of vigilance.
The first flaw which Odysseus shows his pride. At the last point/end of the Trojan War, he boldly fights against the gods by loudly declaring that he was the only worker of his
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Some of these numerous attributes he possesses are pity, his deference of the gods, and his courageousness. The first virtue mentioned is pity. This quality contributes to making Odysseus seem more human, since pity is a gregarious characteristic felt and perceived by the heart. An example of a time when Odysseus experiences and demonstrates pity is when he leads the crew past Scylla and Charybdis and feels sorry for the six men Scylla devours. A result of this is that his men reverence and cherish him more. A second characteristic of Odysseus is his reverence and sacrificial ceremonies to the gods. This is shown in the adventure in the Land of the Dead, where Odysseus goes through a series of sacrifices to be able to verbalize with the spirit of the dead, and the blind prophet Tiresias. A final example of Odysseus' virtues is his valiancy. He makes utilization of this quality all throughout his peregrination to survive, but more categorically when he leads his crew past the two horrendous monsters of Scylla and Charybdis, kenning that at least six of his men would die, but daring to affront the creatures and pass rather than stay on an island and lose all hope of reaching Ithaca