47 Stories
Menelaus in The Odyssey is presented as Odysseus' friend and the king that offered Odysseus' son, Telemachus, assistance to find our hero's whereab...
Motifs in The Odyssey have been studied and scrutinized by numerous scholars ranging from old to young. The Odyssey comprises various books with di...
Nostos in the Odyssey refers to Odysseus' return home 'from Troy by sea. The word nostalgia is also derived from the words "nostos" and "algos," wh...
Oedipus is the tragically fated lead character of Oedipus the King by the Greek playwright Sophocles. Abandoned as a baby by his parents King Laius...
Oedipus Tiresias follows the events involving the blind prophet and how those events influence the outcome play, Oedipus Rex. Tiresias is one of th...
Alexander of Troy, also known as Paris, was the younger brother of Troy's hero, Hector. Paris, however, did not have the pampered upbringing of his...
Penelope in the Odyssey, the poem by Homer, is the faithful wife of Odysseus (or Ulysses for the Romans). Odysseus is the King of Ithaca, and he is...
Singer for both humans and the Divine, Phemius in The Odyssey, is a self-taught player of the lyre specializing in songs of sorrow. He is described...
Sappho 31 is an ancient Greek lyrical poem written by a Greek female poet, Sappho of Lesbos. Not only is it one of the most significant pieces of h...
Iliad themes cover a bunch of universal topics from love and friendship to honor and glory as presented in the epic poem. They represent universal ...
The sphinx Oedipus was originally an Egyptian creation that was adopted by Sophocles in his tragic play, Oedipus Rex. The gods sent the creature to...
Symbols in the Odyssey can also be seen as allegories in the Odyssey; however, it may seem that the poem is just about the story of a Greek hero an...