Calypso's Island, Calypso Islands and Circe Homer's Odyssey are the most challenging problems for Odysseus. Sexual struggle with women may be difficult to win than men, cyclops, animals. These two female characters are particularly attractive to Odysseus because they are goddesses. It is obvious that Odysseus wants to return to Penelope of Ithaca but it seems that he lost sight of his life with his wife, son, and thousands of people who regard him as king.
At Homer 's "Odyssey" he uses the story of Calypso and Shilie to grieve the Greek values by the reader. Odysseus is a Greek standard "perfect" moral character. In the episode of Calypso, Odysseus shows the value of loyalty, and in Circe 's episode he generally indicated the value of Greece. Both goddesses sought husband Odysseus, but Odysseus responded as a perfect Greek hero. In Calypso 's episode, Homer' s teacher must remain loyal to the heart. Circus Drama
Odyssey depicts many social and political structures such as Cyclops, Rest Trigonian, Feiyan, Circus, Calypso, etc., in relation to the class of Ottoman Odysseus and the order of patriarchal. Odysseus' Ithaca seems to express the cultural preferences of this era. It is kind and faithful, stories, rituals, intellectuals and other values that people are most likely to benefit from. Although Iliad emphasizes features necessary for war and destruction, Odyssey is interested in establishing and maintaining a political order for the benefit of individuals and families.
Odysseus, Latin Urics, British Ulysses, Homer's epic Odyssey hero is one of the most well-drawn figures in Western literature. According to Homer, Odysseus is the king of Itaca, the son of Rarthes and Antic Clear (the daughter of Autolycus of Parnassus), whose father is Telemacos of his wife Penelope. (In the later tradition, Odysseus was the son of Sisyphus and was a father such as Sirce, Calypso, etc.) Homer described Odyssey as an eloquent person familiar with outstanding wisdom. Witty, courage and perseverance. At Iliad, Odysseus seems to be the most suitable person to deal with the personal relationship crisis between the Greeks. Odysseus' brave and fighting skills are proved repeatedly, and his bondage is most prominent in his night's adventures with Diomedes against Trojans.