Historical Context
Understanding where the Odyssey came from helps you understand what it means.
When Was the Odyssey Written?
The Odyssey was composed sometime between 750 and 650 BCE, during the period scholars call the Greek Archaic
Age. It is one of the oldest works of Western literature, predating the tragedies of Sophocles by roughly
three centuries, the philosophy of Plato by nearly four, and the plays of Shakespeare by more than two
thousand years. To put it in perspective: the Odyssey is closer in time to the construction of the Egyptian
pyramids than it is to us.
The poem did not emerge from nothing. It draws on a tradition of oral poetry that stretches back to the
Mycenaean civilization of the Bronze Age (roughly 1600–1100 BCE), the period in which the Trojan War,
if it happened at all, would have taken place. The story of Odysseus's return from Troy was told and retold
by generations of oral poets before someone—either Homer or a poet using that name—shaped it
into the version we have today.
Who Was Homer?
The short answer is: we do not know. Ancient tradition held that Homer was a blind poet from the island of
Chios or the city of Smyrna (modern Izmir in Turkey) who composed both the Iliad and the Odyssey. Some
scholars have argued that the two poems are so different in style and outlook that they must be by different
poets. Others maintain that both could be the work of a single genius at different stages of his career.
What we can say with confidence is that "Homer" represents the culmination of a long oral tradition. The
poet (or poets) worked within a system of traditional formulas, stock scenes, and narrative patterns that
had been refined over centuries. Phrases like "the wine-dark sea," "rosy-fingered Dawn," and "swift-footed
Achilles" are not ornamental flourishes—they are building blocks that allowed oral poets to compose
in real time before live audiences.
The Oral Tradition
The Odyssey was composed to be heard, not read. Ancient Greek audiences experienced the poem as a
performance: a bard would recite sections of the epic, accompanying himself on a stringed instrument called
a lyre, during feasts and religious festivals. A complete recitation of the Odyssey would take roughly
twenty-four hours.
This oral origin explains many of the poem's structural features. The frequent repetition of epithets
("grey-eyed Athena," "much-enduring Odysseus") helped the bard maintain the poem's meter while composing
on the fly. The "type scenes"—standardized descriptions of arrivals, feasts, sacrifices, and
assemblies—provided a framework that audiences recognized and expected. And the poem's episodic
structure, in which Odysseus's adventures can be told in almost any order, allowed bards to adapt their
performance to the occasion.
Understanding that the Odyssey is fundamentally an oral work changes how you read it. The repetitions that
might seem tedious on the page are part of the music. The formulas that might seem clichéd are the grammar
of a living tradition. And the poem's emphasis on the power of storytelling—Odysseus is himself a
great storyteller, and the bard Demodocus is treated with reverence—is partly a reflection of the
poet's own art.
The Trojan War Background
The Odyssey assumes its audience knows the story of the Trojan War. Here is what you need to know: Paris,
a prince of Troy, abducted Helen, the wife of the Greek king Menelaus. The Greeks launched a massive
expedition to retrieve her, besieging Troy for ten years. The war ended when Odysseus devised the stratagem
of the Trojan Horse, a hollow wooden horse in which Greek soldiers hid until they were wheeled inside the
city walls. Troy fell, and the Greeks began their journeys home—the nostoi, or returns.
For most Greeks, the return was swift but often tragic. Agamemnon came home to be murdered by his wife and
her lover. Ajax went mad and killed himself. Menelaus wandered for years before reaching Sparta. And
Odysseus, the cleverest of them all, took ten years to travel what should have been a journey of weeks.
The Odyssey picks up the story ten years after the fall of Troy, twenty years after Odysseus left Ithaca.
The Samuel Butler Translation
The text used in our audiobook reader is Samuel Butler's 1900 prose translation of the Odyssey. Butler was
an English novelist, essayist, and classical scholar who believed Homer should be rendered in clear, natural
English prose rather than in verse. His translation sacrifices the rhythm and formality of the Greek original
in favor of accessibility and readability.
Butler's translation remains popular for several reasons: it is accurate, it is readable, and it is in the
public domain, meaning it can be freely shared and adapted. It uses Latinized forms of Greek names (Ulysses
for Odysseus in some editions, though Butler generally preferred the Greek forms) and renders Homer's
elaborate syntax into crisp English sentences. For students encountering the Odyssey for the first time,
Butler's prose removes the barrier of verse form and lets the story speak directly.
Key Literary Devices
Homer's poetic toolkit—the techniques that make the Odyssey work as literature.
Epic Simile (Homeric Simile)
An extended comparison, often running several lines, that draws a parallel between the action of the poem and a scene from everyday life.
Unlike a simple simile ("he fought like a lion"), an epic simile develops the comparison at length, creating
a miniature scene within the scene. Homer uses them at moments of high emotion or intense action to slow
the narrative, deepen the reader's experience, and connect the extraordinary world of heroes and gods to
the ordinary world of farmers, craftsmen, and sailors.
Example: In Book XXIII, Penelope's joy at seeing Odysseus is compared to the relief of shipwrecked sailors
who finally reach land, "covered with brine" and "thankful when they find themselves on firm ground."
The comparison is striking because it applies the sailor metaphor not to the wanderer Odysseus but to the
waiting Penelope—she, too, has been storm-tossed.
Epithet
A descriptive phrase attached to a character's name that becomes a kind of title, repeated throughout the poem.
Epithets serve both a poetic and a mnemonic function. In oral performance, they helped the bard maintain
the poem's meter (the dactylic hexameter of the Greek original) by providing ready-made phrases of the
right rhythmic length. They also reinforce key character traits: "grey-eyed Athena" emphasizes her
watchfulness, "much-enduring Odysseus" emphasizes his resilience, and "rosy-fingered Dawn" transforms
a daily event into a recurring character.
Examples: "the child of morning, rosy-fingered Dawn" · "Odysseus, that ingenious hero" ·
"Zeus the lord of thunder" · "the wine-dark sea" · "Athena, daughter of Zeus"
In Medias Res
Latin for "into the middle of things" — beginning the story at a midpoint rather than at the beginning.
The Odyssey does not start when Odysseus leaves Troy. It begins in the tenth year of his wanderings, when
the gods decide to send him home. His actual adventures—the Cyclops, Circe, the Underworld, the
Sirens—are told in flashback (Books IX–XII) when Odysseus narrates them to the Phaeacians.
This technique creates suspense (we want to know how Odysseus got where he is), allows Homer to begin with
a dramatic situation (the crisis in Ithaca), and gives Odysseus agency as the teller of his own story.
The Iliad uses the same technique: it begins in the tenth year of the Trojan War, not at its start.
In medias res has become one of the most widely imitated narrative techniques in Western literature.
Dramatic Irony
When the audience knows something that a character does not, creating tension between what is said and what is meant.
The second half of the Odyssey is saturated with dramatic irony. From Book XIII onward, we know that the
beggar in Odysseus's hall is Odysseus himself. We watch the suitors mock him, throw stools at him, and
plot to murder his son, all while we know that the most dangerous man alive is sitting among them in
disguise. Every insult, every boast, every careless remark by the suitors carries a double meaning because
we know what is coming and they do not.
Example: When Penelope tells the disguised Odysseus about her grief over her husband's absence, the irony
is devastating: the man she is mourning is the man she is talking to. He weeps, and she does not know why.
Hospitality Scenes (Type Scenes)
Standardized narrative patterns that follow a predictable sequence of events: arrival, bathing, feasting, questioning, gift-giving, departure.
Homer structures nearly every encounter in the Odyssey as a hospitality scene, and each one follows roughly
the same pattern. A visitor arrives, is welcomed, bathed, fed, and only then asked to identify himself.
Gifts are exchanged and safe passage is offered. By establishing this pattern, Homer can create meaning
through deviation: when a host skips a step, or inverts the order, or violates the code entirely
(as the Cyclops does), the audience recognizes the breach immediately.
The Phaeacian episode (Books VI–VIII) is the fullest and most ideal hospitality scene.
The Cyclops episode (Book IX) is its grotesque inversion.
Ring Composition
A structural pattern in which a narrative returns to its starting point, creating a circular or mirrored structure.
The Odyssey exhibits ring composition at multiple scales. At the largest level, the poem begins and ends
with scenes on Olympus and in Ithaca. At the level of individual episodes, Odysseus's wanderings (told
in Books IX–XII) are organized as a ring: the Cyclopes episode is mirrored by the cattle of the Sun,
the Underworld sits at the center, and each adventure reflects its counterpart. This structure is
characteristic of oral poetry, where it helped bards and audiences keep track of the narrative's shape.
At the broadest level: Book I opens with the gods debating Odysseus's fate, and Book XXIV closes with
the gods intervening to restore peace—the story returns to where it began.
The Embedded Narrative (Story within a Story)
When a character within the poem tells their own story, creating a layered narrative structure.
The most famous example is Books IX through XII, where Odysseus narrates his own adventures to the
Phaeacians. This makes Odysseus both the hero and the poet of his own tale, raising questions about
reliability: is he telling the truth, or is the "man of many turns" crafting a performance? Homer also
uses embedded narratives when Menelaus tells of his wanderings (Book IV), when the bard Demodocus sings
of Troy (Book VIII), and when the ghost of Agamemnon tells his murder story (Book XI). Each story-within-
a-story mirrors, contrasts with, or comments on the main narrative.
The three songs of Demodocus in Book VIII all relate to Odysseus: one tells of his quarrel with Achilles,
one tells the comic tale of Ares and Aphrodite, and one tells of the Trojan Horse. Each triggers a different
emotional response and reveals something about Odysseus's character.
Discussion Questions
Twenty questions organized by book group, designed to spark conversation in a classroom or reading group.
Each question asks you to look at the text closely, think about its themes, and connect it to the larger poem.
Books I–IV: The Telemachy
-
The Odyssey begins not with Odysseus but with his son Telemachus. Why does Homer choose to start the
poem this way? What do we learn about Ithaca, the suitors, and the stakes of Odysseus's absence by
seeing them through Telemachus's eyes first?
-
Zeus's opening speech claims that mortals blame the gods for their own suffering. How does this statement
set up the moral framework of the entire poem? Can you find examples later in the Odyssey where mortals
suffer because of their own choices, and examples where divine caprice seems to be the cause?
-
Telemachus visits Nestor at Pylos and Menelaus at Sparta. What does he learn from each? How do these
visits function as a "coming of age" journey, and what do they tell us about the Greek ideal of hospitality?
-
Compare the household of Menelaus and Helen in Sparta with the household of Odysseus in Ithaca. What
does the contrast tell us about the effects of Odysseus's absence on his family and kingdom?
Books V–VIII: Calypso, the Phaeacians, and Odysseus Emerges
-
Calypso offers Odysseus immortality and eternal youth. Why does he refuse? What does his choice reveal
about what he values most? Is it a purely rational decision, or is there something irrational about
choosing mortality?
-
When Odysseus first appears in the poem (Book V), he is sitting on the shore of Calypso's island, weeping
and staring at the sea. What does this image tell us about his character? How does it compare to the
heroic image we might expect from the man who devised the Trojan Horse?
-
The Phaeacians represent the ideal of civilized hospitality. How does Homer use their generosity as a
standard against which to measure every other host in the poem? What happens to the Phaeacians after
they help Odysseus, and what does this suggest about the cost of hospitality?
Books IX–XII: The Great Wanderings
-
Odysseus narrates his own adventures in Books IX–XII. How does the fact that he is telling the story
himself affect how we interpret it? Is Odysseus a reliable narrator? Where might he be exaggerating,
omitting, or reshaping events for his Phaeacian audience?
-
In the Cyclops episode, Odysseus's "Noman" trick saves his life, but his decision to shout his real name
as he sails away nearly destroys him. What does this moment tell us about the tension between cunning and
pride (hubris) in Odysseus's character? Can a hero be too clever for his own good?
-
Compare the temptations Odysseus faces: the Lotus-Eaters (forgetfulness), Circe (pleasure), the Sirens
(knowledge), and the cattle of the Sun (hunger). What does each temptation test, and what pattern can
you identify across them?
-
In the Underworld (Book XI), the ghost of Achilles says he would rather be a poor man's servant than
king of the dead. How does this speech comment on the values of the Iliad, where Achilles chose a short
glorious life over a long ordinary one? Does the Odyssey present a different vision of what makes a
life worth living?
Books XIII–XVI: Return and Reunion
-
When Athena reveals herself to Odysseus in Book XIII, she laughs at his instinct to lie even on his own
soil. What does their exchange tell us about the relationship between Odysseus and his divine patron? Is
it a friendship of equals, or is it something else entirely?
-
Odysseus spends a long stretch of the poem disguised as a beggar in his own house. What is the dramatic
effect of this extended disguise? How does it change your experience as a reader to know his identity
when the characters around him do not?
-
When Odysseus reveals himself to Telemachus (Book XVI), Telemachus initially refuses to believe it,
saying a god must be tricking him. What does this reaction suggest about the nature of homecoming in the
Odyssey? Is recognition ever instant, or does it always require proof?
Books XVII–XX: The Beggar in the Hall
-
The dog Argos recognizes Odysseus, wags his tail, and dies. Why is this one of the most famous scenes in
the poem? What does Argos represent, and what does his condition—neglected, flea-ridden, lying on
a dung heap—tell us about the state of Odysseus's household?
-
In Book XIX, Eurycleia recognizes Odysseus by the scar on his thigh. Homer then tells a long digression
about how Odysseus got the scar as a boy. Why does Homer interrupt the action at this crucial moment with
a flashback? What does the digression add to the scene?
-
Penelope tells the disguised Odysseus that she has decided to set the contest of the bow and marry
whoever can string it. Is this a genuine decision, or is she stalling? Does she suspect who the stranger
really is? The text is deliberately ambiguous; what is your interpretation?
Books XXI–XXIV: The Contest, the Slaughter, and the Aftermath
-
The slaughter of the suitors in Book XXII is graphic and total. Is this scene meant to be satisfying,
disturbing, or both? How does Homer want us to feel about the violence? Consider the treatment of the
suitors who beg for mercy and the punishment of the disloyal servants.
-
Penelope's test of the bed (Book XXIII) is the poem's emotional climax. Why is this test more convincing
than any physical proof of identity? What does the immovable bed symbolize, and why is it built around
a living tree?
-
The Odyssey does not end with Odysseus and Penelope's reunion. Book XXIV shows the souls of the suitors
descending to Hades and Odysseus visiting his aged father Laertes. Why does Homer extend the poem beyond
its most natural ending? What does the final scene—Athena commanding peace between Odysseus and
the suitors' families—add to the poem's meaning?
Essay Topics
Ten prompts suitable for high school or college papers. Each is designed to require close reading, textual
evidence, and analytical argument. Choose one that genuinely interests you—the best essays come from
questions you actually want to answer.
The Cunning Hero vs. The Strong Hero
Compare Odysseus as he appears in the Odyssey with Achilles as he appears in the ghost scene of Book XI.
How does the Odyssey redefine what it means to be a hero? Argue whether the poem values intelligence over
physical prowess, or whether Odysseus ultimately needs both.
Penelope as Odysseus's Equal
Analyze Penelope's character across the poem, paying close attention to her stratagem of the loom, her
handling of the suitors, and her test of the bed. Argue that Penelope is not a passive figure waiting
for rescue but an active, cunning agent whose intelligence matches her husband's.
Hospitality as Moral Compass
Examine three hospitality scenes in the Odyssey (for example: Nestor at Pylos, the Cyclops, and the
suitors at Ithaca) and argue that the poem uses xenia—the code of host and guest—as its
primary framework for distinguishing civilized from uncivilized behavior.
The Problem of Divine Intervention
Does Odysseus succeed because of his own abilities, or because Athena rigs the game in his favor? Examine
key moments where Athena intervenes and argue whether divine help diminishes or enhances the hero's
achievement.
Identity, Disguise, and the Cost of Anonymity
Trace Odysseus's use of false identities throughout the poem: the Noman trick, the beggar disguise, the
lying tales he tells to Eumaeus and Penelope. Argue that the poem treats identity as something that must
be earned back, not simply declared.
The Odyssey as Anti-War Poem
Achilles says he would rather be a servant than a dead king. Agamemnon was murdered on his return.
Odysseus lost all his men and spent twenty years trying to get home. Argue that the Odyssey, despite its
surface celebration of heroic adventure, is fundamentally a poem about the devastating aftermath of war.
The Role of Storytelling Within the Story
The Odyssey contains multiple storytellers: the bard Demodocus, Odysseus himself, Menelaus, Nestor, and
others. Analyze what the poem says about the power and purpose of storytelling by examining how these
embedded narratives function within the larger work.
Temptation and the Choice of Mortality
Odysseus refuses immortality from Calypso, resists the Lotus-Eaters' forgetfulness, and has himself tied
to the mast to hear the Sirens without being destroyed. Argue that the Odyssey presents the choice to
remain mortal, limited, and human as the poem's central heroic act.
Justice or Vengeance? The Slaughter of the Suitors
Is the killing of the suitors in Book XXII an act of divine justice or excessive personal revenge?
Consider the treatment of those who beg for mercy, the execution of the disloyal servants, and the role
of Athena and Zeus in sanctioning the violence. Argue for one interpretation.
Home as a Place vs. Home as an Idea
When Odysseus arrives in Ithaca, he does not recognize it. The home he returns to is not the home he left.
Argue that the Odyssey treats "home" not as a physical location but as a set of relationships—with
Penelope, Telemachus, Laertes, the servants, the land itself—that must be rebuilt through effort
and recognition.
How to Study with an Audiobook
The Odyssey was composed to be heard. Studying it through audio is not a shortcut—it is a return to
how the poem was originally experienced. Here are practical strategies for using our audiobook reader to
deepen your understanding of the text.
Listen While You Read
Our reader displays the text on screen with word-by-word highlighting synchronized to the audio. Follow
along as you listen. This dual-input approach—seeing and hearing the text simultaneously—improves
comprehension and retention significantly compared to reading or listening alone. You will notice the
rhythm of Homer's prose, the repetition of formulas, and the pacing of dialogue in a way that silent
reading alone cannot capture.
Use the Voice Distinction
Each of the 60+ characters in the Odyssey has a distinct voice in our reader. Pay attention to how the
speakers change: when does the narrator hand off to a character? When does Odysseus begin telling his own
story? The transition between voices makes the poem's structure audible. You will hear the difference
between the narrator's measured tone and Odysseus's urgent first-person account, and that difference is
itself a literary device worth studying.
Re-Listen to Key Scenes
Some scenes reward multiple listens. The Cyclops episode (Book IX), the Underworld journey (Book XI),
the slaughter of the suitors (Book XXII), and the recognition scene with Penelope (Book XXIII) are dense
with meaning and detail. On a second listen, you will catch foreshadowing you missed, notice how Homer
builds tension, and appreciate the craft of individual speeches.
Listen for the Formulas
Homer's repeated phrases—"when the child of morning, rosy-fingered Dawn, appeared" or "the wine-dark
sea"—are part of the poem's oral DNA. In silent reading, these can feel like filler. In audio, they
become rhythmic anchors that mark transitions and create a sense of ritual continuity. Listen for them.
Count how many times "rosy-fingered Dawn" appears. Notice how the formula signals a shift from one day to
the next, giving the poem its temporal structure.
Take Notes by Book Number
The Odyssey is divided into twenty-four books, and every scholarly discussion references them by number.
As you listen, keep a running log of notes organized by book. Write down key events, memorable quotes,
questions that occur to you, and themes you notice. When it comes time to write an essay or prepare for
a discussion, your notes will be organized in a way that maps directly onto the text.
Start with Book I
The first book of the Odyssey is the gateway to the entire poem. It introduces the situation in Ithaca,
the divine politics of Olympus, the character of Telemachus, and the theme of hospitality—all in
roughly thirty minutes of listening. If you can engage with Book I, the rest of the poem will follow.
The first four books (the "Telemachy") are sometimes assigned separately from the rest of the poem
because they form a self-contained narrative about Telemachus's journey to manhood.
Use the Companion Pages
This study guide is part of a suite of resources. Use the Book-by-Book Guide for
a summary of each book before or after you listen. Use the Characters Guide
to identify who is speaking and what their role is. Use the Themes Analysis to
deepen your understanding of the poem's ideas. And use the Famous Quotes page
to find key passages for essays and discussions.