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Characters In Helen Of Troy

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CHARACTERS

MORTALS:

AGAMEMNON

The leader of the Achaean expedition to Troy, he was the King of Mycenae. On his return from Troy he was murdered by his wife Clytemnestra, and her lover Aegisthus. The lover was the son of Thyestes, the brother and enemy of Atreus, Agamemnon's father. When Odysseus voyages to Hades he meets with Agamemnon's ghost.

ALCINOUS

The King of the Phaeacians and husband of Arete, who had a daughter called Nausicaa. Nausicaa helps Odysseus when he first arrives in their land. The King is a gracious ruler and is instrumental in assisting Odysseus in returning to Ithaca.

ANTINOUS

He is the leader of the suitors that besiege Penelope, and the other suitors copy his cruelty and greed. He mistreats Odysseus when disguised as a beggar on his return to Ithaca. He is unashamed of his behavior and is a totally evil man. He is the first to be killed by Odysseus. He is aided by Eurymachus, another important suitor.

EUMAEUS

Odysseus' faithful swine-herd who plays an important part in assisting Odysseus to regain power, he is a caring man who offers hospitality to Odysseus when he is disguised as a beggar.

EURYCLEIA

She is a devoted old nurse of Odysseus and Penelope and is first to recognize her master on his return.

HELEN

Helen was the daughter of Leda and Zeus and she became the wife of King Menelaus of Sparta, Agamemnon's brother. Being the daughter of Zeus, she was immortal. Zeus mated with Leda in the guise of a swan and Helen was hatched from and egg and brought up as a member of the royal family of Sparta. Menelaus and Helen were initially very happy, but Paris the heir of King Priam of Troy visited Sparta and with the help of Aphrodite the goddess of love, gained Helen's affection. Stealing part of Menelaus' treasury, the pair eloped. Agamemnon assembled a great army to aid his brother, and they held siege to the city of Troy for ten years. Helen's beauty was unsurpassed and hence the saying, Ð''The face that launched a thousand ships'.

Throughout her stay in Troy, Helen was treated as a proper wife and not a mistress. After the fall of Troy, Helen and Menelaus were reconciled and apparently lived happily ever after.

LAERTES

He is the aged father of Odysseus who leads a private life on a small farm in the hills of Ithaca. He remains active and in good physical shape, despite his age.

MENELAUS

King of Sparta and husband of Helen, it is Menelaus' brother Agamemnon that organizes the expedition to Troy. He engages in single combat with Paris with a view to settling the dispute between the Greeks and Trojans. He won the battle, but was prevented from killing his rival by the intervention of Aphrodite. She owed Paris a debt because he judged her more beautiful than Hera and Athena. His reward was to receive the love of Helen who was the most beautiful woman on earth. Menelaus has a similar experience to Odysseus on his return from Troy, as he too experiences a series of misadventures on the return voyage. When Menelaus died, he went to live in the Elysian fields with his immortal Helen.

MENTOR

He is a faithful friend of Odysseus and tutor to Telemachus, Odysseus' son. Athena often disguised herself as Mentor when walking among the mortals.

NAUSICAA

Daughter of King Alcinous and Queen Arete, she is a beautiful young maiden portrayed by Homer as being innocent and virtuous. Although just in her adolescence, she is attracted to the naked Odysseus when they first meet.

ODYSSEUS

King of Ithaca, son of Laertes, husband of Penelope and father of Telemachus, it is his adventure that is covered in The Odyssey.

Homer emphasizes that this hero not only has physical prowess, but also an astute brain, and it is his cunning that helps bring about the fall of Troy and the escape from Polyphemus, the Cyclops. His determination and quick thinking enable him to escape many dangers.

PENELOPE

The wife of Odysseus, she remains loyal to her husband for nearly twenty years and is portrayed as the perfect wife and mother. She also demonstrates that she is intelligent for she is able to ward off over one hundred suitors for a long period of time.

TELEMACHUS

The son of Odysseus and Penelope, he is just entering adulthood, but is reluctant to take full responsibility for the position in his father's household. However, we observe a quick maturing during the final passages of the poem and he obtains the confidence to become more assertive in dealing with the suitors. It is widely thought that he married Circe.

TIRESIAS

He is the most famous of all Greek soothsayers, who was compensated by the gods for his blindness by his incredible visionary powers. Odysseus consults with his spirit in Hades and he provides vital information concerning the dangers that await and how he can achieve success and a happy life.

THE GODS and SUPERNATURAL

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