Susie Berta

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during the first four books of the epic, Odysseus’ son will have his own adventures at last. These travels will allow him to share in the experiences that, according to the proem, Odysseus has had: “to see the cities and know the minds of men.” In this way, the poem ingeniously reassures Telemachus that he is, indeed, his father’s son.
An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic
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