Yes i was because he seduced calypso on her island and even had a child with her. She waited 20 years for him with no other lover even though he wasnt as nearly as faithful.
No. Penelope was completely faithful to Odysseus even after 20 years of not seeing him. Penelope is often equated with faithfulness.
Penelope waited for twenty years for her husband, Odysseus, to return from the Trojan War and his subsequent adventures. During this time, she remained faithful and cleverly delayed remarrying by weaving and unraveling a tapestry. Her patience and loyalty are central themes in Homer's "The Odyssey." Ultimately, her wait ends when Odysseus finally returns home.
over 20 years
In The Odyssey, going home was Odysseus' ultimate goal. He had been away at war for years, and he desperately missed his wife, Penelope. Odysseus knew Penelope may have believed him to be dead, so he needed to get back to her.
Odysseus had been many years - some say as many as ten, or more - away from Penelope - their son had grown up, but his life had aged him, as well that he went in disguise.
No. Penelope was completely faithful to Odysseus even after 20 years of not seeing him. Penelope is often equated with faithfulness.
Penelope is a character from The Odyssey, a Greek Epic written about a man named Odysseus that is trying to find his way home from the Trojan War. Odysseus' wife is Penelope, and while Odysseus is gone, she experiences pressure from 108 suitors trying to remarry her. However, she stays faithful Odysseus. He finally returns 20 years later to beat the suitors and take back his palace.
Odysseus accuses Penelope of being hardhearted because she has remained faithful to him for 20 years, delaying the suitors who are trying to marry her while he is away. In his disguise as a beggar, Odysseus tests Penelope's loyalty before revealing his true identity.
Fidelity. She had been faithful to her husband for so many years despite the rumor that Odysseus must have died and would no longer come back.
In The Odyssey, Penelope, Odysseus's wife, is looking for him. She remains faithful to him for 20 years while he is away at war and on his journey home. His son, Telemachus, also goes in search of him.
Yes, Odysseus is portrayed as a trustworthy husband to Penelope in Homer's "The Odyssey." Despite facing numerous challenges and temptations during his long journey back to Ithaca, Odysseus remains faithful and devoted to Penelope, eventually reuniting with her and proving his loyalty.
Penelope waited for twenty years for her husband, Odysseus, to return from the Trojan War and his subsequent adventures. During this time, she remained faithful and cleverly delayed remarrying by weaving and unraveling a tapestry. Her patience and loyalty are central themes in Homer's "The Odyssey." Ultimately, her wait ends when Odysseus finally returns home.
over 20 years
Penelope was the mortal wife of mortal Odysseus. Wer are not told how she died.
In The Odyssey, going home was Odysseus' ultimate goal. He had been away at war for years, and he desperately missed his wife, Penelope. Odysseus knew Penelope may have believed him to be dead, so he needed to get back to her.
Odysseus had been many years - some say as many as ten, or more - away from Penelope - their son had grown up, but his life had aged him, as well that he went in disguise.
Penelope was worried that someone was fooling her, perhaps a god, into thinking Odysseus had returned home alive. To be gone twenty years and then return home then was very unlikely.