Asked by Kaai97

Read the following passage about Odysseus from Part 2 of the Odyssey:

Now, being a man, I could not help consenting.
So I went down to the sea beach and the ship,
where I found all my other men on board, (120)
weeping, in despair along the benches.
Sometimes in farmyards when the cows return
well-fed from pasture to the barn, one sees
the pens give way before the calves in tumult,
breaking through to cluster about their mothers, (125)
bumping together, bawling. Just that way
my crew poured round me when they saw me come-
their faces wet with tears as if they saw
their homeland, and the crags of Ithaca,
even the very town where they were born.

What does the epic simile in lines 118-131 illustrate?

a. the bond between captain and crew***
b. the loss of hope
c. the disloyalty between captain and crew
d. the love that Odysseus has for his men

Answers

Answered by Ms. Sue
Yes, a.
Answered by Diana
No, C. I'm reading it for school right now.
Answered by help meee
so which one is it
Answered by Wolfcat
i think c, lol sorry 'Ms.Sue', but i would trust a teacher that knows us kids r cheating XD.. so ya i'd put C...
Answered by Wolfcat
wouldn't*
Answered by Wolfcat
she is probely looking for thoughs that pick A XD
Answered by bleh
im pretty sure its A
Answered by idk
so it’s c?
Answered by hi
It's A bc a theme of the Odyssey is loyalty
Answer
????
Answered by korinthia
yall r useless
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