A poet’s invocation opens the door to a long-delayed homecoming, shaped as much by divine will as by human error. In this opening passage of The Odyssey, the Muse is called upon to tell of Odysseus—his wanderings after Troy, the losses of his companions, and the single mistake that sealed their fate. While the rest of the Greek heroes have returned home, Odysseus remains stranded, held by the nymph Calypso, as the gods quietly turn their attention back toward him.
Set during a council of the gods in Book I, this passage establishes the moral framework of the epic: mortals suffer not only by fate, but by their own choices. Zeus reflects on the recent death of Aegisthus—killed by Orestes despite clear divine warnings—underscoring a central theme of responsibility that will echo throughout the poem.
This is the moment where the story formally begins: Odysseus is remembered, judged, and finally set back into motion.
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Odyssey is a daily podcast reading one page at a time from Homer’s classic epic — every day. Whether you’re starting from the beginning or joining mid-journey, each episode brings you deeper into the story of The Odyssey.