The Odyssey: Homer (Odyysseus) Poem by Joshua Adeyemi

The Odyssey: Homer (Odyysseus)

Rating: 5.0


Perhaps, He'd been dead, caught at the
claws of the sea:
The Akhaians had loan him to the whales, a
meal.
The battle of troy weighed, threw him out
of balance,
Cowardly rugged he'd given in, no longer
stance.
Perhaps he'd journey along the route of
Pylos,
Or zeus(father of all gods and men) , had
bethroted him to the Harlot.
Suitors bewitched by penelope's beauty,
drenched in waeve-trick, swimming in folly.
Telemakhos, astound at the ageless effort,
Perhaps his father's return is the dying
carrot.
But woah! , Athena(the grey-eyed
goddess) , had had her way,
Oh see! Odyssey, the forgotten, to
Ithaka, made his way!
18: 02: 23: 13: 40

Saturday, February 24, 2018
Topic(s) of this poem: war
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
Inspired by Homer's 'The Odyssey'.
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
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