Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Who planned the Trojan horse trick in the Trojan War?

Who planned the Trojan horse trick in the Trojan War?

Odysseus was originally the king of Ithaca. It is said that he planned the famous Trojan Horse in the Trojan War (BC 1230 ~ BC 1200). His heroic deeds mainly come from Homer's epic Odyssey, the greatest blind poet in Greece in the 7th century BC, which tells the story of his wandering on his way home for ten years after the fall of Troy.

As soon as the Trojan War ended, Odysseus set out from Troy and returned to his native Ithaca, but soon after, his fleet was blown to Thrace by a storm. Together with his companions, he occupied and destroyed the city of Hikonis, killed all the men, but pardoned Maro, the priest of Apollo, so the priest gave the hero several barrels of sweet wine. When Odysseus and his companions were resting on the beach, the Chikons from the mainland took crazy revenge on them, killing many Greeks, and they had to board the ship to escape.

The wind brought the fleet to the island where the lotus eaters lived. When three sailors were looking for drinking water along the coast, the lotus eater gave them local sweet fruit. The sailor who ate the fruit suddenly forgot to go home and wanted to stay on the lotus island forever. But in the end Odysseus and his entourage found them and returned to the ship with them.

Then they came to Cook Rope. Everyone here is a terrible giant with a huge eye in the middle of his forehead. Odysseus and his entourage walked along the coast and came to a striking cave. There were many cheeses hanging on the wall of the cave and many little goats in the corner. They made a fire, killed some goats, and then sat down to eat heartily, but they didn't know that these goats belonged to a cook named Polyphemus, who was Poseidon's son. Polyphemus's favorite food is fresh human flesh.

Polyphemus came back with a lot of dry firewood. He moved the boulder at the mouth of the cave and came in. Seeing this group of unexpected guests, he asked rudely who they were. Odysseus asked him to allow them to live here for a period of time and told him what honor the gods had given them. But Polyphemus ignored it, grabbed two sailors and fell to the ground, then swallowed them together with the bones.

The next morning, the cook grabbed two more people for breakfast, then hurried out with the cattle, and then blocked the hole with huge stones. The clever Odysseus came up with a plan. He found a long trunk, sharpened it and hid it in the corner of the cave. In the evening, the cook's rope came back. He ate two unfortunate sailors. Odysseus stepped forward and poured the devil a bowl of wine from Marlowe. Polyphemus drank it as soon as he lifted his neck, and cried happily. After drinking, he ordered two more bowls and asked Odysseus what his name was. Odysseus said his name was "nobody". Polyphemus finally agreed to eat "Nobody", and then he collapsed to the ground and spit out wine and human flesh.

Odysseus and his companions seized the opportunity, heated the trunk on the fire, and then stabbed Polyphemus's one eye. Suddenly, his eyes sizzled, and he growled for help from other cook rope people. A group of rope cooks immediately came to the mouth of the cave and asked him what had happened. He shouted, "No one is hurting me." So the cooking rope disappeared. The next day, when Polyphemus, a blind man, pushed away the boulder, Odysseus and his companions tied themselves to the belly of the sheep and fled while the giant was driving the sheep.

They boarded the ship safely, and Odysseus loudly said his real name on the ship. Polyphemus angrily threw a big stone at the heroes' boat, and prayed to his father Poseidon, asking Poseidon to give Odysseus sorrow and pain.

Odysseus' fleet came to Aeolus, the son of Hippocrates, who was the supervisor of the wind. In order to return to China smoothly, he gave Odysseus a big bag of wind to control freely. The ship finally approached Ithaca, and you could even see the smoke from the palace. Odysseus was exhausted at this moment, and he fell asleep wearily. However, at this critical moment, several sailors thought that the bag contained gold and opened it. There was a terrible storm at sea at once, and their ship was blown far away.

They were forced to sail into the island where the giant Lester Rigoni lived, thinking that they had found a safe haven. However, when three sailors were walking on the beach, they were immediately attacked. The giant on the island threw huge stones at their boat and smashed the people on board. The giant dragged the smashed people back for dinner.

Odysseus' ship is the only one that survived. He sailed to Aeae, and then sent some sailors ashore, where they met circe, a witch. The witch invited them to dinner, and they were all full, but a sailor named Eutyochus suspected fraud and didn't eat. Sure enough, circe poisoned the food with magic, and the sailors who ate it turned into pigs. Laucos hurried back to the ship and told Odysseus all this. Hearing this, Odysseus grabbed the sword and began to take revenge. Under the protection of a charming flower in Hermes, Odysseus' body was immune to Chelsea's poison.

Odysseus did not become a pig like his companions after drinking circe's magic juice. He asked circe to return it to the sailors. But then she lured him to stay as her lover, and the sailors stayed on the island for a whole year.

Finally, circe agreed to let him leave and told him that he had to go to tiresias, a blind soothsayer, and he would tell Odysseus how to get home. She instructed him to sail along the edge of the world, dig a hole there, and then sacrifice a ram and a black ewe to King Haas and Queen Persephone, so that the king would summon the soothsayers.

Odysseus came to this dark land all the year round and began to act according to circe's words. When Odysseus poured sheep's blood into the dug pit, ghosts swarmed out one by one. Odysseus fought with his sword until tiresias arrived.

Tiresias predicted that sailors would land in Trina Solar's Thinina, where Apollo, the sun god, owned many cattle and sheep, which were never allowed to eat. Tiresias said Odysseus could return to Ithaca, but he would encounter many severe tests. Even after he came home, his wandering was not over. In the future, he will travel again, carrying paddles on his shoulders, away from home, and go to a strange country where people don't know boats and paddles. Nevertheless, when he is old, he can leave this world peacefully.

When they returned to Eyaya Island, the witch Sethi greeted them warmly and told Odysseus how to get through the danger ahead safely. After leaving Eyaya Island, the first place they will pass is Sai Ren Island, where people will seduce passing men with beautiful songs and then kill them cruelly. Odysseus sealed his companions' ears with wax so that they couldn't hear the beautiful songs on Sai Ren Island, but he couldn't fit his ears, so he ordered others to tie him up and warned them never to let go. When they sailed to Sai Ren Island, Odysseus was fascinated by singing. He motioned for his companion to untie him, but his companion tied him tighter.

Odysseus sailed safely through Sai Ren Island, and then they met Shula and kaleb Dis. Shula is a monster with six heads. She often rushes down the cliff and catches passing sailors. Kaleb Dis whirled up three times a day, devouring passing ships. When Odysseus' ship approached, Shula, the sea monster, quickly took away six of the best sailors-one in each mouth. The poor sailor kept howling for help, and Odysseus could only watch helplessly, which could not help at all, and the ship sailed slowly again.

The sailors came to Trina Solar's Kaya, the hometown of Apollo, the sun god. Odysseus reminded his companions that tiresias had warned them not to eat the animals of the gods on the island, otherwise their lives would be in danger, and told them not to stay on the island. However, the companion was trapped on the island for a month, and the food was almost eaten, and he was already hungry. One day, while Odysseus was sleeping, Eurydice Locks and his companions killed several animals on the island. Odysseus woke up and scolded them angrily. After six days of full meal, they set sail again in a calm moment. Apollo was very angry. He complained to Zeus, who promised that he would destroy the sailors. So Zeus ordered Golgotha to launch a terrible storm to attack Odysseus' ship, and everyone drowned except Odysseus. Odysseus built a raft and once again escaped from the whirlpool of Calvary. He drifted at sea for nine days and finally came to Qgygia Island, which is the mythical home of the beautiful sea god Calypso. The goddess soon fell in love with the handsome refugee and seduced him after he was full of wine and food. The myth of Calypso kept Odysseus under house arrest on the island for seven years, but Odysseus was always eager to continue sailing and return to his hometown.

The gods of Olympus noticed Odysseus' pain, and all the gods felt sorry for the hero except Poseidon. When Poseidon went to distant Ethiopia for sacrifice, Athena seized the opportunity to stay away and persuaded Zeus to help Odysseus. So the father of the gods sent a messenger Hermes to Okuguea. Hermes brought the Calypso mythology myth the news that she had been worried about: Odysseus had suffered enough, and Zeus ordered her to let him go at once. So Calypso mythology mythology reluctantly helped Odysseus build a boat and provided him with enough food. Although Odysseus rekindled his love for her at this moment, he never forgot the original intention of going home to reunite with his family, and he set foot on the voyage home again.

18 days later, when Odysseus sailed to Arcia, Poseidon returned from the Ethiopian carnival. When she saw Odysseus escape punishment again, she angrily set off a terrible storm and hit Odysseus' ship. Thanks to the kindness of Poseidon, he was able to escape. Poseidon vowed to punish him another day. Odysseus finally climbed to the edge of a stream. He was so tired that he fell asleep in the bushes.

Suddenly, Odysseus was awakened by a woman's scream. He pushed away the branches that covered him and climbed out of the bushes. He saw a young princess playing with her maid. Other women saw the strange naked man run away, but Athena let the princess stand there quietly, and Odysseus climbed over and asked her for help. She provided him with food and clean clothes. When Odysseus cleaned and dressed himself, the princess whispered to the maid that this handsome man would make a good husband. Then she raised her voice and told Odysseus that her name was Nausicaa, the daughter of King Achilles of Kira, and invited him to visit the palace. He also told him that he could only go with her when he went to the palace, otherwise he would be maliciously slandered. She went first and Odysseus followed as a stranger. On arriving at the palace, the princess went straight to her mother and knelt at her feet to ask for help.

The king and queen of Arcanus were attracted by Odysseus' noble appearance and elegant speech. According to local custom, the king gave Odysseus a boat to go home. The next day, before the sailors were ready to board the ship, Alcanos held a grand banquet for Odysseus. In dances and competitions, the minstrel Demodocus sang songs of the Trojan War. When the bard sang the adventures of Odysseus, the hero shed tears of sadness.

Alcanos didn't know his real identity at this time, so he asked Odysseus who he was. In a long and touching statement, Odysseus told all his adventures leaving Troy. Odysseus' experience touched the king, and Akanos promised to send the hero home.

The next morning, Kekila people loaded Odysseus with a lot of expensive gifts. Odysseus is so tired that he has been sleeping. When the ship arrived at the shore of Ithaca, the sailor Kejila gently carried Odysseus to the beach on the shore, but he was still asleep.

When he woke up, he found that the ship had left. At this moment, the goddess Athena appeared beside him, telling him that he had returned to Ithaca, then warning him not to reveal his identity, asking him to dress up as a beggar in rags, and then going to find his faithful servant Yumais. Odysseus came to Omeos' cabin and lied that he was a refugee from Crete. Omeos warmly received him. While preparing food, Omeos told the stranger sadly that about one hundred princes took the opportunity of Odysseus' "death" to propose to his wife, destroyed his palace, ate his food and forced his wife Penelope to marry one of them.

At this time, Odysseus' son Telemarcos came back from Sparta to find his father. Omeos left in a hurry to tell Penelope Telemarcos that she was back, leaving her father and son alone. Then Athena told Odysseus that it was time to reveal her identity to her son. At first, Telemarcos thought Odysseus might be a god, but he didn't believe Odysseus was his father. Later, he finally believed it, and the father and son embraced each other tightly. Telemachus told his father what had happened to him. He said that he couldn't drive his mother's suitors out of his father's palace before, so he had to look for his father everywhere. With the help of Athena, he finally got his wish and met his father.

Odysseus flew into a rage after hearing his son's story. He and his son designed to put all the suitors in the family to death and reunite the whole family, and lived a stable life from then on.