By Putting Wax In Their Ears.
he made his crew put wax earplugs in their ears. he himself wanted to hear the sirens beautiful music, so he asked his crew to tie him to the mast, the foundation of a sail. Odysseus's crew ties Odysseus very tightly to the mast, and disarmed him. When the were going past the sirens, Odysseus was screaming and yelling at his crew to let him go to the sirens. The crew obviously did not hear him because they had the wax ear plugs. That is how Odysseus saved his crew from the sirens.
Odysseus is the only one who can hear the sirens because he had his men tie him to the mast of the ship and plug their ears with wax so that he could listen to the sirens' song without being drawn to his death. This was part of his clever strategy to navigate safely past the dangerous temptations of the sirens.
Odysseus does not plug his own ears with wax when they sail past the sirens because he wants to hear their enchanting song. He instructs his crew to tie him to the mast and not untie him no matter how much he begs, ensuring that he can listen to the sirens but not act on their call. This allows him to experience the sirens' temptation without succumbing to it.
All the crew except Odysseus fill their ears with wax, and Odysseus is tied to the mast so he can't try to steer the ship or jump overboard.
In Homer's "The Odyssey," the sorceress Circe advises Odysseus on how to safely navigate past the Sirens. She tells him to plug the ears of his crew with beeswax and directs him to have himself tied to the ship's mast so he can hear the Sirens' song without succumbing to their enchantment.
Cicre warned Odysseus not to listen to the songs of the sirens, but he was detirmined to! So he had his crew tie him to the mast of his ship as he rowed past. He ordered them to all fill their ears with wax to block out the song. He also told then that once he was tied to the mast they were not allowed to let him down, no matter how hard he protested. When they sailed past Odysseus heard the song and desperatley wanted to go to the island, but his men, as ordered, did not let him down, only when they were past the island did they let him down.
In the Odyssey, the danger posed by the sirens lies in their enchanting song that lures sailors towards them, leading ships to crash on the rocky shores where the sirens reside. Those who listen to their song are unable to resist and often meet a tragic fate. Odysseus devises a plan to navigate safely past the sirens by having his crew plug their ears with beeswax while he himself is tied to the ship's mast to hear their song without being able to steer the ship towards them.
Past tense of crew is crewed.
In Homer's "The Odyssey," the Sirens are mythical creatures who use their enchanting voices to lure sailors to their deaths. Odysseus encounters the Sirens during his journey home from the Trojan War and cleverly navigates the danger by having his crew plug their ears with beeswax and tie him to the mast of the ship so he can hear their song without succumbing to its fatal allure.
Odysseus goes through the Sirens by putting beeswax in their ears. Odysseus is tied to the mast while the Sirens are surrounding them and is begging for his soilders to untie him but they don't. He goes through Scylla by just going past it, letting 6 of his men get eaten by Scylla. And he sailed closer to Scylla to get past Charybdis.
yes it has been used successfully .....because of what.......