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Cyclops |
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Cyclops (sī`klŏps), plural Cyclopes (sīklō`pēz), in Greek mythology, immense one-eyed beings. They appear in at least two distinct traditions. According to Hesiod the Cyclopes were smiths, the sons of Uranus and Gaea. They were imprisoned in Tartarus by their father and again by their brother Kronos. In return for their freedom they gave Zeus the thunderbolt that aided him in overthrowing Kronos. In Homer the Cyclopes are a lawless, barbarous, and pastoral people, one of whom (Polyphemus Polyphemus (pŏlĭfē`məs), in Greek mythology, a Cyclops. He was a shepherd and the son of Poseidon. CyclopsIn Greek mythology, any of several one-eyed giants. In the Odyssey, the Cyclopes were cannibals who lived in a faraway land (traditionally Sicily). Odysseus was captured by the Cyclops Polyphemus, but he escaped being devoured by blinding the giant. According to Hesiod, there were three Cyclopes (Arges, Brontes, and Steropes) who forged thunderbolts for Zeus. In a later tradition, they were assistants to Hephaestus in this task. Apollo destroyed them after one of their thunderbolts killed Asclepius. Cyclops Classical myth one of a race of giants having a single eye in the middle of the forehead, encountered by Odysseus in the Odyssey How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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no-man is my name" (131), recalling Odysseus's clever trick that allows him to outwit the Kyklopes, and Columbus dreams of a land where an oar would be misidentified as a winnowing fan (139), an allusion to the prophecy that Odysseus hears from Tiresias that he must eventually undertake a journey so distant from the sea that an oar would be thus misidentified. |
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