Agamemnon's Treatment Of Women In The Odyssey

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In Homer’s epic The Odyssey, Agamemnon tells the tale of his horrible homecoming and while doing so he imparts three pieces of advice onto Odysseus. First of all, Agamemnon warns Odysseus of how fatal a woman can be. He explains to Odysseus that “there’s nothing more deadly, bestial than a woman set on” accomplishing a terrible feat (Homer 11.485-487). Agamemnon was killed when he came home to his unfaithful wife, Clytemnestra, who plotted to kill him with her lover, Aegisthus. Agamemnon provides Odysseus with this information because he is aware that Odysseus has been away from his home for a long period of time and does not know how loyal Penelope is. Second, Agamemnon advises Odysseus to not tell Penelope everything. He tells Odysseus to