Greek mythology has always had an effect on the world of literature. One tale that is told and used as the subject of both visual and literary texts is the tale of the marriage of Penelope and Odysseus. Penelope was the devoted wife of the famous soldier Odysseus who was sent to fight the Trojan war the day his son Telemachus was born. After the war was over Odysseus was lost for ten years because he angered the god Poseidon, meanwhile Penelope and Telemachus try to protect their house in Ithaca from suitors trying to take his throne and wife. And when he returned Penelope finally realized it was her husband and she was overcome with joy. Their relationship could be described as trustworthy because Odysseus idolized Penelope, …show more content…
They are doing this to take over Odysseus’s place as the head of their household. The overall mood of the painting is agitated because Penelope is not paying attention to the suitors resulting in the suitors becoming overly agitated. Her handmaid also looks annoyed by Penelope’s choice not to remarry, which also makes the maids and servants agitated. Penelope is annoyed by the entire situation especially with the suitors chasing after her or her handmaids not accepting her decision and looking down on her for her decision to wait for her long-absent husband Odysseus. In addition, everyone in the painting thinks she is ruining her chances by not choosing a …show more content…
(“Dorothy Parker”) Dorothy was quiet in demeanour, but with a rapier-like wit that was second to none. (“Dorothy Parker”) Parker had a hard life that started when her mother died when she was five years old, then her father died when she was fourteen. (“Dorothy Rothschild Parker”) She worked for magazines like Vogue and Vanity Fair in the late 1910s. (“Dorothy Parker Biography”) One of her most famous works, “Big Blonde” won the O Henry Award in 1929. (“Dorothy Parker Biography”) Parker also formed a quite famous group called the Algonquin Round Table alongside of writers Robert Benchley and Robert Sherwood. (“Dorothy Parker”) She married Edwin Parker II in 1917, but the marriage ended after a few short years. (“Dorothy Rothschild Parker”) After many small affairs Dorothy was left pregnant and alone, so she had an illegal abortion. (“Dorothy Parker”) Following the abortion she had two unsuccessful suicide attempts. (“Dorothy Parker”) Parker maintained a facade of toughness through verbal cleverness and black humor. (“Dorothy Parker”) She returned to New York in 1963, spending her last few years in fragile condition. (“Dorothy Parker