After blinding Poseidon’s son Polyphemus, Poseidon makes it his duty to do everything he can to keep Odysseus from journeying home. Since “not even the gods/ can defend a man… from that day/ when fate takes hold and lays him out at last”, Athena must come up with other ways to help save Odysseus from Poseidon, a more powerful god, on his journey(III.269). On his way back from Ethiopia, Poseidon sees Odysseus and tries to kill him, “churning the waves into chaos, whipping/ all the gales from every quarter, shrouding over in thunderheads/ the earth and sea at once” (V.322). Athena then “countered him at once”, stopping the winds.…