The Cave and The Cyclops
Let’s set the scene. Odysseus, the king of Ithaca and hero of the Trojan War, is on the long, arduous journey home. A storm blows his ships off course, and he lands on an island inhabited by the Cyclopes—giant, one-eyed, and notoriously uncivilized shepherds.
Driven by a mix of curiosity and arrogance, Odysseus and a dozen of his men venture into a large cave, which turns out to be the home of Polyphemus, son of the sea god Poseidon. When the giant returns, he rolls a massive boulder over the entrance, trapping them inside. He is not a gracious host. He scoffs at the customs of hospitality and promptly eats two of Odysseus's men for dinner, with two more for breakfast the next morning. Odysseus realizes he can't simply kill the monster in his sleep, because only Polyphemus is strong enough to move the stone door. They are well and truly stuck, with a dwindling crew and a monstrous, man-eating jailer.
What's in a Name?
Faced with certain doom, Odysseus does what he does best: he schemes. He offers Polyphemus a gift of some extremely potent, unmixed wine he brought from his ship. The giant, who is used to a simpler diet, guzzles it down and quickly becomes drunk. In his boozy, affable state, Polyphemus asks Odysseus for his name, promising a 'guest-gift' in return. This is the crucial moment. Thinking fast, Odysseus replies with a masterstroke of linguistic cunning: "My name is Nobody. Nobody I am called by mother, father, and by all my comrades." The Greek word he uses is "Outis," which literally means "no one" or "nobody." The drunken giant, promising to eat 'Nobody' last as his gift, soon passes out.
The Perfect Punchline
With the giant unconscious, Odysseus and his remaining men spring into action. They take a massive olive stake, sharpen its point, and harden it in the fire. Then, with their combined strength, they drive the red-hot point into Polyphemus's single eye, blinding him. The giant awakens with an agonizing scream that echoes across the island. His fellow Cyclopes hear his cries and rush to his cave, shouting from outside to ask what's wrong. "Is someone murdering you?" they yell. Polyphemus, writhing in pain, bellows the fateful reply: "Nobody is killing me! Nobody is murdering me by craft!" Hearing this, the other Cyclopes are confused. If 'nobody' is hurting him, they figure he must be suffering from a sickness sent by the gods and, muttering, they go back to their own caves, leaving him to his fate. The trap is sprung. The punchline has landed, and it has just saved their lives.
More Than a Joke
The genius of the "Nobody" trick is that it’s more than just a clever pun; it's a profound statement on the power of intelligence over brute force, a central theme of The Odyssey. Odysseus, physically insignificant compared to the giant, uses language as his ultimate weapon. By making himself a 'nobody,' he exploits a loophole in reality, turning a pronoun into a shield. The story highlights the Greek virtue of metis, or cunning intelligence. Furthermore, there’s a deeper theme of identity at play. For this brief, critical moment, Odysseus must erase his famous name and become a non-entity to survive. He is a king, a war hero, a man known for his kleos (glory and renown), yet his survival depends on being utterly anonymous.
The Ego's Aftermath
The escape itself is just as clever. The next morning, the blind Polyphemus has to let his sheep out to graze. He sits by the entrance, feeling the backs of the sheep to make sure the men aren't riding them out. But Odysseus has tied his men—and himself—to the bellies of the rams. They slip out undetected. But the story doesn't end there. Safely back on his ship, Odysseus’s pride gets the better of him. He can’t resist revealing his true identity, shouting back to the shore, "If anyone asks you who put your eye out... say it was the valiant warrior Odysseus, son of Laertes, who lives in Ithaca!" This act of hubris is a colossal mistake. In revealing his name, he gives the monster someone to curse. Polyphemus prays to his father, Poseidon, for vengeance on Odysseus—a curse that haunts the hero for the next ten years of his journey home.











