The Baseline: Roars, Crashes, and Cries
Before you can appreciate the supernatural, you have to understand the natural. Homer’s world is loud, filled with the raw, impersonal sounds of a pre-industrial age. We hear the roar of the sea as it “seethes like a cauldron over intense fire” around
Charybdis, the hiss of the Cyclops's eye when Odysseus blinds him, and the agonizing cries of men being snatched from their ship by the monster Scylla. These are the sounds of a violent, chaotic world governed by physics and biology, even when the cause is a monster. The crashing waves whipped up by Poseidon, for instance, are often depicted as a force of nature more than a specific, targeted message. This grounding in visceral, natural noise establishes the baseline reality of Odysseus's world, making the sounds that break from this pattern all the more significant.
The Divine Frequency: Voices That Cut Through the Noise
When the gods speak, it’s rarely a shout into the void. Their voices are instruments of precision and power. Take Athena, Odysseus’s divine champion. She often appears to Odysseus or Telemachus alone, her voice cutting through the din of a chaotic situation to deliver a clear, specific message. When she appears to Telemachus disguised as Mentes in the bustling hall of suitors, her presence and words give him a sudden infusion of courage, making him realize a god has visited. This isn't the ambiguous roar of the ocean; it's a targeted, purposeful sound meant for a specific hero at a specific moment. The divine voice in The Odyssey acts as a signal of order, an intervention of higher intelligence in the chaos of mortal life, separating itself from the undifferentiated noise of the natural world.
Supernatural Seduction: The Danger in Song
Between the natural and the divine lies the supernatural—and its sound is often dangerously beautiful. The most famous example is the Sirens' song. Their voices are described as a “high, thrilling song” that promises knowledge of all things, a lure so powerful Odysseus plugs his crew's ears with wax and has himself tied to the mast just to hear it and survive. This isn't a force of nature or a message from Olympus; it's a magical trap. Similarly, the nymph Calypso is often found singing at her loom. While her song isn't explicitly aggressive like the Sirens', it's part of the enchanting, timeless atmosphere of her island that holds Odysseus captive for seven years. These musical moments represent a powerful, non-divine force, a form of temptation that uses the beauty of sound to lead mortals astray, a distinct category from both the crash of a wave and the clarity of a goddess's command.
The Power of Calculated Silence
Sometimes, the most telling sound is none at all. Homer masterfully uses silence to signal a shift from the natural to the supernatural. Just before Odysseus's crew encounters the Sirens, the wind suddenly dies and the sea becomes unnervingly calm. Homer describes it as a divinity lulling the waves to sleep, a quiet that is more menacing than any storm. This abrupt absence of the world’s normal, churning soundtrack tells the reader—and the characters—that they have entered a different kind of space, a domain governed by strange new rules. Likewise, the voices of the dead in the Underworld are described as faint and fragile, a stark contrast to the vibrant sounds of the living world. In these moments, the sudden quiet or the unnatural weakness of a sound is as clear a sign of divine or supernatural influence as any monstrous roar or godly pronouncement.











