The Greeks invented them, Hamilton organized them, and the reader picks them apart. The ancient gods of the Greeks have ruled over storytelling since about 2000 years before the birth of Christ. Among these storytellers, Homer is perhaps the oldest and most notable author. Being the creator of works such as The Iliad and The Odyssey. Homer has been known to surprise and captivate readers just as today’s writers do. The Iliad depicts the epic battle of Troy in which one of the supporting characters becomes the hero of the sequel. After ten years of fighting, the Greeks won against the Trojans, and Odysseus sets sail for his home of Ithaca . What is endured during his travels is captured in Homer’s The Odyssey. The story ends in the epic hero’s triumphant return to his home after over a decade of being gone at sea. Approximately four thousand years later, an English poet named Alfred, Lord Tennyson writes a continuation of After his triumphant return, Odysseus grows tired of being at home. In his old age, he revels in his adventures of the past. Tennyson begins his poem by having Ulysses say exactly that. “It little profits that an idle king, by this still hearth, among these barren crags, matched with an aged wife, I mete and dole! (Page 971, lines 1-3)” As previously mentioned, everything sags and bags. However, the desire to keep going is something more powerful than any form of age restrictions an old man may face. Readers may never know what it’s like to be a hero lost at sea, yearning for adventure after he escapes death on multiple occasions. The feeling can be compared to that of an actor. As time proceeds, tastes and preferences for films change. Older actors usually cannot grasp the fact that their time in the limelight is up. Odysseus has the privilege of not having to give that up, as he is comfortable with dropping everything and going