@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008803, author = {吉武, 純夫 and YOSHITAKE, Sumio}, journal = {名古屋大学文学部研究論集. 文学}, month = {Mar}, note = {In the Odyssey it is clear that owing to the deaths of his six oarsmen who became preys of Skylla Odysseus and his other men could pass the dangerous strait before the rock of this monster. Having heard the premonitions of Kirke he had been all aware of this result, but he did not tell them anything about this danger but allowed it to happen to their suprise. He wanted to save them, but could not even have the chance to do so, while totally he owed his own survival to them as well as he had resposibility to their death. It was in this context that he described their death scene as the most lamentable (oiktiston) in all his adventures. Their deaths were not in vain after all, but nothing positive was told of their death in this poem. And no renewal was made of this aspect of the myth, though for the Greeks it was a mythical ideal that a man accepts his practical death consciously. The myth of the preys of Skylla was a story that told the agony of Odysseus that he experienced when he allowed his men to die unconscious of the effects of their own death.}, pages = {25--37}, title = {スキュラの餌食:オデュッセウスの苦悩}, volume = {54}, year = {2008} }