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As Circe spoke, Dawn mounted her golden throne,

and on the first rays Circe left me, taking

her way like a great goddess up the island.

I made straight for the ship, roused up the men

to get aboard and cast off at the stern.5

They scrambled to their places by the rowlocks

and all in line dipped oars in the grey sea.

But soon an off-shore breeze blew to our liking–

a canvas-bellying breeze, a lusty shipmate

sent by the singing nymph with sunbright hair.10

So we made fast the braces, and we rested,

letting the wind and steersman work the ship.

–The Odyssey,
Homer

What logical conclusion can be drawn about Odysseus’s leadership based on this passage?

He is an observant leader who relaxes while his crew works.
He is a strict leader who demands that his crew work quickly.
He is an efficient leader who prompts his crew to work quickly.
He is a casual leader who returns to his crew calmly.

User Kuboslav
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2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

C

Step-by-step explanation:

A: He is an observant leader who relaxes while his crew works.

B: He is a strict leader who demands that his crew work quickly.

C: He is an efficient leader who prompts his crew to work quickly.

D: He is a casual leader who returns to his crew calmly.

User Betjens
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5.8k points
1 vote

Answer:

He is an efficient leader who prompts his crew to work quickly.

Step-by-step explanation:

"I made straight for the ship, roused up the men to get aboard and cast off at the stern." He quickly tells his men to start their tasks.

"So we made fast the braces, and we rested, letting the wind and steersman work the ship." The crew quickly finished their work and then rested as no further work was needed.

User Ganesh AB
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5.3k points