Throughout the narration, Odysseus, as the captain of his men, is forced to make all the tough decisions, and is rarely blessed with time to consider all possible outcomes. When preparing to cross the waters to make the redundant attempt to make it home, Circe cautioned him of the obstacles that were bound to cross his way, he discloses this crucial information to his men excluding the most fatal, the Scylla, but not without reason. As clarified in the text “This I had not told the crew, for it would only make their knees shake, and there was nothing they could do.” (page 139) A decision