Read the following passage from the Odyssey:

Tell me, where was it, now, you left your ship—
around the point, or down the shore, I wonder?’

He thought he’d find out, but I saw through this,
and answered with ready lie:
Poseidon Lord, who sets the earth a-tremble,
broke it up on the rocks at your land’s end.
A wind from seaward served him, drove us there.
We are survivors, these good men and I.’
From this passage, the reader is most likely to determine that

A)Odysseus is not easily fooled.
B)The men will escape from the Cyclops’ cave. *******THIS ONE*******
C)The Cyclops is not very intelligent.
D)The Cyclops plans to keep the men as his prisoners.

No, the answer is definitely A. Just took the test going with B and it was incorrect. Read the passage carefully and see what overall summary you'd give it.

wait nvm welcome 2023 users

thats better

welcome 2022 users

The reader is most likely to determine that the men will escape from the Cyclops' cave.

To arrive at this answer, we can examine the passage from the Odyssey. In the passage, Odysseus is speaking to the Cyclops and trying to deceive him about the fate of their ship. Odysseus lies to the Cyclops, saying that Poseidon, the god of the sea, destroyed their ship on the rocks at the land's end. He also mentions that they are survivors.

From this information, we can infer that the men are still alive and have not been captured or killed by the Cyclops. This suggests that they may have a chance to escape from the Cyclops' cave. Therefore, option B) The men will escape from the Cyclops' cave is the most likely determination based on the given passage.

There is no mention of the Cyclops.

it's b