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Ulysses 31 opening (Ulysses 31)
Touch a word or the <play> button for sound
Click on a word or on the <play> button for sound
Click on a word or on the red <play> button for sound

This is the opening of the old cartoon series Ulysses 31, a fascinating trip around the unknown universe where a futuristic ancient Greek heroe Ulysses will meet all sorts of mythological gods and creatures in his effort to find his way back home to Ithaca.

You can read about Ulysses true story down in the explanations box.

Listen to the full theme song: Ulysses 31.

Watch the first episode of this series here: Ulysses 31: Vengeance of the Gods.

It is the 31st century, Ulysses killed the giant Cyclops when he rescued the children and his son Telemachus. But the ancient Gods of Olympus are angry and threaten a terrible revenge...
- Mortals, you defy the gods? I sentence you to travel among unknown stars. Until you find the Kingdom of Hades, your bodies will stay as lifeless as stone.
- Ulysses, the way back to earth has been wiped from my memory.
- Father, oh father!
- You are alive my son.

Ulysses, Ulysses,
soaring through all the galaxies,
in search of Earth, flying into the night!

Ulysseee-eee-eees, no-one else can do the things you do!
Ulysseee-eee-eees, like a bolt of thunder from the blue!
Ulysseee-eee-eees, always fighting all the evil forces,
bringing peace and justice to all!

It's me, Nono, small robot, you know, friend of Ulysses!
Uly-eeessseess!
It's me, Nono, small robot, you know, friend of Ulysses!

CYCLOPS= (1 cyclops, 2 cyclopes) Here it probably refers to the most famous cyclops: Polyphemus. The Cyclopes are a mythological race of giants who had just one eye (see picture). They belonged to the Titans, the generation of gods ruling the universe before Zeus and his brothers and sisters (the Olympic gods) took over, after which, they were sent to Mount Etna to serve as helpers to the God Hephaestus (Latin Vulcan) the blacksmith, god of fire. In Greek mythology, Odysseus (Latin Ulysses) killed the cyclop Polyphemus (read the story below).

ANCIENT= Something ancient is centuries or thousands of years old.

THREATEN= If you threaten someone, you tell them that if something happens you (or somebody) will do something bad against them.

REVENGE= To punish someone in return of something bad they did to you.

MORTALS= A mortal is a normal person who will die some day, as opposed to the gods and spirits, who are immortal.

DEFY= To oppose and refuse to submit to or cooperate with.

SENTENCE= If you sentence someone to a punishment, you decide that they will receive that punishment.

LIFELESS= Without life, dead (the suffix –less means "without").

WIPED= Erased, deleted, removed.

SOARING= Flying very high.

IN SEARCH OF= Looking for.

A BOLT OF THUNDER= A thunderbolt, a lightning.
When there is an electric storm in the sky you can see lightnings (or bolt of lightnings), which are intense bright electric rays, and afterwards you can hear the sound of it: that's the thunder (or the clasp of thunder). So a bolt of thunder is the light, and a thunder is the sound.

EVIL= Bad, malign.


THE TRUE STORY OF ULYSSES AND THE CYCLOPS

In this futuristic version, Ulysses kills the Cyclops and Zeus punishes him for doing so, making it hard for him to find his way back home. In Greek mythology things are a bit different. Ulysses had been fighting in the War of Troy where the Greeks managed to take the city thanks to Ulysses' clever plan: they built a huge wooden horse (the famous Trojan Horse) and Greek soldiers, including Ulysses himself, hid inside the horse. The Greeks pretended to surrender and gave the horse as a present to the Trojans, who gladly took it inside the city walls. That night, when all the Trojans were fast asleep after the victory celebrations, the soldiers got out of the horse and conquered the city. After this total victory Ulysses sails back home to his little kingdom of Ithaca, but on the way back he'll find lots of adventures and difficulties that will turn his journey into an odyssey*. Back home, his wife Penelope and his son Telemachus are waiting for him but they don't know if he's alive or dead. The noblemen in his kingdom get impatient and they suggest that Penelope should marry one of them because the country needs a new king. While Ulysses is desperate to find his way back home, Penelope is trying hard to keep the suitors away while she awaits anxiously for her husband to return, and Telemachus just doesn't know if his father will ever come back. To keep the suitors waiting, Penelope promises them she will marry one of them when she finishes weaving a tapestry. The trick is that she weaves it during the day, but then she undoes part of it during the night, so she never seems to finish it.

If Ulysses can't make it back home soon, he will lose his wife and his kingdom, and they will most probably kill his son to prevent him from claiming his rights to the throne when he grows up. In the Trojan War, part of the gods were helping the Trojans and part of them were helping the Greeks, so now, on his way back home, Ulysses will find the same kind of treatment, some gods help him and some gods try to kill him, turning his journey into a constant battle full of fascinating adventures that will let us meet many of the most famous gods, demi-gods, monsters and magical beings of the Greek mythology.

In one of his adventures, Ulysses lands on the Island of the Cyclopes. He takes with him twelve men to find food and drink, and they eventually find a large cave, which is the home of the great Cyclops Polyphemus. When Polyphemus returns home with his flocks and finds Ulysses and his men, he blocks the cave entrance with a great stone, trapping the remaining Greeks inside. Polyphemus then crushes and immediately devours two of his men for his meal. It is said that "rapping them on the ground, he knocked them dead like pups".

The next morning, Polyphemus kills and eats two more of Ulysses' men for his breakfast and exits the cave to graze his sheep. The desperate Ulysses devises a clever escape plan. He spots a massive unseasoned olivewood club that Polyphemus left behind the previous night and, with the help of his men, sharpens the narrow end to a fine point. He hardens the stake over a flame and hides it from sight. That night, Polyphemus returns from herding his flock of sheep. He sits down and kills two more of Ulysses' men, bringing the death toll to six. At that point, Ulysses offers Polyphemus the strong and undiluted wine given to him by Maron. The wine makes Polyphemus drunk and unwary. When Polyphemus asks for Ulysses' name, promising him a guest-gift if he answers, Ulysses tells him "οὔτις," literally "nobody." Being drunk, Polyphemus thinks of it as a real name and says that he will eat "nobody" last and that this shall be his guest-gift—a vicious insult both to the tradition of hospitality and to Ulysses. With that, Polyphemus crashes to the floor and passes out. Ulysses, with the help of his men, lifts the flaming stake, charges forward and drives it into Polyphemus' eye, blinding him. Polyphemus yells for help from his fellow cyclopes that "nobody" has hurt him. The other cyclopes think Polyphemus is making a fool out of them or that it must be a matter with the gods, and they grumble and go away.

In the morning, Ulysses and his men tie themselves to the undersides of Polyphemus' sheep. When the blind Cyclops lets the sheep out to graze, he feels their backs to ensure the men aren't riding out, but because of Ulysses' plan, he does not feel the men underneath. Ulysses leaves last, riding beneath the belly of the biggest ram. Polyphemus doesn't realize that the men are no longer in his cave until the sheep and the men are safely out.

As he sails away with his men, Ulysses boasts to Polyphemus that "I am not nobody; I am Ulysses, Son of Laertes, King of Ithaca." This act of hubris causes problems for Ulysses later. Polyphemus prays to his father, Poseidon for revenge. Even though Poseidon fought on the side of the Greeks during the Iliad, he bore Ulysses a grudge for not giving him a sacrifice when Poseidon prevented them from being discovered inside of the Trojan Horse. Poseidon curses Ulysses, sending storms and contrary winds to inhibit his homeward journey.


* Ulysses is the Latin word for the original Greek name Odysseus. Ancient Greek poet Homer wrote all the adventures of Odysseus' voyage back home in a book called The Odyssey. That is why in modern European languages we use the word "odyssey" to refer to a long adventurous journey or series of events full of difficulties and problems:
- Finding a job after I finished my studies was an odyssey.
- My grandmother's life was an odyssey, they could make a movie out of it.
- Current crisis threw the country's economy into an odyssey.

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