Homer I INTRODUCTION Homer According to tradition, the Greek poet Homer is believed to be the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey, two great epics of ancient Greek literature.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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The Return of OdysseusAfter the Greek warrior Odysseus returns from the Trojan War to his home in Ithaca, he kills the uninvited and unwantedsuitors of his wife, Penelope, who believed him to be dead.
Odysseus’s astonishing skill with the bow convinces Penelopethat he is indeed her long-absent husband.
This anonymous engraving is of an unknown date.Corbis
The Odyssey narrates the return of the Greek hero Odysseus from the Trojan War.
The opening scenes depict the disorder that has arisen in Odysseus’s household during his long absence: A band of suitors is living off of his wealth as they woo his wife, Penelope.
The epic then tells of Odysseus’s ten years of traveling, during whichhe has to face such dangers as a giant, man-eating Cyclops (Polyphemus) and such subtler threats as the goddess Calypso, who offers Odysseus the choice ofimmortality if he will abandon his quest for home and become her husband.
The second half of the poem begins with Odysseus’s arrival at his home island of Ithaca(see Itháki).
Here, exercising infinite patience and self-control, Odysseus tests the loyalty of his servants, plots and carries out a bloody revenge on Penelope’s suitors, and is reunited with his son, his wife, and his aged father.
IV OTHER WORKS ATTRIBUTED TO HOMER
Besides the Iliad and the Odyssey, the so-called Homeric Hymns, a series of relatively short poems celebrating the various gods, have also been attributed traditionally to Homer because their style resembles that of the epics.
V HOMER’S EPIC STYLE
Scholars generally agree that Homer’s epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey, were composed by oral methods rather than by means of writing.
An essential feature of oral composition, especially of lengthy epics, is that the verses are constructed largely from ready-made verbal formulas that allow the poet time to improvise parts ofhis narration to suit the needs of the audience.
These traditional formulas—groups of two or more poetic words—are used either by the poet or by predecessors to fit various metrical positions in the line and todescribe recurrent situations in the narrative.
Thus a formula like “Him then in answer addressed the godlike, patient Odysseus” can be used whenever the poet wantsto introduce a reply by Odysseus.
The poet can cleverly vary the formulas to suit the poem’s needs.
Sometimes the formulaic passages extend over several lines, aswhen Homer describes the launching of a ship or the preparation of a meal.
In other words, the oral poet uses far more prefabricated material in building his poem than the pen-and-paper poet.
The fact that the poet is composing for listenersand not for readers lessens the risk that the repetitions may become monotonous.
As in listening to music, the audience at a fast-moving recital of poetry welcomesrecurrent themes and motifs, provided that the general pattern and movement hold the audience’s attention.
Both Homeric epics are written in an elaborate style, using language that is artificial and full of conventions (familiar literary devices).
The language of the epics incorporates dialects from a broad geographical and chronological range.
Nobody ever spoke Homeric Greek.
Within the range of dialects in the Iliad, scholars have identified some aspects that are of a later age than others, thus suggesting that they are the creation of the final composer of the Iliad.
The similes (figures of speech that draw comparisons), for example, fall into this category.
The metrical form of the Homeric epics is dactylic hexameter—that is, lines of six feet, each foot consisting of three syllables, one long syllable followed by two shortsyllables.
The rhythm of d um-diddy is an example of a dactyl—a long syllable and two short syllables.
In some feet, a spondee (two long syllables) is substituted for a dactyl, creating the rhythm dum-dum instead of dum-diddy .
Unfortunately, the stresses in the English language make the meter difficult to duplicate satisfactorily.
In addition to the stresses that made possible the rhythms of dactylic hexameter, ancient Greek had other qualities that contributed greatly to the pleasing sounds ofHomer’s poetry: a finely graded range of vowels and consonants, and accents that represented different pitches.
Homer greatly exploited both qualities in his verses.Sometimes, too, he achieves remarkable onomatopoeic effects, in which words imitate the sounds of objects or events they are describing.
Other noteworthy features of Homer’s style in both poems are his extended similes (such as the comparison of the Achaeans to bees in the Iliad), striking metaphors (such as the “lily voices” of cicadas), and archaisms (expressions and techniques from earlier periods).
He employs his combined resources of sound, imagery, and sense to support his narrative and enrich his characterization in the Iliad and the Odyssey alike.
Stylistically no significant distinction can be made between the two Homeric epics, although some modern scholars have believed that they were composed by differentpeople.
The Iliad deals with passions, with insoluble dilemmas.
It has no real villains; Achilles, Agamemnon, Priam, and the rest are caught up, as actors and victims, in a cruel and ultimately tragic universe.
Homer makes his audience feel tremendous sympathy for the fall of the enemy of the epic’s hero.
In the Odyssey, on the other hand, the wicked are destroyed, right prevails, and the family is reunited.
The gods themselves care about justice.
Here rational intellect—that of Odysseus inparticular—acts as the guiding force throughout the story.
VI THE “HOMERIC QUESTION”
The modern text of the Homeric poems was transmitted through medieval and Renaissance manuscripts, themselves copies of now-lost ancient manuscripts of theepics.
From classical antiquity until recently, Homer’s readers may have distrusted the tales describing him as a blind beggar bard of Chios (in the Homeric Hymn to.
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