Homer
Homer was the major figure of ancient Greek literature and the
author of the earliest and finest epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Modern scholars hold
conflicting theories on the authorship of these poems, but the
ancient Greeks believed that a blind poet named Homer had composed
them. Tradition has it that he lived in the 12th century BC, around
the time of the Trojan War, in an
Ionic settlement, either Chios or Smyrna, where he made his living
as a court singer and storyteller.
Modern archaeological research has uncovered artifacts similar to
those described in the poems, providing evidence that Homer wrote
at a later date. Because the poems display a considerable knowledge
of Eastern, or Ionian, Greece and are written in the dialect of
that region, most scholars now suppose that Homer was Ionian of the
8th or 9th century BC. Homer writes nothing of himself in his
poems, but similes in the Iliad and the Odyssey frequently make
reference to the humble lives of farmers and artisans, so it is
sometimes conjectured that Homer was of this class.
The question of how the poems were composed also remains a matter
for debate. It is likely that Homer and his audience were members
of a preliterate, oral culture and that his poems were written down
long after their original composition. Nineteenth-century scholars
argued that one person could not memorize so long a text and that
the poems must have been compiled by an editor, who merged several
independent works into a consistent whole. This view is supported
by the occasional inconsistencies of narrative and awkward
transitions from subject to subject.
Twentieth-century studies of preliterate societies have shown,
however, that lengthy works can be composed orally by poets whose
recitations belong to a long tradition of storytelling. The oral
poet constructs his poem from verbal formulas, groups of two or
more words that have already been composed in order to serve
recurring needs in the narrative. These may be used, for example,
when the poet wishes to reintroduce a character whom he has already
described. Formulaic passages may also extend over several lines
and describe actions such as combat or the preparation of a meal.
The oral poet composes for listeners who, like the audience at a
musical concert, base their appreciation on the repetitive elements
that bind a work together and impress its theme on the memory. Like
the poet of Beowulf, Homer was probably a practitioner of an
inherited art, retelling a story that his audience had heard many
times before.
Differences of style and language between the Iliad and the Odyssey
have led some critics to argue that each is the work of a different
poet. The 3d-century AD literary critic Longinus suggested,
however, that the Iliad was the work of Homer's youth and the
Odyssey of his maturity. This simple but acute perception accounts
for the wide divergences in moral and religious tone between the
two. The Iliad is the tragic story of the noble Achilles, who
perfectly embodies the ancient Greek ideals of heroic conduct but
also suffers from the human failings of pride and anger. The
Grecian army is divided by bickering, many admirable men are
killed, and even the gods quarrel. The Odyssey, by contrast,
contains many comic episodes, and its hero, Odysseus, triumphs over
formidable adversaries through his superior intelligence, not by
brute strength. The Iliad portrays a universe marred by moral
disorder, but the Odyssey shows gods punishing men for their sins
and granting a good man his just reward.
The ancient Greeks regarded Homer as divine and respected his work
as a source of wisdom and model of heroic conduct. His influence on
later literature is too extensive to be assessed but may be traced
from Hesiod to the present day. The Roman poet Vergil emulated both
the Iliad and the Odyssey in his Aeneid, whose hero, Aeneas,
displays the courage of Achilles and the wisdom of Odysseus.
Aeneas's wanderings from Troy to Italy--where he founds the city of
Rome--provided Roman readers with a myth that linked their own
culture with that of ancient Greece. The Homeric tradition in
literature inspired William Shakespeare's tragic and antiheroic
Troilus and Cressida (1609) and James Joyce's Ulysses (1922), which
transports the deeds of Odysseus to the setting of 20th-century
Dublin.