The Iliad and the Odyssey can be found on any list of the world's greatest books. From the beginning of Western literature, readers have appreciated these two epic poems for both their entertainment value and their ability to make us reflect on the full range of perennial human concerns. The influence of these poems on the works of other writers is so pervasive that to be familiar with the characters, themes, and episodes of the Iliad and the Odyssey is to be familiar with some of the most significant motifs of subsequent literature.
Each poem is dominated by an extraordinary man and his fate. Though the stories are self-contained, they interpenetrate so that the brief, brilliant life of the warrior Achilles at Troy in the Iliad counters the endurance of long-suffering Odysseus. While Achilles excels in the forthright labor of war, Odysseus is the master of craft, enabling him to manipulate circumstances to the best advantage, moving behind and through the scenes as a strategist, diplomat, and trickster. These characteristics do not, however, flourish only in making war. They also come into play, as we see in the Odyssey, in the multifarious world beyond the battlefield and its clear-cut ranks of adversaries.
When Odysseus and Achilles meet in the House of the Dead, in the exact middle of the Odyssey, the contrast between them is stunning. The living Odysseus has risked his life to come to this place beyond all earthly boundaries in order to acquire the knowledge to continue his journey. The shade of Achilles is despondent, deprived of the narrow arena of war by which he was defined and by which his fame was secured. Each hero in different ways has sought happiness through actionAchilles in a concentrated blaze of glory, sacrificing youth and life for fame that will last forever; Odysseus by striving to experience the full range of possible worlds. When Homer has them meet in the House of the Dead, the place of final resolutions for all mortals, he seems to be asking us to consider a fundamental question: What is happiness, and what kind of life is conducive to it?
Choose any prominent theme in the Odysseyfathers and sons; the relationships of men and women, especially husbands and wives; the responsibilities of leadership; piety; the obligations and transgressions of hosts and guests; the relation of revenge and justiceand it is possible to chart a course through the entire book with that theme in mind. However, each thread of the story is interwoven with so many others that focusing on one soon brings into view the entire warp and woof of the story's fabric. Like its hero, Odysseus, and its heroine, Penelope, the Odyssey eludes attempts to reduce it to a few simple meanings, not because it is so ambiguous, but because it is so intricate.
In essence, the story of Odysseus is straightforward: a veteran of a long war, ten years away from his wife, son, and realm, he sets out to return home with his men. As the result of calamities, some brought on by himself and others beyond his control, he wanders for ten more years, along the way experiencing the breadth and depth of the world. Finally, after his men are lost, he is alone. At last he returns, kills the unwelcome guests who have laid waste his wealth and besieged his wife, seeking to marry her; resumes his role as father, husband, and son; makes peace in his kingdom; and then fades from our view as the poem abruptly comes to an end.
However, the way that the story is told is anything but straightforward. Even the "man of twists and turns" announced as the protagonist in the first line of the poem is not identified by name until 23 lines later. There are stories whose truth lies in their directness; others, in their slantwise approach. The Odyssey as a whole proceeds by indirection, like the many tall tales Odysseus tells to gain credibility among strangers, and even among those closest to him. Through flashbacks, simultaneous events, reminiscences, narratives by those whose stories have no other witnesses, rumor, and legend, the Odyssey moves toward the single-minded goal of its central characterhomecoming and reunion. The structure of the poem seems to emphasize that no homecoming is straightforward, and that every homecoming raises complex questions about what has changed and what has remained the samefor both the one who returns and those who are at the place of return. What, we may ask, remains the essence of the "man of twists and turns" that allows him to maintain his identity as Odysseus?
This indirection reaches its pinnacle in the lengthy book 19, during the conversation between the disguised Odysseus and his wife, Penelope. In the middle of Odysseus's invented autobiography, which touches her deeply enough to make her weep, the narrator interjects, "Falsehoods all,/but he gave his falsehoods all the ring of truth" (p. 397). Her feeling for the stranger is strong before she even knows that he is her husband. On the surface, Odysseus's way of approaching Penelope after so many years is strategic; if he were to reveal himself too soon, he would risk failure in ridding his household of her suitors. More than that, he seems to be a suitor himself, winning again Penelope's love and loyalty because of what he is, not who he is. The facts of his tale are false; the sentiment is true. At the end of book 19, as if by intuition, Penelope proposes a resolution for the predicament of her unwelcome suitorsthe contest of the bow and targets, which only Odysseus is likely to win. Has the truth of falsehood and indirection led her to recognize Odysseus? Homer is silent on this, as if to make us ask ourselves where truth lies and how our shifting interpretations of fact and evidence can ever come around to certainty and resolution.
Nothing certain is known about who Homer might have been. By the time of the Greek classical agethe fifth century b.c.e.there was already a widespread belief that he was the blind, inspired author of both the Iliad and the Odyssey and that he had lived somewhere in the island culture of Asia Minor three or four hundred years earlier. The events depicted in the two books were thought to have occurred several hundred years before Homer's lifetime. The Iliad and the Odyssey were considered fundamental writings at the time of Plato, and they frequently received dramatic public recitations. In addition, the poems were held to exemplify the ideals of virtuous behavior, civic duty, and religious piety on which all education should be based.
However, even in ancient times, there were dissenting opinions. A few scholars believed that Homer was fictional and that the two epics were written by different authors. Later, others questioned whether Homer was the author or merely the editor or scribe who first wrote down the poems, organizing a long tradition of oral recitation. Even the language of Homer obscured his identity: he wrote in a highly stylized form of Greek that was not known to be particular to any geographical region, but seemed contrived to express the sense of the stories of Achilles and Odysseus in an elaborate and flexible poetic meter. Modern scholars have enriched the debate with intricate theories about how oral poetry is memorized and transmitted through many generations of reciters, opening up the possibility that the Homeric epics do not have behind them an individual author, in our contemporary sense of the word.
What transcends all the differing opinions concerning the identity of Homer is the remarkable interwoven complexity and profound consistency of the two books themselves. At the very beginning of the long sequence of political and cultural development commonly referred to as Western civilization, the Iliad and the Odyssey powerfully and coherently delineated the narrative patterns that have since animated the ways in which literature has imparted meaning to human experience.
* Cavafy's "Ithaca," Canto XXVI of Dante's Inferno, and Tennyson's "Ulysses" and "The Lotos-Eaters" are all based on, and implicitly comment on, the story and characters of Homer's Odyssey. Read together, these poems challenge us to reflect on the nature of Odysseus and his journey.
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