As my husband is revisiting the classics for personal literary enrichment, I was wondering if people really knew or know today precisely who the writer of the Iliad and of the Odyssey was. The two masterpieces were considered superb literature from the time when they were written down, presumably in the eighth century B.C., and were ascribed to the poet Greeks called “Homer.”
The Iliad
vividly described the 10-year war between the Greeks and the Trojans. At
its conclusion, Troy was infiltrated by Greek soldiers who hid in a wooden
horse. Once inside the fortress, the Greek soldiers emerged from the wooden
horse at night, opened the city gates and set fire to Troy, destroying the
city. Nobody is quite sure how large the horse was, or how many soldiers were
able to hide inside the horse.
Archeologists
have argued over the potential existence of such Trojan horse and some
historians even go as far as attributing wooden planks found in Turkey, 15 ft
in length, to such a wooden horse, although it could have been the remains of a
ship.
The famous Italian painter Giovanni Tiepolo used his enormous talent to bring to life the Trojan horse being dragged with ropes through the city streets by the Trojans. The circa 1760 oil on canvas painting hangs in the National Gallery in London.
But who was
Homer? The ancient Greeks called the poet Homer, but many doubt that the epic
stories are the literary work of just one person or that he really was called
Homer, this mythical writer who has been venerated and his work dissected and
studied for almost three thousand years.
There is a
seventh or sixth century B.C. poem that refers to “a blind man living in
Chios,” an island on the Aegean Sea. Greeks do recognize that Homer was a
street performer of oral poetry, a “singer.” These “singers” memorized certain
stories that most people have heard or invented new ones on the spot as they
were paid by listeners.
Over time,
more elements were added to the oral tradition and to certain stories,
recognized by specific metric patterns and repetitions of certain word
combinations. Improvisation by more talented “singers,” added a level of mystery
and enchantment to some lengthy stories.
According to
scholars, the Greeks were illiterate and passed on stories through oral
traditions only. They did not have an alphabet until the middle of the eighth
century B.C. when they acquired it from the Phoenicians with whom they traded. The
Phoenicians, who lived on the eastern side of the Mediterranean, in the Levant
region, area known today as Lebanon (Tyre was the capital), invented their alphabet
in the 1200 B.C.
When the Iliad
and the Odyssey were finally written down, it would have contained years
of refinements, flourishes, and additions by various “singers” who used their
talents to enchant listeners, paying customers who were surely mesmerized by
the creative and imaginative storytelling.
“Scholars
agree that both poems contain all the ingredients of orally transmitted poetry.”
The Odyssey
describes the ten-year meandering journey of Odysseus at the end of the
Trojan War. Scholars think that Scylla and Charybdis represent the straits of Messina
but cannot agree where Circe Island was.
A map representing
the storied meanderings of Odysseus from Troy to his birthplace, Ithaca, wanders
across the sea, around Sicily, to Cape Circeio (Circe’s home) in western mid-part
of today’s Italy, back and forth through the tip of Italy, twice above Sicily, and
three times across the Ionian Sea towards Greece and finally to Greece.
The details
most scholars agree on is that the mythical Odysseus left Troy and returned to
his birthplace in Greece, Ithaca. Everything else in-between is often left to
individual interpretation.
Vase
paintings depict Odysseus putting out the eye of the Cyclopes and the sirens trying
to lure away Odysseus who is tied to the ship’s mast.
Because tales
from the Trojan War and from Odysseus’ meanderings seem to refer to different
time periods, and to earlier times, it is safe to say that different “singers”
who told shorter stories contributed to the epics.
Some scholars
believe that, at the time that the alphabet was borrowed from the Phoenicians,
a poet (“singer”) emerged who used individual stories and created a compendium
of two much larger stories called epics and either wrote them down himself or
commissioned scribes to do so. Another hypothesis considers that perhaps there
were two such “Homers” who “wrote” the Iliad and the Odyssey.
The
possibility arises from the fact that the language in the Odyssey seems
typical of a later period than the language of the Iliad. The Iliad focuses on
a few days of brutal war, whereas the Odyssey focuses on ten years of
travel and adventure of one man and his crew across the seas, involving
fantastical beings and magical deeds.
The 19the
century novelist Samuel Butler thought that, unlike the brutal and martial story
of the Iliad, the Odyssey was written by a woman since it did not
contain topics of war at all.
No matter
how many “singers” contributed to the Homeric epics, in the end, one or perhaps
two individuals which scholars like to call “Homer,” have put them all together
into two separate but unified stories. We will never know exactly as “no
manuscript earlier than the third century B.C. survives.”
Fascinating....thanks so much for sharing this
ReplyDeleteIleana,
ReplyDeleteI remember watching a few documentaries where they believe they found the isle of the Sirens and that cave of the underworld with all those passages. It was really interesting. The sound of the Sirens was the wind effect on the island under certain conditions.
Rae Ann