Unit 2 |
|
English
201:
Masterpieces of Western Literature |
.Unit 2 Reading | Course Reading | Entry Page |
Introduction | Background | .Explication | Questions | Review |
Explication:
Reading:W&H:
162-91.
This is the second of three lessons on The Iliad. Our theme in this section is honor.
AK refuses to return to the battle because, he says, AG dishonored him
by taking Briseis. Ironically, all 3 of the great Greeks lose women: AK
loses Briseis, AG lost Khryseis, & MEN lost Helen. Even Zeus
himself lost Thetis. Only AK finds this wound to his honor unendurable.
With AK out of the battle, the Trojans, led by HK, threaten to overrun
the Greek defensive lines, burn their ships, & massacre them.
AG regrets his pride & disrespect:
9.17 with
slow tears trickling,
AG addresses the officer corps:
9.20 Friends,
leaders of Argives, all my captains,
Zeus Kronides entangled me in folly
to my undoing.
AG proposes giving up the siege.
He is not sincere. His suggestion is a tactic. Twice we saw
AG give orders without any regard for the feelings or those affected.
The first instance was when AG kept Khryseis, disregarding the advice of
"all the soldiers" (1.27). The second instance was when AG took Briseis
from AK, against the advice of Nestor: "do not deprive him of the girl"
(1.325). Now in tears, AG demonstrates that he has learned his lesson
about arrogance (hubris) & fate. But he is not a general
by accident. AG knows that he can count on the impetuous Diomedes
to oppose his suggestion. AG proposed:
9.31
Now let us act on what I say:
Board ship for our own fatherland! Retreat!
Notice how different AG's tone is from
book 1 when he ordered troops to seize Briseis from AK. At that time
he didn't invite anyone to "act on what I say." AG commanded:
1.377 if
he [AK] balks at giving her
I shall be there myself with men-at-arms
in force to take her -- all the more gall for him.
Ironically, Diomedes says AG isn't committed
enough!
9.46
[You have] no staying power
Who sacrificed his innocent daughter Iphigeneia
to see this enterprise through? Diomedes' stupidity in this
incident should cause us to smile when he ends his speech, saying:
9.58 We
came here under god.
Nestor is the wise old man. He has
had to relinquish the spotlight on the battlefield to younger men.
But he now enjoys the limelight in giving advice, especially to the great
general AG. How funny that AG pulls the strings to have Nestor advise
him to do exactly what AG wants to do. First Nestor reminds AG that
he is responsible for the army & can't simply go home (like AK has
done -- at least in retiring from the battle).
9.112 Lord Marshal
of the army, AG
. . . you hold power over a great army
& are responsible for it
How likely is it that AG forgot this after
consenting to kill his daughter & then relinquishing Khryseis, because
he said:
1.137 I want the
army saved
& not destroyed
Unlike AK, AG patiently accepts Nestor's
stinging judgment:
9.126 you took the
girl Briseis
. . . but not with our consent.
Far from it; I for one had begged you not to
Just the same, you gave way to your pride,
& you dishonored
a great prince,
...........a
hero to whom the gods themselves do honor.
Does Nestor go too far here? Perhaps. But Akhaians are dying everyday because AK is absent from the battle. AK's mother is a goddess; & not just any goddess, but the one that Zeus wanted to marry. Finally, Nestor loves to give speeches & typically goes a step too far to make sure that his points are entirely clear.
Try to remember AG's demeanor in this scene.
Later we will compare how AG accepted his fate (& guilt) & how
AK avoids saying anything comparable (cf. 19.64). AG:
9.137 Sir,
there is nothing false in your account
of my blind errors. I committed them;
I will not now deny it.
9.143 I lost my head,
I yielded to black anger
but now I would retract it & appease him
What is AK worth? AG hopes to entice him to re-enter the battle by offering him: 7 tripods, 10 bars of gold, 20 caldrons, 12 prize winning horses, 7 skilled women, Briseus (the girl that AG took that caused the problem with AK!), 20 Trojan women of his choice, 7 farms, & one of his daughters. OD (Odysseus), Aias (Ajax) & Phoinix convey this offer to AK. Why these three? Phoinix is a foster father to AK. OD won't make a mistake (like Diomedes probably would). Aias is the next greatest fighter after AK. If he begs AK to return to the battle, that should sate AK's vanity. (Sort of like having Emmitt Smith tell Troy Aikman, "Troy you have to get back in the game because I can't replace you & we can't win without you").
OD reminds AK that he is his own worst
enemy:
9.307 How rightly
in your case you father, Peleus
put it in his farewell [to you]
9.312 Control your
passion, though, & your proud heart,
9.316 That was your
old father's admonition
OD makes the offer to AK. This scene
should remind us that Paris was only offered one of the 3 values: power,
wisdom, or beauty. AK is offered all of these & more. OD
says that if AK is unmoved by money, power, sex/desire, & the honor
that this offer represents, he ought to:
9.367 take pity on
the rest [of us],
all the old army, worn to rags in battle
These will honor you
as gods are honored!
OD continues, saying that if all these
enticements are not enough, consider:
9.370 What
glory you may win!
Think: HK is your man this time
Recall that AK's mother is a goddess who
responds to his every whim. Predictably AK prefers self pity:
9.392 What
least thing have I
to show for it, for harsh days undergone
& my life gambled, all these years of war?
Hopefully you smiled at this scene.
How ridiculous. What could have kept AK out of war? War is
his life. He loves it. It is the only place where he is entirely
in control; the place where he is the power that decides everyone's fate;
the place where he is honored above everyone else. If AK is sincere
in this speech, why does he linger at Troy? Why didn't he go home
when he quit the battle? He stays, not only because he knows that
he will get back into the fight, but also because this scene is precisely
what he has wanted: to be begged; to be told that he (& the kind of
power he personifies) is essential; that we (in the polis) literally
cannot live without him. Vanity knows no bounds. AK is unresponsive:
9.422 he [AG] cannot
change my mind.
AK goes on to bluster -- to prolong this
honor when the entire army acknowledges that it can only be saved by AK;
to bask in self-righteousness. AK predicted that the day will soon
come when:
9.289 You
will eat your heart out,
raging with remorse for this dishonor
& that day is now. AK says he
will not be appeased until AG:
9.472 pays me back
full measure, pain for pain, dishonor for dishonor.
What could AG do to satisfy AK? What
could Thetis do to make AK happy? The point is that appetite is insatiable.
The more it is fed, the more it demands, including:
18.124 anger that envenoms even the
wise
& is far sweeter than slow-dripping honey
clouding the hearts of men like smoke
Interestingly, Gautama Buddha & Homer came to similar conclusions: that because appetite cannot be satisfied, it must be controlled at the time of inception. Either we control it or it controls us. Almost all of Homer's characters, except Odysseus, is an addict. They are addicted to power. They are addicted to beauty.
AK articulates the Greek outlook on life
that continues to influence the West. He says that he has:
9.500 two possible destinies
if on the one hand I remain to fight
. . . I lose all hope of home
but gain unfading glory
if I sail back to my own land my glory
fails--but a long life lies ahead for me
Paris illustrates the second choice: evade
trouble & indulge appetite. What do we think of Paris?
Even his own brother, HK, is contemptuous of Paris. Paris is also
pathetic because he is too immature to recognize that he has no honor.
Greek myth says that reality was divided into three realms. Humans
are destined never to reach Olympus. Soon enough we will be shades
in underground gloom possessing nothing but our memories of life.
Sarpedon, Zeus' son, defines our human condition:
12.356 could we but survive this war
[life is war]
to live forever deathless, without age,
I would not ever go again to battle
nor would I send you there for honor's sake!
But now a thousand shapes of death surround us,
& no man can escape them, or be safe.
Let us attack--whether to give some fellow
glory or to win it
Our lives are fated to be fleeting. If you choose to indulge appetite, perhaps you will be happy for a while. But happiness is bought at the price of anonymity. The Greek paradox that defines human life is this:the gods trouble those they love. We initially think the opposite: that if God loved us, she (e.g., Thetis) would protect us from trouble. The problem is that we would never grow up. In struggling to overcome trouble we write an identity. The best hope for our tragic human condition is to perform honorable acts that we will be proud to remember in the next life when we will no longer possess a body & consequently can no longer act. Hell is something like post-traumatic stress syndrome causing us to relive formative or defining moments of panic & crisis & cowardice to eternally feel guilt & shame. Only one thing could be worse: never to have dared to live at all. Surprisingly, the text for Rev. Jesse Jackson's motto to "be somebody" is Homer. OD will provide the model of a person who dared to be great. AK is great, but he is so instinctive & unreflective that we do not see much of our own humdrum & non-heroic lives reflected in him.
After OD fails to convince AK to return to the battle, Phoinix counsels
AK. He reminds AK that Peleus appointed him to act as a surrogate
father to AK:
9.532 For your sake
the old master-charioteer,
Peleus, made provision that I should come
9.588 I who formed
your manhood
Phoinix is concerned for AK's sanity:
9.729 do not let your mind
go so astray!
Let no malignant spirit
turn you that way, dear son!
Old Phoinix tells the charming story about
prayer & folly:
9.612 Folly is strong &
swift,
outrunning all the prayers, & everywhere
arriving first to injure mortal men
9.610 prayers are daughters
of almighty Zeus--
one may imagine them lame
follow[ing] after passionate Folly.
9.616 they come healing
after [Folly has touched us]
AK is unreachable or unresponsive to reason.
When OD reports the failure of the mission to get AK to come back into
the battle, Diomedes says:
9.8.49 At the best of time
he is a proud man; now you have pushed him far
deeper into his vanity & pride.
By god, let us have done with him
whether he goes or stays!
Ironically, this is our feeling
about AK. Our reason tells us something different: that AK is irreplaceable
& essential for the polis.
Homer's plot seems to have reached a dead end. Remember the beginning when AK almost killed AG? If that had happened the work would never have started. AK was compelled by a power greater than his own. Ironically it is Athena (reason). This is ironic because we have seen that AK will not listen to reason. When Briseis is taken from AK, he attempts to kill AG for this dishonor. AK goes into his sulk when he cannot get his way. The plot now repeats a second version of this sequence. HK takes AK's protégé PAT. This time AK can vent his rage in murderous violence. Ironically AK's rage is now seen as socially constructive. AK will save the Akhaians. There is a second irony that repeats Homer's fundamental theme about the attraction of power. We cheer AK's splendor but when the dust settles, great HK is dead & the polis that he defended will soon be annihilated.
Book 16 opens with irony. AK has
accepted PAT as a kind of military apprentice. AK is suppose to be
both a tutor & role model for PAT. We find PAT scolding his teacher!
16.35 But you are a hard
case,
AK! God forbid this rage you nurse
should master me. You & your fearsome pride!
What good will come of it to anyone?
Have you no pity?
If AK has no pity for his comrades, PAT
is determined to turn the tables to show AK how to act:
16.48 Lend
me your gear to strap over my shoulders;
Trojans then may take me for yourself
& break off the battle.
AK consents. He must be confident
in PAT's military skill. Indeed, we see PAT kill dozens of Trojans.
AK admonishes PAT:
16.107 You must not,
for joy of battle, joy of killing Trojans,
carry the fight to Ilion.
16.111 The Lord Apollo
loves the Trojans. Turn back . . . as soon
as you restore the safety of the [Greek] ships
Once again AK prays for the help of the
gods to:
16.282 accomplish what
I most desire
AK prays for what we all pray for: success,
power, & safety ("to return unhurt"). Tragically:
16.295 Zeus who views the
wide world
heard him. Part [of his prayer] he granted, part denied:
he let PAT push the heavy fighting
back from the [Greek] ships, but would not let him come
unscathed from battle.
Caught up in the excitement of the plot, we are likely to forget that The Iliad is poetry. Everything that happens is symbolic. Life is the battle. No one remains unscathed. Ultimately we follow PAT into death. But there is also a day for greatness; for glory & honor.
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