Unit 3 |
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English
201:
Masterpieces of Western Literature |
.Unit 3 Reading | Course Reading | Entry Page |
Introduction | Background | .Explication | Questions | Review |
Explication:
Reading:
W&H: 191-274.
This is the third of three lessons on The Iliad. Our theme in this section is mortality (death).
PAT graphically slays dozens of Trojans:
16.341 Dealing death to
a chief & champion, Patroklos
drove them in confusion from the ship
Aias, the lesser, takes a Trojan champion alive:
16.388 but killed him on
the spot with a sword stroke
across the nape--the whole blade running hot
with blood, as welling death & his harsh destiny
possessed him.
Homer invites us to think about this slaughter by taking us out of the
heat of the battle:
16.442 As under a great
storm black earth is drenched
on an autumn day, when Zeus pours down the rain
in scudding gusts to punish men, annoyed
because they will enforce their crooked judgments
& banish justice from the market place,
thoughtless of the god's vengeance; all their streams
run high & full . . .
while cultivated fields erode away
This passage hopes to explain the relationship between violence & justice. We will see that Aeschylus' plays focus on precisely this point. The sequence here begins with hubris: "they will enforce their crooked judgments." Because these men do not have the wisdom to accept fate (sophrosyne), they must be compelled to do so by violence ("god's vengeance"). The problem is that vengeance & violence is not confined to the guilty. It spills out to flood "cultivated fields" & destroy culture (polis) itself. I think we are invited to be equivocal about PAT's violence. The story is told from the Greek point of view, so we cheer for our team. But we are also repelled by PAT's violent atrocities that are suppose to establish justice. As Aeschylus says, they seem like fresh outrages that appeal for some further measure of justice that would stop violence. Many people feel that way today about capital punishment. To complete the analysis of the metaphor here, notice that there are 3 possibilities. Too little rain creates a desert. Too much rain produces a flood. If the rain is power/violence, we need to find the fulcrum point, the point of balance. We do not want anarchy. Nor do we desire a tyranny or police state. But some measure of violence (police, military) is necessary to nurture any society.
After quickly dispatching a dozen Trojans PAT faces Sarpedon & Zeus
himself questions fate that inexorably brings pain:
16.503 Sorrow
for me, that in the scheme of things
the dearest of men to me must lie in dust
16.506 shall I catch up Sarpedon
out of the mortal fight with all its woe . . .
Or shall I make him fall
Hera makes sure that we understand the point: that to be human means
enduring pain in the struggle for power & self-definition & ultimately
losing that battle in death:
16.514 A man who is born to die, long destined for
it,
would you set free from that unspeakable end?
If he does, Zeus will open Pandora's box by literally creating a different
species. If humans did not die, they would be gods. Logoswould
be destroyed, chaos would ensue:
16.518 should
you dispatch Sarpedon home alive,
anticipate some other god's desire
to pluck a man he loves out of the battle
16.523 dear to you though he is, & though you
mourn him,
let him fall
If Zeus himself is compelled to accept fate & mourn because of what it brings, can we complain? Hera implies that Zeus has the power to change fate, if he so desired. What we see is that Zeus is not impelled by desire. He chooses to accept logos & fate even though it is painful.
Sarpedon's death is less tragic than HK's, because we know so much more
about HK's nobility from the scenes with his brother, wife, & father.
Yet Sarpedon's death clearly illustrates the tragedy of life's lost battle
for power:
16.564 Sarpedon
raging, clutching the bloody dust.
Imagine a greathearted sultry bull
a lion kills amid a shambling herd:
with choking groans he dies under the claws.
In case you didn't get the point about Zeus & fate, Homer tersely
comments:
16.601 Here's
a great man destroyed,
Sarpedon, son of Zeus. Zeus let his own son
die undefended.
Our first unit followed the theme of power.
Our second unit featured the theme of honor.
Now we complete the circle, by so poignantly recognizing that honor &
righteousness without power are doomed to die as surely as the reverse:
power without principle is doomed to chaos. We suffer the tragedy
of Sarpedon, not only for the loss of youth & life, but also because:
16.632 Sarpedon
had been a bastion of the town of Troy.
The one man who does not feel the loss is:
16.638 PAT
in his savagery
who proposes to desecrate the corpse:
16.645 take
him, dishonor him, & strip his arms
We see how quickly fate can turn. PAT slays another dozen Trojans
& then faces HK.
16.836 Apollo
. . .
16.839 on the Trojans he conferred his glory
PAT is out of control & perilously near to committing hubris
in his jeering disrespect for the tragic deaths of his adversaries:
16.854 You
jeered at him [Kebriones], then, master of horse, PAT
Soon PAT will be in the dust. How long do PAT & HK battle?
From the time when "the sun stood at high noon" (16.801) until "when the
sun passed toward unyoking time" (16.803). Who kills PAT? 3
blows are struck by different adversaries. First Apollo:
16.906 struck
with open hand
the man's back & broad shoulders, & the eyes
of the fighting man were dizzied by the blow
Among his many powers, Phoibos (16.903 the shining one) Apollo is the
god of the sun. Six hours or longer battling for his life in the
sun against HK with no Gater-aid, causes PAT to suffer heat stroke:
16.920 his shield &
strap fell to the ground; the Lord
Apollo, son of Zeus, broke off his cuirass.
Shock ran through him, & his good legs failed,
so that he stood agape
This allows a Dardan fighter
to get in a spear thrust. PAT tries to retreat but HK
16.939 charged
straight at him through the ranks & lunged for him
low in the flank, driving the spearhead through
As he bleeds to death, PAT promises
that he will be avenged by AK:
16.981 your death stand
near, & your immutable end,
at Prince AK' hands
Is this justice? Is PAT's life (or AK's life, that PAT imitates) acceptable? What is PAT fighting to achieve? (You will find this question repeated in the Question section.)
AK learns that HK killed PAT.He
is filled with grief & rage.If
the grief were his only emotion, wouldn’t you expect AK to grieve (like
a father) for everything that PAT lost in losing his life?He
won’t see his parents again; he won’t get married & have children,
etc.Instead, AK once again perceives
that something has been taken from him, just as Briseis was taken by AG.Do
you believe AK when he says:
18.130I
have quelled my passion as I must.
AK means that he is no longer angry
at AG.Why?Because
his anger has a new target: HK.How
angry & enraged is AK?Enough
to slaughter children & commit suicide:
18.389as
I must follow you into the grave,
.........I
will not give you burial, PAT,
..........until
I carry back the gear & head
..........of
him who killed you, noble friend.
..........Before
your funeral pyre I’ll cut
the throats
.........of
12 resplendent children of the Trojans--
..........that
is my murdering fury at your death
AK is not only angry at the loss
of his beloved, he is also embarrassed.AK
had accepted the role of mentor for PAT.Above
all else, AK should have protected PAT’s life & then acted as a role
model & military instructor. We
will see HK worried that:
22.126 troops
have perished for my foolish pride,
...........I
am ashamed to face townsmen & women.
...........Someone
inferior to me may say:
..........‘He
kept his pride & lost his men.'
Imagine AK facing PAT’s father.What
could he say?“I saved my life by
sending your son to his death.”This
would be ignominious enough, but it is even worse because AK had promised
to protect PAT.AK admits:
18.113.
he needed me
..........to
shield him or to parry the death stroke.
18.118Here
I sat,
..........my
weight a useless burden to the earth,
..........&
I am one who has no peer in war
Once again Thetis hears her son wailing.She
feels:
18.58.my
life is pain
........for
my great son’s dark destiny
18.67.I
have no power
........to
help him, though I go to him.
Indeed, AK tells his mom:
18.147though
you love me; you cannot make
me listen.
I hope you remember this line &
AK’s suicidal stubbornness, because OD does listen.We
recall that when Athena prevented AK from murdering AG, AK said:
1.256.When
you 2 immortals [Hera & Athena, the 2 divinities that Paris had not
listened to] speak, a man
........complies,
though his heart burst.
Everyone listens to power.When
your life hangs in the balance, you pay attention & “obey” fate.When
we (or AK) seems to have the power to dominate others, he sees no reason
to listen.As AG complained to Nestor:
1.337 .this
man’s [AK] ambition,
..........remember,
is to lead, to lord it over
..........everyone,
hold power over everyone
..........give
orders to the rest of us!
In contrast, we will see OD listening
respectfully to those without ostensible power, listening to little girls
like Ino (who is sea foam), the 12 year old princess Nausikaa, to “the
awesome one [Athena] in pigtails” (appearing as “a small girl child” OD
7.44, 23), & to Hermes who appears as “a boy whose lip was downy in
the first bloom of manhood” & who presumes to tell OD “what to do”
(OD 10.297, 307).It is all very
simple: AK says you cannot make me listen, even if I pay with my life.OD
listens, not just when his life is imperiled by someone with obvious power,
he also listens to feminine wisdom, whose power is not immediately displayed.Actually,
the power of malign feminine characters (Helen & Klytemnestra) is immediately
manifest. In contrast, the
power of benign feminine characters is manifest in the children they raise
& the civilization they foster.
HK has taken AK’s armor from the corpse of PAT.Consequently, AK must wait until his mother, Thetis, brings him new armor made by Hephaistos himself.There is a long section describing this armor.Why?(See the Chat question in the Question section).
Thetis brings the armor & instructs
her son:
19.38 .call
the Akhaians to assembly.
..........Tell
them your anger against AG
..........is
over & done with!
AK now obeys because it is what he
wants.PAT & Briseis are markers
to gauge AK’s narcissism & rage.When
Briseis was taken, AK said:
9.411 .He
[AG] holds my bride, dear to my heart
9.418...
. . as in my heart I loved
........Briseis,
though I won her by the spear
What does Briseis mean to AK now?
19.64..AG,
was it better for us . . .
..........to
waste ourselves in strife over a girl?
..........If
only Artemis had shot her down
...........
. . on the day I made her mine
If AK truly loved Briseis, wouldn’t he prefer life with her rather than suicidal violence?Of course, that is the point, that AK’s rage is uncontrollable, causing doom & ruin for him & everyone around him (1.2).
Remember that AK personifies the
power of battle.AG personifies the
more sophisticated & less tangible power of politics & military
strategy.We see the difference in
this very funny scene.AK has just
addressed the army, telling them that he is returning to battle.This
should be his hour.Notice how AG
steals the scene by speaking so much more eloquently.AK
implies that Briseis was all to blame & bluntly declares:
19.76.I
drop my anger now!
In contrast, AG goes on & on,
not so much apologizing to AK as stealing the scene:
19.108I
am not to blame.
..........Zeus
& Fate & a nightmare Fury are,
..........for
putting savage Folly in my mind
..........in
the assembly that day, when I wrested
..........AK’s
prize of war from him.In truth,
..........what
could I do?Divine will shapes these
things.
AG goes on to tell the story about
Folly who was flung from Olympus to land in the dreams of men, “arriving
first [before prayer or sophrosyne] to injure mortal men” (9.615).AG
ends by demonstrating his largesse:
19.163.
. . . see how richly
.........I
reward you!
AK is no longer interested in competing
with AG for honor.He wants HK:
19.165AG,
make the gifts
.........if
you are keen to . . . or keep them
When OD suggests that the battle
will be long & consequently the troops should eat well in preparation,
AK says:
19.235.
Slaughter & blood are what I crave, & groans
..........of
anguished men!
Magnificent as he is, HK also perishes
because of his vanity. His
father, Priam, begs HK:
22.66 ..Come
inside the wall, child; here you may
..........fight
on to save our Trojan men & women.
HK’s mother also begs:
22.101dear
child; defend yourself against the killer
........this
side of the wall, not hand to hand.
.........He
[AK] has no pity.
Why doesn’t HK listen to mom &
dad?We already quoted the lines:
22.127I
am ashamed to face townsmen & women.
..........Someone
inferior to me may say:
..........‘He
kept his pride & lost his men, this HK!’
.........So
it will go.Better, when that time
comes,
..........that
I appear as he who killed AK
...........
. . or else that I went down
..........fighting
him to the end before the city.
Despite the patriotism at the end,
HK resembles AK: he would rather die than be dishonored.HK’s
very body objects when AK comes on implacable & awesome as Ares himself:
22.163 HK,
as he watched, began to tremble.
........Then
he could hold his ground no more.He
ran.
What a pathetic sight.Even
Zeus is touched & – as he had earlier with Sarpedon – considers exempting
HK from mortality:
22.206 Come, gods, put your
minds on it, consider
.........whether
we may deliver him from death
.........or
see him, noble as he is, brought down
........by
Peleus’ son, AK
Athena reminds her father & us
that
22.212 The man [& all
men]
.........is
mortal, & his doom fixed, long ago.
As with Sarpedon, there is the suggestion
that Zeus has the power to interfere with logos & fate, but
he is wise enough to resist desire & accept reality.Thus
Zeus tells Athena, who personifies his thought (she emerged from Zeus mind
as an adult androgyne in armor):
22.216I
am not bent [like AK – “you cannot make me listen”]
........on
my suggestion, & I would indulge you [wisdom incarnate]
HK hopes to make a deal with death,
less for himself than for the grief he knows that his death will cause
his wife, his parents, & everyone in Troy.The
agent of death, AK, tersely tells HK:
22.316Summon
up what skills you have.By god,
.........you’d
better be a spearman & a fighter!
........Now
there is no way out.
When PAT, wearing AK’s armor, was
sunstroke:
16.921 Apollo, son of Zeus,
broke off his cuirass
The cuirass is the breastplate
& backplate, which includes some protection for the neck.HK
is now wearing AK’s old armor.Here
is another illustration of how fate works. When AK wore that armor,
is it likely that he knew its weak point?What
would he have worried about, wearing that armor?
Apparently his neck. Because HK is wearing that very armor,
AK knows exactly where to aim his blow:
22.379 AK poised in
his right hand, with deadly
.........aim
at KH, at the skin where most
..........it
lay exposed.But nearly all was covered
..........by
the bronze gear he took from slain PAT,
.........showing
only, where his collarbones
.........divided
neck & shoulders, the bare throat
.........where
the destruction of a life is quickest.
Does HK’s death satisfy the appetite
of rage?AK’s quick & easy victory
leaves him full of adrenalin & rage that no longer has a target:
22.411Would
god my passion drove me
.........to
slaughter you & eat you raw, you’ve caused
.........such
agony to me!
The most poignant scene in The
Iliad belongs to AND (Andromakhe).She
is preparing a hot bath for her husband whom she anticipates will soon
be home from the battle.Picking
out a lovely garment for him, she hears "a wailing & a distant moan."Rushing
to the ramparts she sees that head she had hope to bathe & stroke,
bouncing in the dirt.As she faints,
her tunnel vision adds even more telescopic depth to the nightmare sight:
22.546 AND stood gazing from the wall
........&
saw him being dragged before the city.
........Chariot
horses at a brutal gallop
........pulled
the torn body toward the decked ships.
This is end of the action in The
Iliad.The city is not yet annihilated,
but it is already empty & pointless.Thus
AND vows:
22.600 Ah , there are
folded garments in your chambers,
........delicate
& fine, of women’s weaving.
........These,
by heaven, I’ll burn to the last thread,
........in
blazing fire [rage]!They are no
good to you.
Our first theme in The Iliad was power.The power to invest in the super-ego & define an identity that would prevail & dominate over others who, also impelled by the will-to-power, sought to dominate us.Our second theme was honor.This might be construed as enjoying the result of our struggle to gain power, to be somebody.The tragedy is that this mid-life pride of accomplishment cannot last.Our third theme was mortality.HK so nobly defends civilization.Still, Chronos, the primitive power that engendered Zeus, consumes both.Human beings are fated to perish.No human power can change that end.
We have not explicated Book 24 of The Iliad. Because that last book reviews the lessons illustrated by the plot of The Iliad, we will explicate Book 24 in the Review section of this lesson.
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