Book contents
- Frontmatter
- ADVERTISEMENT
- Contents
- I AGORÈ OR THE POLITIES OF THE HOMERIC AGE
- II ILIOS
- III THALASSA
- EXCURSUS I
- EXCURSUS II
- IV AOIDOS
- SECT. I On the Plot of the Iliad
- SECT. II The Sense of Beauty in Homer: human, animal, and inanimate
- SECT. III Homer's perception and use of Number
- SECT. IV Homer's Perceptions and Use of Colour
- SECT. V Homer and some of his Successors in Epic Poetry: in particular, Virgil and Tasso
- SECT. VI Some principal Homeric Characters in Troy. Rector: Helen: Paris
- SECT. VII The declension of the great Homeric Characters in the later Tradition
- Plate section
SECT. VI - Some principal Homeric Characters in Troy. Rector: Helen: Paris
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- ADVERTISEMENT
- Contents
- I AGORÈ OR THE POLITIES OF THE HOMERIC AGE
- II ILIOS
- III THALASSA
- EXCURSUS I
- EXCURSUS II
- IV AOIDOS
- SECT. I On the Plot of the Iliad
- SECT. II The Sense of Beauty in Homer: human, animal, and inanimate
- SECT. III Homer's perception and use of Number
- SECT. IV Homer's Perceptions and Use of Colour
- SECT. V Homer and some of his Successors in Epic Poetry: in particular, Virgil and Tasso
- SECT. VI Some principal Homeric Characters in Troy. Rector: Helen: Paris
- SECT. VII The declension of the great Homeric Characters in the later Tradition
- Plate section
Summary
To one only among the countless millions of human beings has it been given to draw characters, by the strength of his own individual hand, in lines of such force and vigour, that they have become, from his day to our own, the common inheritance of civilized man. That one is Homer. Ever since his time, besides finding his way into the usually impenetrable East, he has provided literary capital and available stock in trade for reciters and hearers, for authors and readers of all times and of all places within the limits of the Western world ;
Adjice Mæoniden, a quo, ceu fonte perenni,
Vatum Pieriis ora rigantur aquis.
Like the sun, which furnishes with its light the close courts and alleys of London, while himself unseen by their inhabitants, Homer has supplied with the illumination of his ideas millions of minds that were never brought into direct contact with his works, and even millions more, that have hardly been aware of his existence. As the full flow of his genius has opened itself out into ten thousand irrigating channels by successive subdivision, there can be no cause for wonder, if some of them have not preserved the pellucid clearness of the stream. Like blood from the great artery of the heart of man, as it returns through innumerable veins, it is gradually darkened in its flow.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age , pp. 555 - 589Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1858