Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- OLYMPUS: OR THE RELIGION OF THE HOMERIC AGE
- SECT. I On the mixed character of the Supernatural System, or Theo-mythology of Homer
- SECT. II The traditive element of the Homeric Theo-mythology
- SECT. III The inventive element of the Homeric Theo-mythology
- SECT. IV The Composition of the Olympian Court; and the classification of the whole supernatural order in Homer
- SECT. V The Olympian Community and its Members considered in themselves
- SECT. VI The Olympian Community and its Members considered in their influence on human society and conduct
- SECT. VII On the traces of an origin abroad for the Olympian Religion
- SECT. VIII The Morals of the Homeric Age
- SECT. IX Woman in the heroic age
SECT. IX - Woman in the heroic age
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- OLYMPUS: OR THE RELIGION OF THE HOMERIC AGE
- SECT. I On the mixed character of the Supernatural System, or Theo-mythology of Homer
- SECT. II The traditive element of the Homeric Theo-mythology
- SECT. III The inventive element of the Homeric Theo-mythology
- SECT. IV The Composition of the Olympian Court; and the classification of the whole supernatural order in Homer
- SECT. V The Olympian Community and its Members considered in themselves
- SECT. VI The Olympian Community and its Members considered in their influence on human society and conduct
- SECT. VII On the traces of an origin abroad for the Olympian Religion
- SECT. VIII The Morals of the Homeric Age
- SECT. IX Woman in the heroic age
Summary
No view of a peculiar civilization can on its ethical side be satisfactory, unless it include a distinct consideration of the place held in it by woman. And, besides, the position of the Greek woman of the heroic age is in itself so remarkable, as even on special grounds to require separate and detailed notice. It is likewise so elevated, both absolutely and in comparison with what it became in the historic ages of Greece and Rome amidst their elaborate civilization, as to form in itself a sufficient confutation of the theories of those writers who can see in the history of mankind only the development of a law of continual progress from intellectual darkness into light, and from moral degradation up to virtue.
The idea and place of woman have been slowly and laboriously elevated by the Gospel: and their full development has constituted the purest and most perfect protest, that the world has ever seen, against the sovereignty of force. For it is not alone against merely physical, but also against merely intellectual strength, that this protest has been lodged. To the very highest range of intellectual strength known among the children of Adam, woman seems never to have ascended, but in every or almost every case to have fallen some what short of it. But when we look to the virtues, it seems probable both that her average is higher, and that she also attains in the highest instances to loftier summits. Certainly there is no proof here of her inferiority to man.
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- Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age , pp. 479 - 520Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010