Introduction To The Iliad
Introduction To The Iliad
Introduction To The Iliad
8-2012
Repository Citation
Cook, E. (2012). Introduction to the Iliad. In E. McCrorie (Trans.), Iliad (pp. xvii-lxii). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University
Press.
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Introduction
for its attention to the rhythms and sounds as well as the sense of the Greek original.1
This is especially welcome because meter is a key to understanding the poem. Unlike
English meters, which are based on accent, those of Greek verse are based on the length
of the syllables, while the accents are voiced independently. The verses of Greek epic are
composed of six feet. Each foot begins with a long syllable, marked as , followed by
two short syllables, , or another long syllable. For example, the phrase queenly Hera
In most Homeric verses, a word ends in the third foot, causing a break known as a
caesura, which may occur after the first syllable (b), or in between two short syllables
(c). A somewhat less common caesura may also occur in the fourth foot (d). Word-end at
the end of a foot is called a diairesis and is especially common a the end of the fourth
foot (e). A line of Homeric verse is schematized as follows, with numbers marking the
1 2 3 4 5 6
| | | | |
a bc d e
a) verse begin
b and c) main caesura
d) caesura
e) diairesis
1
The ancient name for this verse form is dactylic hexameter: the first word refers to the
metrical shape which was taken to resemble the joints of a finger. The second word
indicates that the verse consists of six feet, or metra. Hence, six-footed finger-verse.
The proem, or introduction to the Iliad, is scanned below, with McCrories translation
||
Mnin eide, the, Peleideo Akhilos
Sing of rage, Goddess, that bane of Akhilleus,
|| ||
oulomnen, h mur Akhaios lge theke,
Peleus son, which caused untold pain for Akhaians,
|| ||
polls d iphthmous psukhs idi proapsen
sent down throngs of powerful spirits to Aides,
|| ||
heron, autos d helria tekhe knessin
war-chiefs rendered the prize of dogs and every
|| ||
oionos te psi Dis d eteleeto boul
sort of bird. So the plan of Zeus was accomplished
||
ex ho d t prta diastten ersante
right from the start when two men parted in anger
|| || ||
Atredes te wnax andrn ka dos Akhilles
Atreus son, ruler of men, and godlike Akhilleus.
The verses of Greek epic are thus relatively long and the number of syllables is
highly variable, ranging between twelve and seventeen per line. The principle by which
2
two short syllables and one long syllable can be interchanged, the resulting variations in
the length and velocity of the line, the natural breaks within it, and the complex interplay
of the independent systems of meter and accent, allow for nearly limitless variations in
rhythm, tone and emphasis. Dactylic hexameter is thus an ideal medium for the dramatic
natural cadences of Greek heroic diction.4 This process continued over the space of many
periods and dialects. While the Homeric epics were composed during the archaic period
(conventionally dated to 776-479 BCE) we know that Greek poets sang heroic poetry
during the much earlier Bronze Age (approximately 2,000-1,200 BCE) since we can
explain certain metrical problems by reconstructing the earlier forms and pronunciations.
For example, the phrases potnia Hr (queenly Hera) and Dii mtin atalantos (equal to
Zeus in intelligence) both violate the rules of meter in Homer, but would have scanned
correctly in the Bronze Age. On other grounds it has been argued that poetry of the
period already included Homeric heroes such as Aias, Odusseus, and Idomeneus. The
implication, then, is that hexameter poetry featuring Homeric warriors and a divine
apparatus was sung in an unbroken chain from the Bronze Age to the archaic period.5
Phrases such as potnia Hr and Dii mtin atalantos belong to a much larger
pattern of repeated language commonly referred to as formulas. Perhaps the best known
examples of such formulas are the names and epithets of the poems characters. For a
3
least one of the breaks in the verse, whatever the grammatical function of his name might
be:
1 2 3 4 5 6
| || | |
a bc d e
Subject
Position c: podarks dios Akhilleus (swift-footed, godlike Akhilleus)
Position d: podas kus Akhilleus (swift-footed Akhilleus)
Position e: dios Akhilleus (godlike Akhilleus)
kus Akhilleus (swift Akhilleus)
Direct Object
Position c: Akhilla ptoliporthon (Akhilleus, city destroyer)
Indirect Object
Position a: Pleid Akhilli (Akhilleus, son of Peleus)
Position c: Akhilli ptoliporth (Akhilleus, city-destroyer)
Possession
Position b: Pliade Akhilos (Akhilleus, son of Peleus)
Position c: Akhillos theioio (godlike Akhilleus)
4
Several additional features of the system are worth noting. First, the phrases not only
begin at natural breaks in the line, but typically complete it as well. The poet who
composes using these formulas thus has a way of completing a verse with Akhilleus as
the subject after reaching positions c, d, and e. As important, the poet usually has only
one way of completing the verse when he reaches a given position, and none of these
economy and scope. That is to say, metrically identical formulas are avoided, and those
in use tend to have a wide variety of applications: for example, Akhilleus, city-
destroyer scans correctly as both the direct and indirect object, and is consequently used
in both constructions. On the other hand, if the poet reaches position c, he can complete a
reaches position e, he can simply omit swift-footed and complete the line with godlike
Akhilleus. And since Akhilleus and Odusseus have the same metrical shapes, both
of them receive the epithets godlike and city-destroyer. The economy and scope of
the formulaic system distinguishes the Homeric epics from those of literate poets such as
Vergil. On this basis, Milman Parry famously concluded that the Homeric epics were
orally composed: that is, the formula is part of a functional system that helps the poet
The formulaic nature of Homeric poetry extends to larger scale narrative units
journeys, going to bed, bathing, clothing and arming, deliberations, assemblies, oath
taking, sacrifices and feasting. Walter Arend, who produced the first in-depth analysis of
5
the type-scenes in Homer, catalogued no less than twenty-one typical elements of
Homeric sacrifices, for example. These elements are, moreover, repeated in the same
order, though individual elements can be treated cursorily or eliminated entirely. Type-
Homeric poetry: the dimensions of a narrative unit generally reflect its significance. As
Richard Martin has demonstrated, this is also true of character speeches: Nestors famous
long-windedness does not reflect the garrulity of old age so much as his importance as a
strategic thinker. Indeed, the monumental dimensions of the Iliad itself directly assert its
warrior is described as dominating the field of battle. Its typical features include:
8. The hero feels renewed vigor and achieves fresh exploits (these include a duel
with an enemy leader, the leaders defeat, the victors boast, and struggle over the
6
9. A double simile10
organize most of the major battles in the poem. The aristeia of Diomedes in Book 5 of
the Iliad also shows that Homer can exploit the expectations generated by the type-scene
The poet signals that he is about to begin an aristeia by declaring that Athene
roused Diomedes to battle and describing the brilliance of his armor. We then get an
initial exploit, as he kills Phegeus and captures his chariot. Other Greeks now make a
series of kills: implicitly, Diomedes has broken the Trojan ranks, which is the point at
which mass slaughter becomes possible. There follows an initial setback when Pandaros
wounds Diomedes with an arrow. Diomedes prays to Athene, who hears his prayer and
offers help and encouragement, but cautions him against fighting any of the gods except
Aphrodite. Diomedes then goes on to renewed exploits, killing Pandaros and wounding
Aineias. Aphrodite attempts to protect Aineias, but Diomedes wounds her, whereupon
she quits the battlefield leaving her son for Apollo to defend. When the scene shifts with
her to Olympos we are prepared to believe that Diomedes aristeia is at an endafter all,
he has just wounded an Olympian god! But the scene presently returns to the battlefield
where we see Diomedes press the attack against Aineias even though he knows Apollo is
protecting him: back off, Apollo commands, do not hope / you can match the Gods
(5.440-1). Again we may be led to suspect that Diomedes has reached the end of his
exploits: the god himself has marked the limits, one might say, of heroism itself. This
seems to be confirmed when Ares takes the field: Diomedes yields as Athene instructed,
and Hektor and Sarpedon lead a Trojan counterattack. But now Athene appears to
7
Diomedes unbidden and takes the reins as his charioteer! The two then set out after Ares,
whom Diomedes succeeds in wounding. Finally, after two false conclusions, each
designed to heighten the impact of the climax to Diomedes aristeia, we reach that
climax as Brazen Ares / roared like nine thousand warriors fighting, / more like ten
The inference to be drawn is that everything about Homer is formulaic. Even the
plots of the epics can be usefully viewed as formulaic, since they are structured by a
traditional narrative pattern, known as Withdrawal and Return. Underlying the pattern
is story of Persephones annual disappearance and arrival, and it also informs the plot of
the roughly contemporary Homeric Hymn to Demeter. This is the sequence of themes in
the Hymn:
(1) the withdrawal of the hero (or heroine), which sometimes takes the form of a
long absence; this element is often closely linked with a quarrel and the loss of
someone beloved;
(2) disguise during the absence or upon the return of the hero, frequently
(4) the recognition of the hero, or at least a fuller revelation of his identity;
Points of contact between this pattern and the Iliad are concentrated on the quarrel
between Akhilleus and Agamemnon, though the disaster to which the quarrel leads
accounts for much of the battle narrative: Akhilleus has his mistress, Briseis, taken from
8
him by Agamemnon (1). As a result, Akhilleus curses Agamemnon and withdraws from
battle in anger (1). The Greek army suffers heavy casualties, and an embassy is sent to
Akhilleus to offer restitution (5). At first, Akhilleus refuses the offer, just as Demeter
impersonates Akhilleus in battle, and is killed by Hektor (1 and 2). Akhilleus and
Agamemnon are then formally reconciled and Akhilleus returns to battle (6), where
Akhilleus gains enhanced status by warding off destruction from the army, just as
Demeter and Persephone enjoy new honors on their return to Olympos. It should be
noted, however, that both the Iliad and the Odyssey differ from the Demeter-myth in one
Demeter does in the Hymn, he also returns to exact revenge on the enemy, as Odusseus
does in the Odyssey. This suggests that the theme of Return for Revenge represents an
epic adaptation of the pattern. On the other hand, the most important point of contact
between the epics and the Demeter-myth is that in each case the Return of the hero results
in renewal for the community after a period of crisis in which its existence was
threatened.
The Hero
Epic heroes can also be viewed as formulaic in that they are traditional
general terms, the Greek hero interrogates the boundaries between humanity and divinity.
The hero is thus defined by his superhuman strength, as measured by his conquest of
monstrous adversaries or success as a warrior. As a result, the hero can serve as a vehicle
9
for celebrating the triumph of the life-force over the powers of death. This idea underlies
heroic combat-myth generally, but it is realized still more directly in katabasis, the story
of the heros successful descent into and return from Hades. In Herakles katabasis, this
underworld, the hell-hound Kerberos, and the captive but still living Theseus. So viewed,
the heros immortalization is a virtual inevitability, and deified heroes were in fact
worshipped throughout the Greek world. The Iliad, however, denies its heroes
immortality so that their deaths are tragic. This, in turn, makes the choices that Akhilleus
The heros abilities are not limited to physical strength but include exceptional
intelligence and capacity for deceit. The hero thus embodies a polarity between cunning
intelligence (mtis) and violent might (bi) that belongs to a broad class of oppositions
e.g., mind and body, word and deed, culture and natureused by the Greeks to organize
their experience.13 Gregory Nagy has argued that this pairing of force and intelligence as
complementary attributes of the traditional hero can be traced back to pre-Greek, or Indo-
European myth.14 Yet mtis and bi are also regularly opposed in Greek thought, for
embody heroic strength and cunning, when viewed together Akhilleus failure and
Odusseus success at capturing Troy can be used to celebrate the superiority of mtis over
bi. At the same time, heroic strength and cunning are equally trangressive, leaving the
hero a highly ambiguous character. This combination of exceptional ability and moral
ambiguity makes the hero a natural vehicle for exploring the relationship between
10
Before turning to Homeric society, however, we need to consider a few additional
aspects of the traditional hero. First, the hero often has a divine adversary and patron, and
displays a marked affinity for each. Odusseus, for example, is persecuted by Poseidon for
blinding the Kuklops, but is supported by Athene. Akhilleus, whose relationship with the
gods is especially close, arguably has more than one patron, Athene, Hera, and above all
his goddess mother, Thetis. The identity of his antagonist, Apollo, is more
straightforward. In that Akhilleus and Apollo are both unshorn embodiments of youthful
beauty, they resemble each other physically. While Akhilleus is the best of the Akhaians,
Apollo is pointedly called the best of the gods in the context of a prophecy that he will
kill Akhilleus (19.43). Apollo and Akhilleus both rout the enemy army by shouting while
holding or wearing the Aigis (15.321, 18.217ff.). The similarity borders on the parodic
(21.599ff.). Whereas Apollo is a god of healing as well as plague, the most lethal warrior
at Troy is also said to possess special powers of healing, taught to him by the kentaur
Kheiron. More important, however, is that in the Iliad their similarity is also thematic in
that the wrath of Akhilleus issues directly from, and has analogous causes and
The hero often has a mortal companion, who can likewise be seen as reflecting
the heros own character. In the Iliad, Akhilleus alter-ego is Patroklos, who embodies
the mortal and compassionate side of Akhilleus semi-divine nature. Scholars have noted
that the companion often dies in Withdrawal and Return narratives. In the Iliad, this can
11
Anatolian loan-word meaning ritual substitute.15 The function of the therapn is to take
on the impurities of the figure for whom the substitute then dies. This, we shall see, is a
Finally, the hero is equally a Man of Anger and a Man of Pain, and in both an
active and a passive sense.16 The wrath of Akhilleus thus originates in the pain he suffers
when deprived of honor, and he responds by inflicting pain on his own community. In
fact, pain occupies the center of Akhilleus thematic identity in Homer, just as his wrath
is the central theme of the epic. Gregory Nagy has plausibly explained Akhilleus name as
meaning one whose las [host of fighting men] has khos [grief].17 Although his name
describes Akhilleus as a source of pain, he also suffers more terribly than any other
character, first the grief of losing honor and then the far greater grief of losing Patroklos,
his substitute.
The hero can thus be cast as a warrior or a dragon slayer, the pain that the hero
inflicts can be viewed as harmful or beneficial, and it falls equally on the enemy and on
the heros own community. In the course of the Iliad, Akhilleus causes more pain to both
the Greek and Trojan communities than any other fighter at Troy. Nevertheless, it is the
pain Akhilleus causes his own community that introduces him in the poem, and thus
measures his greatness. And although quintessentially a hero of physical strength (bi),
Akhilleus does not use his strength to harm his community. Instead, he relies on a
stratagem (mtis), in which he withdraws from battle along with his troops until the
Greeks suffer humiliating defeat. His mtis thus serves to reveal the worth of his bi and
is in a sense subordinate to it. But his very stratagem also figures Akhilleus as a social
agent and leader of men on whom he relies in a competitive struggle with Agamemnon.
12
In other words, Akhilleus behaves heroically by harming his community, but he is
equally an elite warrior competing with other elites for status and prestige.
Homeric Society
The traditional hero was good to think with during the period in which the epics
were taking shape.18 The date of the first written manuscripts of Homer remains
controversial, though most would agree that they fall somewhere in the archaic period,
between the final third of the eighth century and the first half of the sixth. For our
purposes, that is close enough, since the social facts and tensions that fuel the plot of both
epics would have defined Greek life throughout this time and well beyond it.
The Greeks of the archaic period were intensely aware that powerful kingdoms
had blanketed the Greek mainland during the Bronze Age, roughly half a millennium
earlier.19 They knew the rulers of these kingdoms as warriors and as builders of large and
wealthy palaces, around whose ruins many of the later poleis, city-states, of Greece
sprang up. Yet they seem to have been unaware that the wealth of these rulers was based
on the production of textiles and scented olive oil, that the palaces were redistributive
centers with elaborate bureaucracies, and that Bronze Age society was highly complex
In general, one can say that the oral traditions out of which the epics developed
were relatively better at preserving information about the material culture such as tower
shields and boars tusk helmetsalthough much of this could have been periodically
cultural values. There is in fact an important reason why epic poets would have had no
13
wish to preserve such information: the epics appealed to their audiences by their exotic
and opulent Bronze Age settings, but even more powerfully by allowing the audience to
see themselves, their struggles, concerns, values and aspirations reflected in such settings.
The notional setting of Homeric epic is thus the Bronze Age, but the social
realities depicted in them are those of archaic Greece: like the Homeric gods, Homeric
society has been streamlined in such a way that audiences throughout the Greek world
can see their own cultural realities reflected in the poem. A leader of the Homeric
the presence of multiple basileis on Ithake and Scherie in the Odyssey suggests that it
only loosely corresponds to the English term. Adult male members of elite households
are known as agathos, esthlos, noble, and aristos, best, or chief. These terms are
vague and general, pointing to the lack of a complexly structured aristocracy. On the
other hand, aristos also points to skill in warfare. So too, one of the terms for the political
community, laos, also designates the army. War was a defining feature of archaic life.
Homers elite society was notionally egalitarian: that is, nothing formally
distinguished the standing of an individual elite from that of other elites except,
potentially, the vague term basileus. Despite, or rather because of, the lack of formal
honor and relative status (tim). Such status can be concretely embodied by a prize of
honor ( geras), awarded in return for extraordinary service. Briseis does not simply
symbolize but concretely embodies the honor that Akhilleus won by sacking her city.
Moreover, honor is a zero-sum system: one mans honor is inherently at another mans
expense and both will do anything in their power to preserve it. The term for this
14
competitive struggle for status is eris, which can be applied to the competition between
individual elites within the community, enemy combatants, and even opposing armies.
Finally, there is more than one theater in which elites can compete, and more than one
resulting hierarchy of tim. Homeric epic distinguishes between three principle theaters
leader. An important result of all this is that the status of the individual within elite
society was under constant threat and negotiation, while elite identity was established by
the very act of competing with other elites, and by being allowed to compete. Identity
much useful information as possible from their fellow competitors, while withholding
any information that others might be able to turn against them. Outright deception is a
legitimate competitive strategy even with members of the same community. It follows
that Homeric characters are often indirect in their words and actions, which routinely
conceal hidden motives: for example, when Agamemnon encourages the entire army to
return home in Book 2, he is actually testing the armys resolve to fight (see below).
The entire adult life of an elite male was structured around winning and
preserving honor, which is itself a public construct. The rules and procedures of elite
competition are sometimes referred to as the heroic code, although they should not be
divorced from the lived realities of archaic Greece. It is no exaggeration to say that
competition for status was the engine that gave us Homeric epic, democracy, the
Parthenon, and Plato. But elite competition was also ruthless and often brutal, and their
competitive strategies not infrequently brought elite self-interest into conflict with the
15
needs of the community. Elites themselves could experience this same conflict as a series
popularity of Homeric epic throughout the classical period, and even to the present day,
derives in no small measure from its powerful dramatization of these very conflicts, for
which it does not offer easy solutions. Homeric epic is commonly said to reflect elite
values and though there is obviously some truth to thisthe aristeia is at one level an
ideological statementit is important to note that in the Iliad Agamemnon and Akhilleus
are both punished at the level of the plot for their implacable pursuit of self-interest at the
communitys expense.
Mythological Background20
The cultural logic of the Homeric world is thus essentially that of archaic Greece.
This world is given a Bronze Age patina with the presence of antique artifacts and
practices such as chariot warfare, with the avoidance of obvious anachronisms such as
iron weaponry, and above all with the heroic stature of its human characters and the open
involvement of the gods in human affairs. Whereas the social world in which Homeric
heroes circulate is thus broadly contemporary with the poet and his audience, the song
traditions out of which the epics developed were many centuries old by the time they
were finally written down. The Iliad consequently assumes an audience familiar with the
entire Trojan War and it routinely alludes to events that lie outside its own narrative.
Other events are crucial to understanding the poem although Homer does not directly
mention them or even seems to suppress them, as he often does with exotic folklore
16
traditions. This is even true of the event ultimately responsible for the war itself, the
prophecy of Themis.
Though Homer does not mention the prophecy, Laura Slatkin has demonstrated
that it elucidates the central themes of the Iliad. From Pindar we learn that Zeus and
prophesied that Thetis would produce a lord mightier than his father. As a
consequence, she advised Zeus and Poseidon to end their strife, wed Thetis to a mortal,
and see her son killed in war. As Slatkin remarks: The price of Zeuss hegemony is
Akhilleus death.21 Although the Iliad nowhere relates the story, it does seem to allude
to it when Akhilleus asks his mother to supplicate Zeus on his behalf if you ever /
gladdened the Gods heart with words or the right work (1.394-5; cf. 352-4). Akhilleus
continues, however, by describing how Thetis once protected Zeus when Hera, Poseidon
and Athene sought to depose him. The theme of his threatened overthrow is retained, but
the gods involved are significantly those who will oppose Zeus plan in the Iliad to honor
Thetis request.
Zeus faces two other threats that can further elucidate the Iliad: Hesiod relates
that early in his rule Zeus did battle with Typhoeus, a monster sporting a hundred
serpentine heads, whom he dispatches with his thunderbolt. In other accounts, Zeus
initially suffers defeat and is rescued by Hermes and Pan, while Typhoeus is identified as
both a dragon and as the Orontes river.22 Such features reveal that Typhoeus belongs to a
widely attested tradition in which the ruler of the gods consolidates his power by using
celestial fire to defeat the forces of chaos, personified as terrestrial water and as a snake.23
Another version occurs in the labors of Herakles, when Zeus son does battle with the
17
Hydra, a snaky monster from the swamps of Lerna whose very name means water. This
tradition finds an important echo in the Iliad when Zeus almost son, Akhilleus, does
Nor is the prophecy of Themis the only such warning that Zeus receives. In fact,
the prophecy belongs to a broader complex of themes that takes us to the origins of the
cosmos itself. Hesiod relates that after the defeat of Typhoeus, Zeus made personified
intelligence, Metis, his first wife.24 Like Thetis, she is a water-nymph. When she was
about to give birth to Athene, Gaia and Ouranos advised Zeus to put Metis in his belly so
that no one else would have his kingly honor. For after Athene, Metis was destined to
succession, Ouranos by preventing his children from being born, that is by keeping them
in Gaias belly, Kronos by swallowing and keeping them in his own. Zeus is more
successful than his predecessors because he deals with the source of the problem: the
swallows the female rather than her offspring, in the process assimilating Metis to his
own being.
displacing it to earth. In Hesiod, this transfer is embodied in the person of Pandora, the
first woman. Hesiod relates that prior to Pandoras arrival men lived free from evils, hard
work and disease which brings death, but that when she opened her storage jar she
released these into the world. In other words, she brings with her the necessity of
18
generational succession even as she herself represents the possibility of procreation. The
marriage of Thetis thus belongs to this second strategy of displacement. In the Iliad,
moreover, the Trojan War itself is closely linked to the succession theme, and in more
The key to the link is none other than competitive strife (eris). As opposed to
the mortal world, where men grow old, die and are replaced by their sons, in heaven
succession to earth is to banish the strife it brings from the company of the gods. This is
between Thetis and Peleus, meant to prevent generational strife in heaven.26 Eris arrives
anyway, and provokes strife among Aphrodite, Hera and Athene as to who is fairest.
Zeus again displaces their strife to earth by instructing Hermes to escort the goddesses to
Mt. Ida where Paris, the son of Priam, is to pass judgment. Aphrodite secures her victory
by promising him the most beautiful woman on earth, Helen, who was already married to
Menelaos. Strife is displaced onto humans for a third time when a contest among the
goddesses over beauty devolves into the contest over a beautiful woman that is the Trojan
War. The marriage of Thetis to Peleus thus directly leads to the greatest war in history
and produces the greatest hero to fight in the war, Akhilleus. And the greatest poem to
celebrate that war begins with strife over a woman, Briseis, between that same hero and
generational struggle that would have occurred in heaven if Akhilleus had been born the
son of Zeus.
19
After the judgment, Paris sails with Aineias to Sparta, elopes with Helen and
takes with him a considerable part of Menelaos treasure, while Menelaos is away on
Krete (3.233). When Menelaos learns of the elopement he plans the expedition against
Troy with Agamemnon. The army assembles at Aulis, on the Boiotian coast. Kalkhas
there prophesies that Troy will fall in the tenth year after seeing a portent in which a
snake eats nine sparrows before Zeus turns it to stone. Agamemnon later shoots a deer
and boasts that he surpasses Artemis in archery, whereupon the goddess raises a storm
that prevents the fleet from sailing. Again Kalkhas prophesies, ordering the sacrifice of
Agamemnons daughter, Iphigenia, to appease the goddess anger. The leaders send for
Iphigeneia under the pretext that she is to be married to Akhilleus. Traditions vary as to
whether Iphigeneia is then sacrificed or Artemis snatches Iphigeneia from the altar and
replaces her with a deer. This is another folktale tradition of the sort that Homer routinely
avoids, though like the prophecy of Thetis he alludes to it when Agamemnon declares
Kalkhas a prophet of evil and accuses him of never uttering a prophecy in his favor
(1.106-8). As we shall see, his accusation is embedded in a scene that broadly parallels
the sacrifice of Iphigeneia. Moreover, the audience certainly knew the story that his wife,
Klutaimnestre, will murder Agamemnon on his return. If she does so because of the
sacrifice of Iphigeneia, then the pro-Trojan Artemis has ensured that the cost of
prosecuting the Trojan war will be Agamemnons life. When the Greeks finally land at
Troy, Hektor kills Protesilaos, the first person to set foot on Trojan soil, in accordance
with a prophecy. Akhilleus subsequently drives off the cattle of Aineias, captures
Lukaon, a son of Priam, and sacks Lurnessos, Pedasos and many neighboring cities. In
the division of the spoils, Agamemnon is awarded Khruseis and Akhilleus Briseis.
20
So much for the events leading up to the Iliad. The poem also assumes familiarity
with those that follow: the epic Aithiopis relates that Penthesileia and Memnon arrive at
Troy after the burial of Hektor. Penthesileia is a female warrior from Thrace and the
daughter of Ares. Presumably she led a contingent of Amazons. This is another folklore
tradition of the sort that Homer avoids, and he nowhere mentions her (though see 3.189).
Memnon is an Aithiopian prince, and son to the dawn-goddess, Eos. He arrives at Troy
aristeia, and is killed in turn by Akhilleus. Akhilleus also kills Thersites, when the latter
taunts him as being in love with Penthesileia. A quarrel breaks out in the camp over
Odusseus.
As the fighting continues, Nestor suffers chariot-wreck when Paris strikes one of
his horses with an arrow. As a consequence Nestor is almost killed by Memnon, but is
rescued by his son, Antilokhos, whom Memnon kills instead. When Akhilleus attacks
Memnon, Zeus weighs their souls in a scale and that of Memnon sinks. Akhilleus then
slays Memnon in revenge for the loss of his friend. Eos, however, persuades Zeus to
render her son immortal. Akhilleus meanwhile drives the Trojans back to Troy, but is
killed at the Skaian gate from an arrow to the foot by Paris and Apollo. A battle is fought
over the corpse, which is finally rescued by Aias, with Odusseus protecting his back as he
retreats. Akhilleus is lamented by Thetis, her sisters, and the Muses. Thetis then snatches
her son from the pyre and transports him to White Island where he too enjoys
immortality. The Greeks nevertheless erect a funeral mound for Akhilleus, and hold
funeral games. Odusseus and Aias quarrel over who should be awarded Akhilleus
21
armsthat is, who is the best of the Akhaians now that Akhilleus has died. Odusseus
wins the contest, so that intelligence is privileged over might (mtis over bi,), and the
humiliated Aias commits suicide. Epeios, meanwhile, concocts the plan for the Trojan
Horse, which is executed by Odusseus and Athene. Troy thus falls by a stratagem, which
vindicates the award of Akhilleus arms to Odusseus. Lokrian Aias rapes Kassandra in
the temple of Athene, incurring the goddess wrath towards the entire army, and she
Synoptic Analysis27
The Iliads opening two scenes are of such comprehensive importance for
understanding the poem that they require the listener to draw on each feature of Homeric
epic that we have been considering: formulaic composition, the traditional hero, the
background to the war, and, above all, the dynamics of Homeric society. In terms of
formulaic composition, these scenes initiate a Withdrawal and Return, which provides a
scaffolding for the narrative of Books 122.28 On this scaffolding, Homer hangs a series
of battle narratives and scenes that echo important events outside the Iliads timeline. By
such means, the signal events of a ten year war are drawn into the compass of a poem
Turning from formulaic composition to social dynamics, we see that the theme of
the poem is Akhilleus mnis, a term normally applied to divine wrath. Kalkhas will
between the characters and their anger (1.75).29 Homer identifies eris as the source of
Akhilleus wrath when he asks the Muse, Which of the Gods brought these two into
22
conflict? (1.8: eris). The godlike anger (mnis) of Akhilleus thus results from
competitive strife (eris) over honor (tim). The effect of these links is to make elite
competition and its consequences for the wider community a, or even the, central issue of
the poem.
The Muse now takes over the narrative, declaring that Apollo caused them to fight
because Agamemnon dishonored the priest Khruses. The source of dishonor was
Agamemnons refusal to accept ransom for the priests daughter, Khruseis, whom the
Greeks had awarded Agamemnon as a prize of honor.30 As a result, Apollo attacks the
loss thus stems from a miscalculation of the priests standing with his patron deity. This
given the facts of Greek social life, his suspicions would have been wholly natural even
without the addition of some seemingly obvious cues that Akhilleus has suborned the
priest. After suffering nine days of losses, Akhilleus calls an assembly in which he
suggests that a prophet, priest or dream-interpreter identify the cause of the plague. The
prophet Kalkhas promptly declares that he can do so, but demands protection on the
grounds that he will anger a man who is greatly / ruling all the Argivesand Argives
obey him (1.79). Akhilleus agrees to protect him, even if he should name Agamemnon.
Thus encouraged, Kalkhas declares that Agamemnon is indeed responsible for the
23
Akhilleus: whereas from Agamemnons perspective, Akhilleus starts their strife, from
When Agamemnon learns that he must return Khruseis, he becomes indignant and
undermines his leadership position whether or not Akhilleus is responsible. His threat to
take the prize of honor from Akhilleus, Aias or Odusseus serves as a blanket assertion
of his authority at this crucial juncture, but Akhilleus rightly suspects that, as the
instigator of the situation, he is the real target. He thus warns that if Agamemnon makes
good on his threat he will subvert the very reason the Greeks are fighting at Troy, namely
to win honor by risking their lives in battle. When Akhilleus threatens to return home as a
consequence, Agamemnon tells him to flee if he wants to since Others alongside / shall
esteem me, mainly the Counselor, great Zeus (174-5). Agamemnons implicit calculus is
that he will still have sufficient troops to conquer Troy in Akhilleus absence. As if to
confirm his assumption, the Greeks initially have the advantage until Zeus imposes defeat
in Book 8. Again, however, Agamemnon misjudges his own and, more importantly,
The opening scenes of the poem are formally parallel, and the wrath of Akhilleus
both continues the wrath of his divine antagonist and has the same cause, object and
strategy: the prophet Khruses appears before the assembled Greeks and asks Agamemnon
to return his daughter in exchange for ransom; Agamemnon refuses whereupon Khruses
withdraws to the seashore and prays to Apollo for revenge; Apollo kills the troops in
punishment, and Akhilleus calls another assembly in which events repeat themselves.
24
The prophet Kalkhas declares that Agamemnon must return Khruseis without ransom and
must offer Apollo a sacrifice of atonement; Agamemnon takes Briseis from Akhilleus,
whereupon Akhilleus withdraws to the seashore and prays to his goddess mother for
revenge; as a result many more troops die, so that Agamemnon is forced to offer to return
Briseis with gifts of atonement. Whereas the Iliad is structured by the traditional pattern
of Withdrawal and Return, the events of Books 1 through 9 have an internal model in
the Khruses-paradigm.
taking Briseis from Akhilleus. He also breaks a fundamental rule of elite competition by
using his political authority to deprive Akhilleus of status (tim) won in battle. Akhilleus
finds the prospect of losing status so intolerable that he contemplates a parallel offense, in
which he would use his own superiority as a fighter to seek redress by killing
Agamemnon. But just as he reaches for his sword, Athene appears to him alone and
instructs him to end the fight (1.210: eris) and rebuke Agamemnon instead.
This scene introduces a repeated leitmotiv in which the poem nearly reaches a
conclusion contrary to fate and tradition, these being essentially the same. It is also the
initial registration in the poem of the traditional antinomy between violent might and
cunning intelligence (bi and mtis). Whereas Akhilleus impulse to violence is overtly
equally Akhilleus own. Indeed, the incongruity that no one seems to notice Akhilleus
having a full-blown conversation with an invisible goddess at this critical moment would
saying, Akhilleus realized that he would achieve greater satisfaction seeing Agamemnon
25
humiliated than killing him. To be sure, Athene is here more than a psychological
projection, but the fact remains that Homer routinely allows the audience to interpret
events in both theological and naturalistic terms. Homeric scholars commonly refer to
comparing them to the backstory of the war. Specifically, Agamemnons refusal to return
Khruseis is analogous to Paris refusal to return Helen. The analogy to Briseis is closer
still, since Agamemnon takes and withholds Akhilleus mistress. Akhilleus himself
exploits the parallel when he calls Briseis his wife in Book 9 (336). Whereas the
elopement of Helen with Paris will result in the destruction of Troy, the seizure of Briseis
will result in the defeat of the Greek army. Agamemnons actions thus undermine his
declares Agamemnon responsible for the plague, Agamemnon alludes to the sacrifice of
Iphigeneia by complaining that the prophet has never said anything to his advantage. The
similarity to the present situation is obvious, and explains the allusion: whereas Artemis
demands the loss of Agamemnons daughter for the war to begin, Artemis brother
demands the loss of his mistress for it to continue. In both scenes, Agamemnon stands
revealed by Apollos priest as having offended against divine prerogatives. Yet Apollo is
also Akhilleus antagonist, and Akhilleus not only suffers on account of the gods wrath,
but he also suffers dishonor at Agamemnons hands analogous to that which the god
26
Finally, the quarrel echoes the cosmic myth in which Zeus rule is threatened by a
potential heir. Their difference in age and authority allows us to see the strife between
the mortal counterpart of Zeus as best of the Akhaioi. The irony is that this is a contest
Akhilleus would have won in heaven. And since the quarrel also echoes the rape of
Helen, it unites the cosmic theme with the proximate cause of the war. As we shall see,
Homer often relates his characters to multiple characters and roles within the Iliad itself
When Akhilleus withdraws, first to the shore, then to his tent, the audience
assumes that disaster will result owing to the paradigmatic force of Withdrawal and
Return and the internal parallel with Khruses. At first the plan of Zeus follows this
scenario, though the gods expectations, like those of the audience, are deceived by the
Greeks who stubbornly refuse to play along and suffer defeat: in other words, Homer
uses the expectations created by the narrative pattern to celebrate Greek battle-prowess.
And so, Book 2 begins with Zeus deliberating how to honor Akhilleus and kill many
Greeks.31 His decision is to persuade Agamemnon to lead the army into battle: implicitly,
Zeus assumes that the army has been so weakened and demoralized by the plague and
withdrawal of Akhilleus forces that the Trojans will defeat them without further
intervention on his part. Zeus accordingly sends a dream promising Agamemnon that
Troy will fall that very day. Although an act of divine intervention, Zeus initial plan
27
At dawn, Agamemnon summons a council of elders in which he declares that he
will test the army; and he commands the other leaders to restrain their men when he urges
them to sail for home. Agamemnon understands the armys mood and attempts to employ
reverse psychology to stiffen their resolve. That the other leaders will have to restrain
their men is also part of his plan: he hopes to force the council to provide a public display
of support for the war effort and his own leadership following on the open disaffection of
Akhilleus. His plan, like the plan of Zeus, initially goes awry as the troops stampede to
their ships before the leaders can respond. Odusseus, however, manages to restore order
This scene typifies a common rhetorical device in which Homer uses the actions
of an individual to represent those of many, since one man could not stop the flight of
sixty thousand: implicitly, then, Odusseus stands for the efforts of all the Greek leaders
whom Agamemnon had commanded to restrain their men. The most important example
of Homers rhetoric of representing the general with the particular is in fact the aristeia,
Once he reassembles the troops, Odusseus delivers the speech Agamemnon had
requested in support of the war-effort. He so effectively turns the armys mood that they
roar in approval. Thus, despite initially miscarrying, Agamemnons strategy is, in the
end, entirely successful: as in Book 1, Agamemnon is far from being the caricature of the
bad leader that he is sometimes made out to be. He is a skilled social actor, who
understands the rules, stakes and strategies, of elite competition. If he errs his are human
28
Following the assembly is the catalogue of ships, which is notorious for its
emphasis on the Boiotian forces who do not play a correspondingly significant role in the
fighting. The catalogues Boiotian focus makes immediate sense when we recall that the
fleet first mustered at Aulis. This suggests that the catalogue is adapted from song
traditions devoted to the early years of the war. Its incorporation into the Iliads narrative
thus belongs to the wider pattern of alluding to important events outside the poems own
timeline. Odusseus introduces the catalogue, as it were, in his speech rallying the troops
by mentioning the prophecy of Kalkhas that Troy would fall in its tenth year.
Book 3 continues the pattern of echoing events from the beginning and end of the
war, and of the poem itself threatening to end prematurely. It also contains some of the
finest characterization in Homer, combined with the dark humor that is an Iliadic
trademark: as the ranks are about to close, Paris comes forward wearing a leopard-skin
and brandishing a bow. The leopard sports the showiest of animal skins, and the scene
introduces the notoriously handsome Paris as showing off by challenging the Greeks to
fight. As the smallest of the panthers, however, leopards are inferior to lions, and
form, when he catches sight of Menelaos, the freshly demoted Paris attempts to flee like a
live deer. Paris bow likewise marks him as a second-tier fighter and also calls his
bravery into question as archers are able to fight from a safe distance. On the other hand,
his bow also serves to remind listeners that Paris and Apollo eventually kill Akhilleus.
Both aspects of Paris archery reecho in the scene from Book 11 in which Paris strikes
Diomedes foot: the nature of the wound foreshadows the death of Akhilleus, while the
29
Hektor now enters the scene and upbraids Paris for attempting to shirk the duel.
He is thus introduced in terms of a contrast between his and Paris sense of personal
honor and responsibility to defend Troy. Paris accepts Hektors rebuke, but instead of
displaying shame he does so lightheartedly; his famous and cavalier dismissal, dont
scold me for lovely presents from gold Aphrodite (3.64), reminds us of the judgment of
Paris, but it also prepares us for the arrival of the goddess herself to bestow another gift
on her favorite. Nevertheless, Paris assents to duel Menelaos for Helen. When Hektor
proposes the duel, Menelaos demands that Priam swear to its terms.
The scene now shifts inside Troy in anticipation of the heralds arrival to summon
Priam. This shift serves to introduce Helen, whom the messenger-goddess, Iris, calls to
witness the duel. Iris finds Helen in her room weaving. Weaving is, ironically, a symbol
of uxorial fidelity, and the irony is increased by Helens weaving scenes from the war
being fought over her. She is thus in effect weaving the Iliad, for which Akhilleus
delivers the news, Helen leaves at once for the Skaian gate, where she finds Priam and
the Trojan elders. Priam calls her to him and asks her to identify the Greek leaders. This
is another scene that has likely been adapted from traditions set in the early years of the
war, though the lack of verisimilitude is perhaps not so great as is sometimes maintained:
there would have presumably been few occasions on which Priam could have seen the
Greek leaders without their armor, so it is not particularly surprising that he asks Helen to
identify them here. More important, the catalogue of heroes, like the earlier catalogue of
ships, rehearses the names and identifying characteristics of the Greek leaders for the
30
listener. Homer provides a third catalogue as Agamemnon reviews the troops in Book 4,
so that the audience has repeated opportunities to get acquainted with the main characters
The heralds now arrive to announce the duel. They do not directly report the
speech of Hektor or Menelaos, but provide summaries. This proves important to what
follows, since Agamemnon adds to the oath a demand for reparations. Menelaos wins the
duel, but Aphrodite snatches the defeated Paris from the battlefield and deposits him in
his bedroom, to which she then summons Helen. The scene thus echoes the theme of
Trojan treachery with a comic version of the rape of Helen in which Aphrodite plays the
role of Paris, while Paris reprises his earlier seduction, again to comic effect. This theme,
and specifically Paris treachery towards Menelaos, returns in Book 4 as another archer,
Pandaros, breaks the truce by striking Menelaos with an arrow. Both offenses will be
punished in Book 5, as Diomedes kills Pandaros and wounds Aphrodite in the course of
his aristeia.
In one of the poems many ironies, Zeus must now prevent the war from reaching
a happy conclusion in which his beloved Troy would also escape destruction. By a
further irony, he does so by suggesting in the opening scene of Book 4 that the gods
establish peace in light of Menelaos clear victory. When Hera objects that all her labors
will be in vain Zeus yields, but demands that she yield to him in the future. Hera readily
assents, declaring that she would not even oppose him if he wishes to destroy the cities
she loves most: Argos, Mycene and Sparta. We are thus given the metaphysics of the fall
of the Bronze Age; one can only imagine how the poems Peloponnesian audiences must
have felt on hearing this! More important for our purposes, what Zeus has done is
31
manipulate Hera and Athene into taking responsibility for something he finds personally
Zeus thus allows Athene to incite the Trojans to violate their oaths: whereas the
treachery of Paris against Menelaos starts the war, Athene sees to it that a further act of
treachery by a Trojan archer against Menelaos will restart it. Athene thus assumes the
appearance of Laodokos and suggests to the archer Pandaros that Paris would reward him
if he were to shoot Menelaos. There are reasons why Pandaros would find this plausible:
elsewhere we learn that Antimakhos was especially opposed to the return of Helen
because he expected gifts from Paris (11.123-5). Implicitly, Paris has been using the
goods acquired on his ill-fated adventures to buy off the Trojan leaders.
Pandaros proceeds to shoot Menelaos, but Athene guides the arrow so that it only
does enough damage to ensure that the oath is irredeemably violated. This scene
illustrates a further important aspect of double motivation: even though Athene inspires
Pandaros to commit the sacrilege, this in no way relieves Pandaros of responsibility for
his actions. Moreover, although he acts on his own, the Trojans bear collective
responsibility for his crime, which they do not punish. Instead they begin to advance on
Agamemnon now reviews the troops, beginning with Idomeneus and his men.
From there he proceeds to the forces of Aias, Nestor, Odusseus and Diomedes. We are
thus given a final review of the leaders before the fighting begins. Agamemnons review
also reproduces the left half of the Greek camp, beginning with the troops immediately
adjacent to Menelaos, proceeding from there to the extreme east, and then circling back.
32
In other words, their position on the battlefield approximates the layout of the camp.
Homer relies on a general image of the camp in his battle narratives as well as those set
within it:33
Wall
Left (East) Center Right (West)
Telamonian Idomeneus Menelaos Agamemnon Nestor Odysseus Eurypulos Diomedes Oilean Meges Menesthesus Protesilaos Akhilleus
Aias Aias
Salaminians Kretans Spartans Mukenaians Pulians Ithakans Northern Argives Lokrians Islanders Athenians Northern Murmidons
Greeks Greeks
_______________________________________________________________________
Sea-Shore
Book 4 concludes with back and forth killings by the Greeks and Trojans that
indicate an evenly pitched battle. At this point, we might fairly expect the tide to turn in
favor of the Trojans in accordance with Zeus plan. Instead, as Book 5 gets underway,
Athene gives Diomedes strength and daring so that he would garner the best praise
(5.3). When she next makes his helmet and shield blaze like the Dog Star, we know that
we are entering an aristeia and that for the present the Greeks will be victorious. In other
words, the Greeks will not be allowed to suffer defeat until they have securely established
Diomedes so dominates the field of battle that the other Greeks largely recede
wounds Ares at the climax of his aristeia, the battle is again evenly fought until Aias
breaks the Trojan ranks at the beginning of Book 6 and another series of killings follows.
The most memorable scene of the latter series occurs when Menelaos captures Adrestos,
who begs Menelaos to spare his life in exchange for ransom. Menelaos is about to do so
when Agamemnon races up and counsels him not to spare even the child in his mothers
33
womb. Homer declares that he counsels rightly (6.62), yet it is clear that the Greeks
had accepted ransom previously. Something has changed between then and the poems
own timeline, and although Agamemnon can be imagined as still seething after the
Trojans broke the truce, Troys fall is also imminent. Ransom has become irrelevant,
even counterproductive.
The prophet Helenos now urges Hektor to return to Troy and ask Hekabe to
sacrifice to Athene. This is the pragmatic goal of Hektors mission, and it says something
important about Homeric theology that it would make sense for the Trojans best fighter
to quit the field at such a moment to propitiate the goddess. The thematic and dramatic
purpose of the mission, however, is to arrange a meeting between Hektor and his wife
and son with Troys doom seemingly imminent. To the pathos this lends their encounter,
Homer adds the irony of having Andromache give the tactical advice, to withdraw the
army within the citys walls, that might have saved Troy. Hektor replies that to do so is
not in his nature, since he always fights in the front ranks, seeking glory for himself and
his father. Hektors embrace of the heroic code and single-minded pursuit of honor thus
leads not only to his own death, but the destruction of an entire civilization.
The return of Hektor and Paris to the fighting in Book 7 is followed by a string of
does, in fact, arrive from Olympos to aid the Greeks, but she is met by Apollo, who
proposes that they end the fighting for that day by rousing Hektor to challenge the Greeks
to a duel. At first, however, none of the Greeks rises to face Hektor, and they must be
shamed by Nestor into doing so. After thus dramatizing that Hektor is a formidable
opponent, Homer proceeds to show that a number of Greek fighters are a match for him,
34
as eight men rise to the challenge. When they cast lots to determine who will face Hektor,
the armys prayer that Telamonian Aias, Diomedes or Agamemnon be chosen provides a
further ranking of the Greek fighters. The symmetry with the duel between Paris and
Menelaos would be exact had Agamemnon been chosen, but arguably for that same
reason he cannot be, and it would seem incongruous, following on Diomedes aristeia, if
Hektor survived a duel with him. Aias, however, is different, since his special ability is as
a defensive fighter; he thus fights Hektor to a draw though Homer still makes it clear that
Aias wins the fight. The first day of fighting is thus framed by a pair of duels in which the
brothers Paris and Hektor are each defeated but nevertheless survive.
As Book 8 begins, Zeus initial plan has failed spectacularly.34 He now summons
the gods to assembly and forbids them from interfering in the battle. After the armies
fight indecisively through the morning, Zeus weighs the fates of the Trojans and Greeks
in a scale. When the fate of the Greeks sinks, Zeus thunders, sending a panic on the
Greek army. The effect is deliberately arbitrary and the narrative of Greek defeat is brief,
thus twice diminishing Trojan success: elsewhere, for example, reversals in battle are
caused by the wounding or killing of a hero. In the present case, not only is no one killed
initially, but Hektor also fails to kill a single fighter in his advance to the ships. He is thus
Nestor is unable to join in the retreat because Paris shot one of his horses with an
arrow. When Hektor makes for him, Diomedes comes to the rescue. This is another scene
that echoes events outside the poem: in this case the chariot-wreck from the Aithiopis that
results in the deaths of Antilokhos, Memnon and ultimately Akhilleus. The parallel is
announced by the scene in which Zeus weighs the fates of the armies, which echoes the
35
one in which he weighs the souls of Memnon and Akhilleus (he will later also weigh the
souls of Akhilleus and Hektor). Diomedes then places Nestor on board his own chariot
and presses the attack until Zeus hurls another thunderbolt. Nestor recognizes the
warning and turns the chariot in retreat despite Diomedes protest that he will feel a
fearsome pang (8.147: akhos) when he hears Hektor boasting. Indeed, at this very
moment Akhilleus is acquiring his identity as a hero who causes grief (akhos) to his
that he has not earned. The scene thereby also serves to expose Hektors emotional
lability and overconfidence following on his successhis first in the warthat will
Zeus returns to Olympos for a second assembly, in which he promises the further
rout of the Greek forces until Akhilleus reenters battle to avenge the death of Patroklos.
listener can focus on the how and why of what is happening. In the present case, an
deeply ironic light. The book opens with an assembly in which Agamemnon reprises his
speech urging the army to sail homeonly now he speaks in earnest. On this occasion,
however, Diomedes stands up to deliver a spirited defense of the war effort. As in Book
2, the army shouts in approval. Nestor recognizes that Agamemnon can now be
persuaded to reconcile with Akhilleus and requests a private meeting of the leaders that
will spare Agamemnons dignity when he makes the proposal. Agamemnon agrees to
36
restore Briseis and offer ransom (apoina) if Akhilleus will return to battle. A delegation
Khruseis to Khruses and provided a sacrifice of atonement that corresponds to his offer of
ransom here. But the offer Agamemnon makes is also designed to subordinate Akhilleus
to him as, among other things, his son-in-law. As important, Agamemnon makes the
wrong offer: apoina is in all other cases offered to the victorious enemy to secure the
return of a soldier taken live in battle. Agamemnon thus figures Akhilleus in the role of
the enemy, from whom he is ransoming his own captive army. Odusseus, who is sensitive
Akhilleus. Agamemnon concludes his offer by making his objective explicit: Let him
bend . . . / let him submit to me now since I am more kingly (9.158-160). Odusseus
omits that too, and replaces it with something he hopes will be more persuasive, declaring
that whatever Akhilleus might think of Agamemnon and his gifts, the army will honor
Akhilleus like a god; he may even be able to kill Hektor, who thinks that none of the
Greeks are his equal. Akhilleus, however, sees the offer for what it is, replying For I find
a man hateful as Aides / gate who hides one thing in his mind while saying another
(9.312-3). After an impassioned speech rejecting the offer, Akhilleus declares that he will
which he wins great fame and a long life without it is a hyperbolic version of the heroic
code itself. Rehearsing that choice here reveals a further problem that Akhilleus faces:
what Agamemnon has done, in effect, is not only to break the contract in which honor
compensates for risking ones life in battle, but also to sever the link between honor and
37
fame. It is precisely this link that Agamemnons offer fails to restore to Akhilleus
satisfaction, and it is only then that Akhilleus decides that fame is not worth dying for. In
other words, Homer has the protagonist of his own epic declare that the Iliad is not worth
dying for!
Phoinix now relates his own autobiography and the story of Meleager in order to
persuade Akhilleus to return to battle. The moral of the Meleager myth is that if
Akhilleus delays his return to battle then Agamemnon may renege on the gifts. In
combination, however, his stories make three further points: do not quarrel with the
father, the mother is the real problem, and above all listen to your friends. To make
the last point he manipulates a folktale pattern known as the Ascending Scale of
Affections as various people approach Meleager and attempt to persuade him to return
to the fighting. Whereas the traditional sequence is friends, mother, father, siblings,
spouse, Phoinix deliberately locates friends immediately below spouse in order to stress
response, declaring that hell think matters over; when Aias rebukes him for treating his
own friends this way Akhilleus replies that he will return to battle when Hektor sets fire
to the fleet. Friendship is thus made to trump social obligation, revenge to trump material
compensation: Akhilleus will return to battle due to bonds of friendship, but not before
compensate satisfactorily for his own humiliation and to render laughable any message
however, he does not mention that Akhilleus will return when the Trojans set fire to the
ships, and instead repeats Akhilleus initial threat to sail for home. The reason for this, of
course, is that if he had, then the army would have torched the fleet themselves!
38
With his response to Aias, Akhilleus signals that he will now abandon the
Khruses-paradigm, according to which he should now accept the girl and the ransoms,
and follow the Meleager-paradigm, returning to battle at the very last minute. He thus
draws precisely the opposite moral from the story to that which Phoinix wanted him to
draw. But Akhilleus also takes to heart the warning that if he reenters battle and saves the
day, then Agamemnon will have no reason to make good on his offer. There is, however,
is convinced to return to battle by his wife, Kleo-patre, whose name simply reverses the
explicitly refer, an oracle that if the newly arrived Thracian king Rhesos and his horses
drank from the Skamander Troy would be invincible.36 Homer replaces the oracle by
giving Rhesos an exceptional team of horses and golden weaponry. The horses may serve
to remind the listener of the prophecy, but the practical effect is to make Rhesos an
inviting target rather than threat. More important is the episodes purpose: following their
defeat in battle and the failure of the embassy to reconcile with Akhilleus, Greek morale
is at a low point. This is concretely represented in the anxious concern of the armys
leader, Agamemnon, in the books opening scene. The night-raid that follows provides a
welcome change of tone and a minor Greek victory. But it also sets their further defeat in
ironically declares that the Greek leaders should contrive a better plan (mtis) than the
present one. Nestors plans to build the Akhaian wall and to send an embassy to
39
Akhilleus are each referred to as a mtis, and both are meant to ensure the armys safety.
In the former case, the plan consists of literally replacing Akhilleus with a defensive wall,
suggestion echoes the traditional dispute over the relative merits of might versus
intelligence and implies that Nestors mtis has proven inferior to Akhilleus bi. As if
following up on the suggestion, Agamemnon now seeks Nestors further mtis (10.19).
proposal is thus a successful analogue to the embassy in Book 9 that failed to secure
Akhilleus bi on behalf of the army. Yet Diomedes also asks Odusseus to accompany
him, and the raid is a success because Diomedes and Odusseus use their bi and mtis in
tandem. In this sense, the night-raid models an ideal that is sundered by the quarrel
The third day of battle begins with Book 11 and will continue through Book 18. It
has three phases, each beginning with Greek success, followed by a sudden reversal. In
fact, the majority of the narrative describes the Greeks as winning: it is something of a
triumph of construction that Homer is able to craft a seven book narrative of Greek defeat
that so little credits Trojan success. Book 11, in turn, is organized by a series of failed
aristeiai involving the best Greek fighters after Akhilleus. As leader of the army,
Agamemnon is given the first aristeia, and his contains the only arming scene until
Patroklos enters battle: his wounding and withdrawal are thus emblematic. One of the
striking features of Agamemnons aristeia is that his victims are not described as adults,
but typically as pairs of sons from leading Trojan families, some of whom he kills in an
especially brutal manner. In addition to being easier prey than a Hektor or Aineias, they
40
would also provide exceptional spoils to the notoriously acquisitive Agamemnon. One of
the youths, however, is able to strike him on the elbow before Agamemnon kills him.
Agamemnon continues fighting for a time, but once the wound dries the pain sets in and
woman giving birth, after he has killed numerous products of such labor (note the echo of
the Adrestos-episode). Tellingly, Agamemnon does not pray to a god after suffering his
initial setback, nor does a god intervene as a result, and his aristeia is cut short with dire
When Agamemnon withdraws, Hektor presses the attack and Odusseus appeals to
Diomedes for help. Diomedes strikes Hektor on the helmet, so that night-like darkness
covered his two eyes (11.356), imagery that also describes death: Diomedes thus exacts
revenge on Hektors boasting in Book 8 by virtually killing him. At this point, we can
hear the orchestra tuning up for Diomedes victory-march, but then Paris abruptly strikes
him in the foot with an arrow. A foreshadowing of Hektors death is thus balanced by a
foreshadowing of Akhilleus with his surrogate serving as both killer and victim.
When Diomedes returns to camp, Odusseus is soon wounded and must be recued
by Aias. Paris then wounds Makhaon, whom Nestor escorts back to camp on his chariot.
Akhilleus sees Nestor enter the camp and sends Patroklos to investigate. As always,
Nestor thinks strategically and his response includes another stratagem designed to
further the Greek cause: he knows that Akhilleus vulnerability consists precisely of his
affection for Patroklos and that the ever compassionate Patroklos is concerned for his
fellow Greeks. His words are thus calculated to increase Patroklos alarm at the situation
and indignation over Akhilleus continued intransigence. Patroklos readily accepts the
41
further suggestion that he rescue the situation by impersonating Akhilleus in battle. As he
returns to Akhilleus hut, however, Patroklos encounters Eurupulos, who asks him to
treat his wounds. Ironically, his very compassion takes Patroklos out of action for an
As Book 12 opens, Homer returns to the Greeks and Trojans fighting en masse
with the remark that the Greek wall had been built against the will of the gods. As a
consequence, Poseidon and Apollo would destroy it after the war. The story serves to
underscore the importance of the wall in this segment of fighting. It does so, however, in
a way that calls attention to the impermanence of human achievements, for which,
implicitly, epic provides the antidote. The irony is deepened by the simile that follows in
which Hektor is compared to a boar or lion whose courage kills him (12.46; cf. 16.753).
Andromakhes own worst fear is used to introduce Hektors aristeia, so that his greatest
exploits are achieved in the shadow of his impending death. Dead Hektor thus triumphs
beneath an obliterated wall: not only human accomplishment but humanity itself is
ephemeral, and heroes are the most ephemeral creatures of all. Yet their very mortality
After a protracted struggle at the wall, Hektor finally hurls a rock at the gates and
breaks them open. Book 12 closes with him leaping inside, followed by many Trojans.
This is a scene to which we will repeatedly return. But just as Hektor seems to be on the
verge of setting fire to the ships, the Greeks stage a major counterattack that ties up an
important thread of the story: the revolt of the gods against the plan of Zeus that began in
Book 8. The revolt now continues when Zeus averts his attention from the fighting.
Poseidon notices him do so and journeys to Troy, where he inspires the two Aiantes and
42
the other Greek leaders. When Pouludamas warns Hektor that the Trojans are in disarray,
Hektor instructs him to reorder the center while he reinforces the left. When Hektor nears
the ship of Protesilaos, he and Aias exchange insults. This, the first Greek ship to land at
Troy and thus one of the furthest up the beach, is also the one Hektor eventually sets fire
Book 14 opens with Nestor was not overlooking the war-cries, though he was
drinking. This would seem to follow on the close of Book 13, but the situation in which
we find Nestor is where last we saw him in Book 11. He has, it would seem, been
drinking for 1,350 verses! Moreover, when Nestor leaves his hut to reconnoiter, what he
confronts is not the evenly fought battle of Book 13, but the Greek rout of Book 12. We
thus have three contradictory narrative signals: what we find is Nestor at the close of
Book 11, what Nestor hears seems to continue the narrative of Book 13, but what he sees
returns us to the situation at the close of Book 12. Each of these issues can be explained
with the poets habit of narrating simultaneous events consecutively: that is to say, the
events of Books 13 and 14 both follow on those of Book 12, and the close of Book 13 is
designed to mask the shift.38 Often, the poets motive for narrating events in this way is
simple clarity. In the present case, however, he exploits the convention for sensational
effect as it allows him to dramatize the climactic scene of Trojan assault on the wall
multiple times. Nestors apparent drinking binge can be explained by another feature of
the convention: when Homer switches between narratives, the thread that drops out of
focus can become, in effect, frozen in time. Another example of this is the duel between
Aias and Hektor, which occurs over 400 verses after they first challenge each other in
Book 13, and nearly 900 verses after Hektor first breaches the wall.
43
Once the convention is understood, points in which the narratives intersect
become obvious, and even amusing. After Nestor hears the war-cries he tells Makhaon
to keep drinking while Hekamede prepares a bath to wash away the gore from his body.
This continues situation we last saw them in at the close of Book 11. When he leaves the
hut at the beginning of Book 14, Nestor confronts the situation at the end of Book 12.
Homer then reintroduces Poseidon with the same verse used to announce the gods earlier
intervention in Book 13: Hardly blind at his watch, the well-known / Earth Shaker
(14.135=13.10). On this occasion, what the god noticed is not explained, nor is his arrival
at Troy described, because the scenes belong to the same timeline. After encouraging
Agamemnon, as he had earlier encouraged the Aiantes, Poseidon shouts with the voice of
Homer now explains why Zeus averted his attention, and even more strikingly
why he does not hear Poseidons shout: Hera tricks him into having sex! This is the
culmination of the revolt of the gods against the policy of non-interference that Zeus
possible in Books 13 and 14. Dramatically, however, it is the climax of the narrative of
Greek counterattack. Therefore the seduction comes after the events it facilitates:
Hera begins by bathing and dressing in a humorous echo of the arming scene that
introduces an aristeia.39 She then tricks Aphrodite, a goddess naturally associated with
lovers deceptions, into providing her with a love charm, and enlists the aid of embodied
sleep, Hupnos, to use his powers on Zeus after she has sex with him (in another scene
that can be interpreted both theologically and naturalistically). As she approaches, Zeus
44
becomes aroused and promptly launches into a catalogue of former lovers, declaring that
he never felt such desire for any of them as he feels for Hera at this moment. As if to
punish her deception, Hera must listen to his catalogue without betraying a hint of
annoyance.
Zeus transforms the summit of Mount Ida into a Golden Age paradise enclosed by
an impenetrable mist so they can make love in private. When Zeus falls asleep
afterwards, Hupnos informs Poseidon, who again shouts encouragement, this time at a
logically appropriate moment. As the goddess of marriage, Hera performs her divine and
conjugal role in order to help the Greeks in battle, thus uniting the antinomy between love
and war that we find in the similarly comical and risqu song of Ares and Aphrodite in
Odyssey Book 8. (Less direct parallels can be found in the paired woundings of Ares and
Aphrodite in Iliad Books 5 and 21.) Their lovemaking also ironically evokes hieros
gamos, or sacred marriage, which is meant to ensure the fertility of the earth. Here it
ensures Greek success in their counterattack, the highpoint of which is the long-delayed
duel between Aias and Hektor. Hektor strikes but fails to wound Aias, whereupon Aias
strikes Hektor on the chest with a rock. Once again, the language surrounding Hektor is
elsewhere applied to dying warriors, so that Diomedes and Aias both take revenge for
Zeus awakens at the beginning of Book 15 to see the Trojans routed, correctly
surmises that Hera is responsible, and threatens to beat her. Hera is duly frightened and
swears that she did not put Poseidon up to harming the Trojans. Zeus smiles at the
obvious prevarication and reduces the punishment to that of summoning Iris and Apollo
so they can undo her interference. When Iris next persuades Poseidon to retire from the
45
fighting, the revolt in heaven is finally at an end. Apollo appears to Hektor, promises to
rout the Greeks for him and breaths great strength into Hektor himself (15.262).
for the newly invigorated Hektor is immediately compared to a horse that breaks his
halter and runs off exalting across the plain (263-8). He has thus come untethered: this
same simile is applied to the notoriously flighty Paris at the close of Book 6.
As Hektor advances into battle, Apollo goes before him bearing the Aigis. After
enough delay to reveal that the Greeks could hold their own even under these
circumstances, Apollo shakes the Aigis and shouts. As in Book 8, the Greek reversal is
stunningly swift and arbitrary, the result of god-sent panic. Once again the Trojans rush
across the wall with a great shout (384). Like Nestor in Book 14, Patroklos hears the
shout and leaves the hut of Eurupulos to investigate; like Nestor what Patroklos sees is
the Trojans are at first unable to break through to the ships. Exchanges of killing follow
to show that the battle is evenly pitched despite Apollos intervention. The sinister
undercurrent of the horse simile now returns as Hektor rages like Ares or a forest-fire and
foams at the mouth while his eyes blaze beneath his bristling brows (605-8). Finally,
Hektor rushes at the ship of Protesilaos, while with a surpassingly great hand / Zeus
pushed [him] from behind, and roused the army beside him (694-5). Nowhere else in
Homer is Zeus described as physically present on earth. The effect is so striking, in fact,
that scholars have sought to emend the text. To do so is to miss the point: Zeus push
46
belongs to the same rhetorical strategy that occasioned Apollos promise to rout the
Having killed Protesilaos at the beginning of the war, Hektor now sets fire to his
ship, an act that ultimately leads to his own death and Troys destruction. Book 16 opens
with Patroklos arriving at Akhilleus hut. Akhilleus sees his excitement and takes an
ironic tone, comparing Patroklos to a little girl running to her mother (7ff.). This is
precisely the role he rejected in Book 9, when he compared himself to a mother bird
protecting the Greek army (323ff.). In another of the poems many ironies, the
comparison rebounds on Akhilleus own head, for he will fail to protect Patroklos from
harm.
As we have seen, there remains the danger that if Akhilleus returns to battle at
once, Agamemnon might not make good on his offer of goods. By sending Patroklos into
battle Akhilleus hopes to buy time so Agamemnon can make a formal presentation of the
gifts. Akhilleus thus gives Patroklos three instructions: beat back the Trojans so that you
can win great honor and glory for me from the Greeks; once you do return and do not
fight without me or you will make me less honorable; nor press the attack to Troy, for
Apollo may enter the fighting (80-96). In other words, dont be too successful or I may
end up like Meleager and you may end up dead. Akhilleus concludes his instructions
yes, and each Greek! and we two might take off death,
47
so that we alone may loosen the veils of Troy (16.97-100).
The metaphor here belongs to a central theme of the poem: Akhilleus wishes both to shed
his mortality as if it were clothing and to undress Troy. To remove a womans veil is
synonymous with having sex, while the word Akhilleus uses for veil can also mean
battlement, so his words simultaneously refer to throwing down the citys walls and
raping its women. The precondition to doing so is to be stripped of his mortality. This
arresting image is then inverted by the scene of Hektors death: responding to the cries of
the townsfolk, Andromakhe races to the city-wall, and at the sight of Hektor being
dragged behind Akhilleus chariot she casts the veil from her head. In so doing, she
symbolically casts down the battlements of Troy and surrenders to the sexual violation
Patroklos has known his place and remained in it: his first words in the poem are Why
did you call, Akhilleus? How do you need me? (11.605). But, once he puts on
Akhilleus armor, Patroklos forgets himself, pressing the attack to the walls of Troy itself.
his closest friend, the severity of which can scarcely be overstated. Had he succeeded,
Patroklos would have deprived Akhilleus of both his honor and his fame, a fate even
see here is the nature of the impurity he acquires and the vehicle of its transfer, the former
suggested by, and the latter consisting of, Akhilleus divine armor. Once encased in that
armor, Patroklos loses all sense of personal limitations and begins behaving like a god.
48
Moreover, he implicitly engages in competitive strife (eris) with Akhilleus by
attempting to storm Troy himself. To make his identification with Akhilleus complete,
Patroklos dies at the hands of Akhilleus divine antagonist and killer, Apollo.
own identity. Patroklos is thus on one level the embodied fame of Akhilleus. Akhilleus
loses his honor and withdraws from battle in which men win honor and fame.
Akhilleus then sends his own ancestral fame into battle, so that he can regain his honor.
In so doing, he loses his Patro-klos, who dies at Apollos hands. But, in the world of the
Iliad, one purchases immortal fame with ones life. And it is precisely because Akhilleus
loses Patroklos that he reenters battle and wins Patroklos as the avenger of his
Patroklos.
The arming scene announces the beginning of an aristeia. That the armor does not
glow foreshadows Patoklos death.42 Patroklos aristeia culminates in his killing a son of
Zeus, Sarpedon. Sarpedon throws his spear and kills the mortal trace-horse, Pedasos, thus
foreshadowing Patroklos own death. Automedon cuts loose the trace horse, as Nestor
was attempting to do when Diomedes rescued him in the parallel scene from Book 8.
Sarpedon makes another cast at Patroklos and misses, whereupon Patroklos strikes him in
the chest, killing him (his desire to mistreat the corpse foreshadows Akhilleus
mistreatment of Hektors corpse and Hektors own desire to mistreat Patroklos). Shortly
after Patroklos kills Sarpedon, he reaches the walls of Troy itself, where he is repulsed by
Apollo. The god commands Patroklos to yield, which he does, but despite Akhilleus
warnings he continues to press the attack. Apollo then knocks Patroklos dizzy, Euphorbos
49
strikes him in the back and slinks off, and finally Hektor strikes him in the belly. A point
of this unique description of a soldiers death is that, once again, Homer gives Hektor no
glory. When the dying Patroklos then prophesies Hektors own death, Hektor replies:
His words here could not be more different to his pessimistic speech to Andromache in
Book 6. From a theological perspective, the notion that he could defeat Akhilleus reveals
The death of Patroklos foreshadows the deaths of both Hektor in the Iliad and
Akhilleus in the Aithiopis: Sarpedon kills a trace-horse, just as Paris twice kills Nestors
horse (in Iliad Book 8 and the Aithiopis); Patroklos kills Sarpedon, the son of a god, just
as Akhilleus kills Memnon, the son of a goddess; Apollo helps Hektor kill Patroklos, just
as he helps Paris kill Akhilleus; Hektor kills Patroklos, just as Memnon kills Antilokhos;
Akhilleus kills Hektor in revenge, just as he kills Memnon in revenge. There follows an
entire book devoted to the fight over Patroklos body, which echoes the fight over
Akhilleus body in the Aithiopis; in both cases Aias eventually recovers the corpse for the
acquires Akhilleus armor while the Greeks recover Patroklos corpse. The battle is thus
fought indecisively, as reflected in Zeus own uniquely shifting favor. This has a number
Patroklos death. A protracted battle over the corpse consequently ensues that lends
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weight to the situation. When Hektor dons Akhilleus armor, we see the hybris of his
claim to be Akhilleus equal translated into culpable action. Homer underlines this by
having Zeus object to his presumption and deny Hektor the further glory of capturing
Akhilleus immortal horses. Nevertheless, Zeus fits the armor to Hektors smaller
personified battle-rage, Ares, puts him on, / filling the body inside him/ hugely with
strength and prowess (210-12). The loss of Akhilleus armor also makes possible the
magnificent scene in which Hephaistos forges a replacement. Finally, because the Greeks
retrieve the body, the Trojans are unable to force Akhilleus to return Hektor for burial.
When Hektor strips the armor, Menelaos sends Antilokhos to seek help from
Akhilleus. Thus, in the opening scene of Book 18, swift-footed Antilokhos arrives with
the news that Patroklos is dead. Antilokhos speech is brief, a mere four lines, but could
not be more momentous. Akhilleus responds not with speech but terrible wailing, joined
by the maidservants who shriek and beat their breasts while Antilokhos sobs and
lamentation. This is grief beyond speech. As with Hektor, Homer describes the prostrate
Akhilleus with formulaic language elsewhere applied to men dying. His abuse of the
this point forward until Book 24, Akhilleus all but ceases to have bodily functions. But
the image of Akhilleus, the essence of physical perfection, rolling in ashes and dust, also
echoes the dichotomy in his semi-divine nature. This is followed by a further contrast, in
which personified nature joins in the lament. A mist now forms on the surface of the deep
from which Thetis and her nymphs emerge, to surround and envelop, to mourn with and
51
for, Akhilleus. The scene of his death thus shades off into that of his funeral without a
comma. But it is not enough to say that the scene foreshadows Akhilleus death and
funeral, for in a very real sense Akhilleus mortal self dies together with his substitute.
In Book 1, Akhilleus prayed to his mother, who emerged from the sea to find him
mourning the loss of a loved one. Akhilleus then asked her for a certain favor:
this is Akhilleus prayer translated into reality, and the parallel in setting brings the fact
home with brutal clarity.43 Now, finally, we get speech, as Thetis asks Akhilleus why he
laments, since Zeus has fulfilled his every request. It is important to remember that Thetis
as a goddess must know Patroklos has died (cf. 1.365). The scene dramatizes, in addition
to much else, the inability of divinity to comprehend human suffering, even when that
human is the gods own offspring, and even when the god will shortly suffer the very
same loss.
For a second time Thetis sets off for Olympos to extract a favor, this time
consisting of armor from Hephaistos. Meanwhile, Athene clothes Akhilleus in the Aigis
and circles his head in a golden cloud from which fire blazes. So attired, Akhilleus stands
by the ditch and shouts, striking terror in the Trojans and thrice routing the army. The
scene thus unites three thematically charged images. The first is that of clothing as
identity. Akhilleus has lost his armor, but Athene gives him another article of divine
clothing capable of changing the nature of its occupant, thereby allowing a mortal to
perform miracles. This clothing, moreover, is the Aigis, so that the divinity with whom
fire, and once again by extension with Zeus.44 Finally, Akhilleus protects Patroklos body
by emitting pure, inarticulate sound, as he had when he learned of Patroklos death: his
52
cry of grief now becomes a cry of rage, a cry capable of murder. Paradoxically, at the
moment he gives himself completely to death, Akhilleus becomes most fully aligned with
divinity, and specifically with his almost father, Zeus. Events have been set in motion of
such magnitude that the fabric of reality itself is beginning to rip. This is marked by a
virtual divine epiphany of Akhilleus as father Zeus, wielding the Aigis and thunderbolt.
The result of the epiphany is that Akhilleus prevents the Trojans from desecrating the
body of Patroklos, just as Zeus prevents the Greeks from seizing the body of Sarpedon.
Patroklos corpse is meanwhile returned to camp, and, by another miracle of nature, Hera
forces the sun to set. With Heras act three interrelated narrative threads come to an end:
Zeus promise to Thetis in Book 1 to bring about Greek defeat, his prohibition against the
gods assisting the Greeks and Trojans announced in Book 8, and his promise in Book 11
The assimilation of Akhilleus to Zeus prepares for the following scene in which
Hephaistos forges Akhilleus armor. The centerpiece of his creation is the shield,
depicting the universe as a series of balanced oppositions and life as a cycle, with images
of procreation (marriage, plowing a field), death (murder, war), and life from death
(hunting, sacrifice, harvesting). At the center of the shield are the heavens, giving us an
Olympian perspective on the universe. But enclosing the shield are contrasting images of
marriage), and of division (a dispute in court over how to compensate for a life taken).
Marriage, of course, echoes the dispute that caused the war and that informs the plot of
the poem itself, while the courtroom scene points to the one solution to those disputes
that no one in the poem ever considers.45 The city at peace is in turn balanced by a city at
53
war whose attackers are divided into factions: those who would accept ransom and spare
the city, and those who simply want to destroy it. Again the parallel to Troy is direct.
It is widely recognized that, at one level, the shield symbolizes the Iliad itself as
an immortal work of art. The poem is thus presented as a larger whole, of which the
Trojan war is only a small part. Yet the armor also represents the character and destiny of
Akhilleus: as divine armor, it represents his own divine nature; as a symbol of the Iliad it
represents the immortality he achieves as the hero of epic. And when Akhilleus picks up
the shield, hes got the whole world in his hands. Akhilleus thus wields a symbol of his
destiny had Thetis married Zeus. When Akhilleus dons this armor, he will do battle with
personified nature, the Skamandros, in a scene that echoes traditions in which the sky-
When Thetis returns to the camp at the beginning of Book 19, the mere sight of
the armor scares the daylights out of the army. Once again, the Greek amazes by the
juxtapositions it achieves: but Akhilleus, as he looked at the armor, so did bilious anger
put him on even more, and terribly did his eyes shine forth from beneath his brows, as
though flame (19.15-17). Thetis then instructs Akhilleus to put on your might (19.36).
And finally, as he prepares to fight, his two eyes blaze as though flame of fire, and
unendurable grief began putting on Akhilleus heart as, raging at the Trojans, he put on
the gifts of the god (19.365-8). Anger and grief wear Akhilleus like a suit of immortal
armor. This is the perfect inverse to his earlier wish to take off death, and yet it allows
him to fulfill that very wish, for Akhilleus godlike rage leads to his immortalization in
epic.
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Just as we expect Akhilleus to race off to war, he calls an assembly to renounce
speech in which avoids addressing Akhilleus by name, referring to him once as the son of
Peleus and several times simply as you. He concludes with: Since I was blinded, Zeus
(apoina) (137-8). In a calculated insult he again uses the offensive term, apoina, that
Odusseus had earlier replaced with gifts. In pointed contrast to Agamemnon, Akhilleus
gives Agamemnon a full line honorific address. Nevertheless his words too are barbed:
lavish gifts if you like, whatever is proper, / or retain them: thats your choice (147-9).
The goods are merely gifts and meaningless now, just as honor is meaningless, for
Akhilleus is no longer a member of the human community. His call to battle further
Odusseus, however, insists that Agamemnon present the gifts and offer a feast of
atonement, so that Akhilleus will lack nothing that is due (180). The gifts are not
simply for Akhilleus sake: the social contract must be reaffirmed. At this point, an
but now they lie savaged, those whom Hektor, / son of Priam, killed when Zeus granted
him kudos. / You two rouse us to eat though!! (203-5). Nevertheless, he acquiesces, the
ceremonies are performed, and, finally, Akhilleus arms for battle. The humanization of
Akhilleus horses that began in Book 17 as they weep for Patroklos now reaches its
striking conclusion. When Akhilleus rebukes them for failing to bring Patroklos back
safely, Xanthos declares that they were not to blame but the best of the Gods killed him
55
(413), and it is Akhilleus fate as well to be killed by a god and a mortal. With this further
Just as Akhilleus enters the battle, however, the scene switches to a divine
assembly as Book 20 opens that will conclude with the gods departing for war. The
human and divine-assembly scenes are formally and thematically parallel: now that the
quarrel with Agamemnon is resolved, Akhilleus returns to the fighting; now that the
revolt of the gods against Zeus has ended, Zeus formally annuls his policy of non-
interference and invites them to join in. (compare the divine and human assemblies in
Books 1 and 8-9.) Zeus stated motive in doing so is to prevent Akhilleus from sacking
Troy prematurely. Implicitly, Akhilleus has the power to overturn fate itself, just as Zeus
describes himself as able to spare the life of Sarpedon contrary to fate (and will again in
Hektors case). Moreover, Akhilleus is able to sack Troy single-handedly: the only other
hero who could and in fact did so is Zeus son, Herakles. Akhilleus so dominates the
fighting, in fact, that the other Greeks vanish from view for the duration of his aristeia: it
The scene of the gods setting out for battle is majestic, even portentous, but will
Olympian subplots, such as Heras seduction of Zeus, as is the resulting contrast with the
human fighting. Five gods set out to support the Greeks and six the Trojans: tellingly,
even outnumbered the pro-Greek gods are more powerful. Personified Eris now rouses
both sides as Athene and Ares shout, Zeus thunders, Poseidon shakes the earth, and
Hades cries out in alarm lest his dank realm be exposed to view. Not only are the forces
that rule the universe joining in the battle, but they threaten to confound the cosmic order.
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In this way Homer dramatizes not merely the significance of this moment, or even
When Akhilleus enters the battle, the sight of him glowing in armor (20.46)
terrifies the Trojans. The gods now set about keeping Akhilleus in check, with the stated
aim of preventing Troys fall, but with the poetic aim of delaying the duel with Hektor so
that Akhilleus aristeia will have the narrative dimensions appropriate to its significance.
Apollo intercedes first by rousing Aineias to fight Akhilleus. Aineias is the only
remaining fighter on the Trojan side who is of Akhilleus stature, so if the poets strategy
were simply to delay the encounter with Hektor, then it would be natural to have them
duel. But the scene is not simply functional: formally, Akhilleus aristeia begins and ends
with his dueling members of the Trojan royal house, Aineias and Hektor. This can be
paralleled with the first day of fighting, where duels with Paris and Hektor bracket the
a Trojan counterpart to Akhilleus himself. Homer thus introduces them as they come
together to fight as two men, easily the best men (158: aristoi). Both are, moreover,
sons of goddesses, a point to which Aineias calls attention in issuing his challenge. The
most telling connection between them, however, is that Aineias feels mnis towards
Priam because the latter did not honor him (13.460-1: epemnie), so that in either case the
cause of the heros wrath is the kings failure to honor the best of his warriors with the
further result that Aineias withdraws from fighting. And whereas the death of
Patroklos draws Akhilleus back into the fighting, Deiphobos persuades Aineias to
return to battle so that he could protect the corpse of his brother-in-law Alkathoos.
The result of these parallels is that Akhilleus begins his aristeia by virtually killing
57
himself. But at the moment Akhilleus is about to take his life, Poseidon whisks Aineias
off to the edge of the battle and instructs him to avoid further engaging Akhilleus.
As Book 21 begins, Akhilleus splits the Trojan ranks, driving half onto the plain,
and penning the other half by the Skamander. Homer compares them as they flee to
locusts burned by fire, thus maintaining the fire imagery that surrounds Akhilleus. The
centerpiece of the sequence is the encounter with Lukaon, a son of Priam whom
Akhilleus had earlier captured and sold on Lemnos. Lukaon attempts to supplicate
Akhilleus, but on this occasion Akhilleus does not spare him. The contrast in Akhilleus
behavior shows us that something has changed between then and now, so that his
earlier advice is fitting because Troy is about to fall, Akhilleus is here unsparing
because he is about to die. He thus addresses Lukaon as friend before killing him. By
so awakening his listeners to the tragedy of the human condition, Homer prepares them to
respond with sympathy to Hektors death. Such emotions would have been impossible in
Book 15, where his death would have been heroic, while in Book 19 killing him would
have been a simple act of revenge. Now his death remains both things, but it is also
tragic.47
After dispatching Lukaon, Akhilleus resumes his killing spree. This enrages
Skamander because his streams are now full of corpses. After warning Akhilleus to
desist, the river rushes at him in flood. Akhilleus retreats to the plain but the river
continues to pursue him. There follows the battle with the river: an episode that
corresponds to the heros setback in an aristeia thus assimilates Akhilleus to the sky-god
during a crisis in which the cosmos itself is threatened. We are now also in a position to
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see that the episode is also the climax of a series of themes that assimilate Akhilleus to
Zeus. Yet Akhilleus himself threatens the cosmos by transgressing the limits of mere
receives divine help and his opponent is overcome by celestial fire. Hephaistos now burns
Skamander and does not relent until the river makes the crucial promise that he will not
prevent Troy from burning. With this, the fight between the gods, or theomachy, finally
gets underway: what began as somber and portentous now quickly devolves into comedy
Apollo now inspires Agenor to face Akhilleus; when Akhilleus gives pursuit, the
god takes on Agenors appearance and deludes Akhilleus into thinking that he can catch
him. Apollo thus buys time for the Trojans to retreat to Troy. In the opening scene of
Book 22, Apollo then taunts Akhilleus by revealing his identity. The entire Iliad is here
encapsulated in a single image: Akhilleus tragedy issues from a naked will to power that
is the very essence of his nature. At the most general level, his struggles define the human
condition. Akhilleus anger can also be extended to his own frustrated attempts to
identify with his divine self, represented concretely in his reliance on his mother, his
struggles with the father, and his vain, unknowing pursuit of his own divine
doppelgnger in the present scene. At this level, his emotions likewise represent the
anger and sorrow of everyman, as does his choice between a short life with immortal
fame or a long life as nobody. So viewed, a central message of the Iliad is that we all
59
purchase whatever immortality we are capable of achieving with sacrifice, the greatest
Akhilleus had looked at all the possible compensations for his own mortality and
rejected them, declaring that material goods cannot compensate, social status cannot
compensate, immortal fame cannot compensate for his life, that is, a human life. Yet that
same man decides revenge is worth dying for. This begs the question, Whose death is
being avenged? That of Patroklos? Yet Patroklos is his own ritual substitute. Akhilleus
heroism is an act of revenge, but what he avenges is his own mortality and he avenges it
All this leads to a further question. The aristeia of Akhilleus ends as it must with
Hektors death. But why must Hektor die? Priam opened the gates of Troy to receive the
Trojans. Now he cries out to his son to enter Troy, but Hektor refuses because he feels
shame before the Trojans and fears their rebukes. In short, honor and shame destroy
Hektor. Once again, the heroic code is portrayed not simply as completely egocentric but
as posing a threat to civilization itself. And yet, as Akhilleus races towards him, his armor
like the flaring / light from a fire, the Sun-Gods blaze when he rises (22.134-5),
Hektor turns coward and runs. The effect of the armor on the Greeks and Trojans helps
prepare for his response here, though Akhilleus is physically so imposing that his
response does not surprise in any case. To appreciate Homers artistry at this moment,
imagine the episode if Hektor had taken his stand: despite his earlier puffery, Hektor is no
match for Akhilleus, as he is now made to recognize. Homers response to the artistic
challenge of making their encounter climactic is thus to explore a new set of emotions,
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Akhilleus becomes more than deaths agent, he virtually becomes the death-god
himself.48
Akhilleus chases Hektor around the city three times. Akhilleus and the
Myrmidons will soon process three times around the pyre of Patroklos, enclosing the
space and making it sacred (23.13; cf. 24.15-6). Their race thus becomes a funeral
procession for the city of Troy itself. Athene then impersonates Hektors brother,
Deiphobos, and deceives Hektor into believing that he will help him face Akhilleus. She
causes Hektors death, but in an important sense she helps him as well: the one thing
Hektor lives for, that he has sacrificed himself, his family and all of Troy for, his honor,
he has just thrown away by fleeing Akhilleus. And yet, Athene, his mortal enemy,
restores him to honor by tricking him into behaving like a man. All that the Trojans and
Greeks see is that he stops running, takes his stand, and dies a noble death. We, the
audience, know he is tricked into doing so, but unlike the poems internal characters we
also hear his inner thoughts in which he declares his resolve to go out in a blaze of glory.
Hektor dies near the Skaian gate, the scene of his earlier departure from
Andromakhe. Her worst fear is now realized as his courage kills him. Akhilleus deals
Hektor a blow to the throat while he is wearing Akhilleus own armor: it would be hard
to imagine a more direct or potent way of saying that to kill Hektor is to kill himself.
When Hektor then prophecies that death, Akhilleus replies, in chilling, nihilistic contrast
61
His aristeia concludes uniquely with Akhilleus gaining control of his victims corpse,
Book 23 is devoted to the funeral and funeral games of Patroklos with their
attendant contrasts between grief and joy, death and affirming life. The scene of
mourning Hektors death at Troy with which the previous book closes is now balanced by
Akhilleus and the Myrmidons mourning Patroklos, supine on his bier with Hektor
prostrate in the dust beneath him. After providing a funeral meal, Akhilleus withdraws to
the shore of the loudly / roaring sea where Sleep overtook him (59-62). Once more
the sea, his mothers element, gives concrete expression to his feelings of anger and grief.
Next morning, Akhilleus loads the pyre with offerings to accompany Patroklos in the
afterlife. But the fire will not kindle. Akhilleus then prays to the North and West winds,
and Iris serves as his messenger, thus performing a role for Akhilleus that she elsewhere
performs for Zeus. As Akhilleus pours libations, shrill winds rise up from the sea and
then hurtle down onto the pyre, which explodes in flame. Akhilleus again enlists the
support of elemental nature, the howling winds that again express his anger and grief, as
does the raging fire that consumes the corpse of his own mortal self.
Many an Akhilleus-epic no doubt ended with Akhilleus on the pyre and the
funeral games in his honor that followed. Such scenes would provide obvious closure and
emphasize the ritual dimension of the narrative. In the Iliad, we do get the heros death
and funeral games, though not of Akhilleus himself, but of his substitute, Patroklos, and
no cult is founded. But the poem pointedly does not end here: this is not the resolution
62
Next day, Akhilleus hosts funeral games honoring Patroklos, in which Akhilleus
is himself reintegrated into the human community. We are thus given a glimpse of the
real Akhilleus, an Akhilleus without the rage or sorrow, an Akhilleus in charge of the
situation, master of his own self, generous to a fault, conciliatory in the face of strife, and
respectful of others prerogatives. The funeral games are, paradoxically, the closest the
poems human characters ever get to the carefree existence of the gods. As such, they are
unbridled rage, Book 23 prepares both Akhilleus and the listener for the ransom of
Hektor. Homer thus employs an episode that traditionally might conclude an epic in order
But the games serve the further purpose of bidding farewell to the other Greek heroes
after they have been excluded from the narrative for nearly three books. As such they are
also a framing device, echoing the catalogues of Books 2 to 4 that introduced them.
The first event, the chariot-race, is also the most important and is consequently
narrated at greatest length. Diomedes wins the event thanks to Athenes support even
though Eumelos had the better team: as the events progress the link between divine favor
and human success emerges as a prominent theme of the games. Tellingly, the prize of
honor won by our surrogate Akhilleus is a woman. The more interesting contest,
however, is for second place, which Antilokhos wins by using a trick to cut off Menelaos,
who had the better team of horses. This reproduces the contrast between force and
intelligence that is a pervasive theme of the poem. What makes this example especially
noteworthy is the parallel between Antilokhos and Patroklos: as we have seen, the death
of Patroklos foreshadows the death of Antilokhos, who also comes to replace Patroklos in
63
Akhilleus affections in extra-Homeric tradition. In the present scene, Akhilleus smiles at
Antilokhos impetuosity, his only smile in the poem. The brother of Agamemnon thus
quarrels with a substitute-Akhilleus over honor, but the quarrel quickly reaches the
When Menelaos complains that Antilokhos cheated, Antilokhos readily cedes his
prize. He does not, however, cease competing, and he wins the prize in the ensuing verbal
contest, just has he had won the contest for second place: Back off now, he pleads, for
Im much younger than you are (587). After following with platitudes about how the
youth lack discernment and intelligence he concludes by demonstrating that he has plenty
of both: The horse that I won here / I will give you myself. If you ask for a greater / prize
from my house, Ill grant it gladly . . . (591-4). Menelaos accepts his excuse and
declares he will give Antilokhos the mare, even though it belongs to him.
The poem concludes by posing once more the issue of compensation. In Book 9,
Akhilleus declares that mere goods cannot compensate for lost honor, nor can fame
compensate for his life, unless he first avenges Agamemnons insult. This he achieves,
but at the cost of losing someone he loves far more deeply than Briseis. Again he seeks
revenge and again it doesnt work, but here the failure is more profound. Akhilleus has
killed Hektor and buried Patroklos with honor, but finds no closure. To his own
grief over loss. In the end, revenge is exposed as simply another form of material
compensation.
The funeral of Patroklos has restored Akhilleus to the human community, but
Book 24 opens with a return to his former isolation, as he lies sleepless in his hut,
64
wanders distraught along the seashore, and each dawn he ties Hektor to his chariot and
drags him three times around Patroklos funeral mound. He wont relinquish Hektors
body or stop mistreating it because to do so, to release it, would be to accept Hektors
death, and thus Patroklos death and with it his own. Then Zeus sends Priam to secure his
sons release in an account modeled on katabasis, the heros descent into the
underworld.50 This is the quintessential heroic exploit, celebrating the triumph of the life
force over the forces of death, so it is tragically ironic that what Priam retrieves is a mere
corpse.
And so, on his way to the camp Priam meets Hermes, the god who escorts the
souls of the dead to Hades, at a river, symbol of the spiritual divide between this world
and the next. From there, Hermes escorts Priam into hostile terrain under cover of
darkness. Suddenly Akhilleus hut has become monumental, with a gate barred by a
timber-beam that takes heroic strength to remove. Priam then miraculously appears
before the killing machine in control of his sons lifeless body. Once again, Akhilleus has
Priam is the key to the emotional resolution of this poem. In Priam, Akhilleus can
see his own grieving father. It is the knowledge of that grief that allows him to accept the
compensation for a human life that he repeatedly found inadequate. For his part, Priam
enters the death-realm to ransom his sons corpse, but he restores Akhilleus to life in the
process. They mourn together over the loss that defines us as human, Priam for his son,
Akhilleus for his father, even as they adopt each other as father and son.51 Afterwards,
they eat together, and sleep in the same hut, Akhilleus, for the first time in the poem, with
Briseis. What Akhilleus has done, and has insisted on doing, is create the formal
65
relationship of xenia, or guest-friendship, with Priam that transforms a scene of ransom
into one of gift-exchange. He thus addresses Priam as friend, even as he accepts him as
a supplicant and adopts him as a father. Accepting Priams gifts amounts to accepting
his own mortality, and yet paradoxically that very acceptance means saying yes to life for
the brief span that is allotted to him. Once again, I suggest, this is Homers view of the
Yet the narrative stubbornly refuses to close: once again we return to scenes of
family. Our last image in the poem is not of the Greeks but Hektors family mourning
over his corpse. The last speech in the poem is not by Akhilleus, but Helen, lamenting the
gather wood for the funeral. The Iliad concludes with an open door onto a tragic future
that helps grant the events of the poem their larger significance. As a result of Hektors
death Troy will soon fall, Akhilleus and Priam will be killed by each others sons,
Andromakhe enslaved, Helen restored to her husband, and Astuanax hurled from the
walls of the city. The funeral of Hektor is thus the funeral of Troy itself.
66
1
I employ McCrories spellings of the Greek names and generally cite his translations
except for a few places where it was necessary to treat some significant wordplay in the
original. The best general introductions to the Iliad are by S. Schein (1984) and M.
Edwards (1987) who traverse much the same terrain covered here in greater detail. More
advanced students will also want to consult I. Morris and B. Powell eds. (1996).
2
There is another important word break at the end of the first foot, or after the first
syllable of the second, so that the verse naturally divides into four word groups. This does
not, however, affect the formulas that I am using to illustrate Homers compositional
techniques.
3
Greek accents are based on pitch rather than stress as in English verse: a or acute
accent indicates a rising tone, a ` or grave indicates a lower or falling tone, and a or
continuity see also M.P. Nilsson (1932) esp. 187-220; M. L. West (1988 and 1992).
5
We can take this much further: Nagy in particular (e.g. 1999) has traced many
prominent themes in Homer back to the much earlier Indo-European period, long
67
11
M. L. Lord (1994) 181-2; see also E. Cook (2012).
12
On the mortal hero see esp. S. Schein (1984).
13
G. Nagy (1999) esp. 45-9; E. Cook (1995) esp. 29-32, 149-52.
14
G. Nagy (1990) 13-17.
15
Nagy (1999) esp. 33, 292-5.
16
Adapted from E. Cook (2009). On Homeric society, see, e.g., E. Beidelman (1989), K.
that the audience understood his name this way; on which see Nagy (2004) 131-7.
18
Adapted from E. Cook (2004).
19
See, e.g., J. Bennet (1996); and for a general introduction to Bronze Age Greece see C.
forced her to marry a mortal: This version is, however, incompatible with the Iliads
narrative, which requires that Zeus be in her debt. On the relationship of Homer to the
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27
For a more in depth synoptic study, see E.T. Owen (1947). M. Edwards (1987), in an
updating of Owen, canvases what he deems to be the most important books: 1, 3, 6, 9, 13,
14, 16, 18, 22 and 24. Advanced students should consult B. Feniks (1968) analysis of
repeated patterns in the battle narratives of books: 5, 8 11, 13, 16, and 17.
28
For its deployment in the Odyssey, see E. Cook (2012).
29
On mnis, see L. Muellner (1996).
30
On compensation, see D. Wilson (2002).
31
See E. Cook (2003).
32
Scodel (2003), e.g., 39-40, is especially insightful on the need for multiple
introductions, summaries and foreshadowings, which she accounts for with variability in
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44
On fire symbolism in Homer, see Whitman (1958) ch. 7 and on symbolism generally
see ch. 6.
45
Though compare 9.632-3.
46
Akhilleus does address the army at once point (20.354-63), but even there they remain
* * *
McCrorie, Corinne Pache, Seth Schein and Norman Williamson for reading and
generously commenting on an earlier draft of this paper. Please credit them with anything
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