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Rainbow, Sky, and Stars in the Iliad and the Odyssey: A Chorizontic Argument

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Grace Harriet Macurdy
Affiliation:
Vassar College

Extract

The opinion has been expressed frequently of late, notably by Professor Mackail and Miss Stawell, that the Odyssey may well be the work of the advanced years of the Homer of the Iliad. Miss Stawell remarks that one of an alert mind must feel that the Odyssey is the poem of an older man—one who has conceived and written a poem before. She suggests that that poem may have been the Iliad. So Professor Mackail argues that a “different mind may come to a poet with the lapse of years and with fresh experiences,” and that “the poet who produced the Iliad in the early prime of his life was a poet capable of the artistic and poetical change that is felt in the Odyssey, among new surroundings, with an altered view of life, with an imaginative ardour burning less strongly and with increased constructional mastery.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1914

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References

page 212 note 1 Lectures on Greek Poetry, p. 12.Google Scholar

page 212 note 2 Ibid., p. 73.

page 212 note 3 Il. VI. 145–9; III. 65, 6.

page 213 note 1 “Lurid”? So Leaf.

page 213 note 2 Leaf, Iliad, II., App. H, on ούρανός, αίθήρ, άήρ.

page 213 note 3 Iliad, XIII. 837 ; XIX. 357.

page 213 note 4 Problem of the Homeric Poems, p. 137.

page 213 note 5 According to Gehring's Index, 32–12.

page 214 note 1 Iliad, XIII. 754.

page 214 note 2 Odyssey, VI. 44 ; XIV. 476; XIX. 204.

page 214 note 3 Iliad, XVI. 765–69.

page 214 note 4 Studies in Homer, p. 45.

page 215 note 1 Murray, Rise of the Greek Epic, p. 215.

page 215 note 2 Murray, Four Stages of Greek Religion, p. 68.