Authors: Adam Nicolson
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For
Sarah Raven
Molly Nicolson
Rosie Nicolson
Ben Nicolson
William Nicolson
Thomas Nicolson
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CONTENTS
 Â
3
â¢
Loving Homer
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COLOR PLATES
“The Mask of Agamemnon.”
(Universal History Archive/Getty Images)
Mycenaean funerary stele with relief chariot scene, ca. 1600
BC
.
(Photo by Adam Nicolson)
Minoan bath, mid-fourteenth century
BC
.
(© Carlos Collection of Ancient Art, Emory University)
TEXT ILLUSTRATIONS
Rue Contrescarpe-Dauphine, ca. 1866, by Charles Marville.
(Courtesy of Philippe Mellot)
Milman Parry.
(Courtesy of the Milman Parry Collection of Oral Literature, Harvard University)
Bronze spearheads.
(Museo Archeologico Paolo Orsi, Syracuse. Photo by Adam Nicolson)
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There is a pair of linked questions at the heart of this book: Where does Homer come from? And why does Homer matter? These ancient poems can be daunting and difficult, but I have no doubt that their account of war and suffering can still speak to us of the role of destiny in life, of cruelty, humanity, its frailty and the pains of existence. That they do is a mystery. Why is it that something conceived in the eastern Mediterranean Bronze Age, maybe four thousand years ago, as foreign as the Dayak, as distant as Vanuatu, can still exert its grip on us? How can we be so intimate with something so far away?
Perhaps it is a mistake to give the answer before the questions are properly asked, but this is complicated country, and an idea of the destination is worth having. Besides, it is a Homeric technique to tell the story before it begins. And so, if you ask why and how the Homeric poems emerged when they did, and why and how Homer can mean so much now, the answer to both questions is the same: because Homer tells us how we became who we are.
That is not the usual modern answer. The current orthodoxy is that the
Iliad
and the
Odyssey
are both products of the eighth century
BC
, or thereabouts, early Iron Age Greece, a time that has been called the Greek Renaissance. In the preceding half millennium, Greek civilization had largely sunk into isolated pockets of poverty. Many of the islands in the Aegean were deserted. One or two had remained rich and kept up links with the Near East, but the great palaces of an earlier Greece had fallen into ruin. But for reasons that have yet to be explained, the eighth century saw a widespread revival. The population of Greece and the islands began to grow. The tempo of life quickened. The art of making bronze, dependent on imported tin, was revived for the first time in four centuries. Colonies, trade, improved ships, gymnasiums, coinage, temples, cities, pan-Hellenic competitions at Olympia (the first, traditionally, in 776
BC
), the art of writing, of depicting the human figure on pottery and in the round, the first written law codes, the dating of history, the first tentative moves toward the formation of city-statesâevery one of these aspects of a renewed civilization quite suddenly appeared all over the eighth-century Aegean. Homer, in this view, was the product of a new, dynamic, politically inventive and culturally burgeoning moment in Greek history. Homer was the poet of a boom.
I see it differently: my Homer is a thousand years older. His power and poetry derive not from the situation of a few emergent states in the eighth-century Aegean, but from a far bigger and more fundamental historic moment, in the centuries around 2000
BC
, when early Greek civilization crystallized from the fusion of two very different worlds: the semi-nomadic, hero-based culture of the Eurasian steppes to the north and west of the Black Sea, and the sophisticated, authoritarian and literate cities and palaces of the eastern Mediterranean. Greeknessâand eventually Europeannessâemerged from the meeting and melding of those worlds. Homer is the trace of that encounterâin war, despair and eventual reconciliation at Troy in the
Iliad
, in flexibility and mutual absorption in the
Odyssey
. Homer's urgency comes from the pain associated with that clash of worlds and his immediacy from the eternal principles at stake: what matters more, the individual or the community, the city or the hero? What is life, something of everlasting value or a transient and hopeless irrelevance?