In concluding these lengthy studies
of the Iliad and the Odyssey, we shall try to grasp
each of the poems as a whole, and then the two together
is one great totality sprung of one people and of one
consciousness. The central fact out of which both
poems arise, to which and from which both poems move,
is the Trojan War. This War, whether mythical
or historical, is certainly the most famous, and probably
the most significant that ever took place on the earth.
As to the Odyssey, the first thing
to be seized is the complete career of its Hero Ulysses.
This career has naturally two parts: the going
to Troy from Ithaca, and the coming back from Troy
to Ithaca. Every Greek hero had a similar career,
wholly or in part; many, of coarse, never returned.
The two parts together constitute a total movement
which begins at a certain point and returns to the
same; hence it may be called a cycle, and its two
parts may be designated in a general way as the Separation
and the Return.
The Odyssey has as its theme the second
half of the cycle, though, of course, it presupposes
the first half, namely the going to Troy and the stay
there. The poem, accordingly, does not give the
entire life of Ulysses; what may be called the Trojan
half must be looked for elsewhere, mainly in the Iliad.
Of course there are in the Odyssey many allusions
to incidents which belong to the first half of this
career.
The Ulysses of the Iliad is one of
the great leaders and one of the great heroes, but
he is neither the chief leader nor the chief hero.
Already he appears in Book First as a member of the
Council, and an epithet is applied to him which suggests
his wisdom. Thus at the start of the Iliad he
is designated as the man of thought, of intelligence,
of many resources. But in the Second Book he shines
with full glory, he is indeed the pivot of the whole
Book. On account of a speech made by Agamemnon,
their leader, the Greeks start at once for home, they
are ready to give up the great enterprise of the restoration
of Helen, they act as if they would abandon their
cause. It is Ulysses who calls them back to themselves
and restores order; he shows himself to be the only
man in the whole army who knows what to do in a critical
emergency. He suppresses Thersites, he exhorts
the chieftains, he uses force on the common people.
He finally makes a speech to the entire body of Greeks
in the Assembly, which recalls the great national purpose
of the War, and is the true word for the time.
Nestor follows him in a similar vein, and the Greek
host again takes its place in line of battle and prepares
for the onset upon Troy. Here we have a typical
action of Ulysses, showing his essential character,
and revealing the germ out of which the Odyssey may
well have sprouted.
Other matters may also be noticed.
Pallas, the Goddess of Wisdom, appears to him in the
midst of the tumult, and gives him her suggestion.
She will remain with him ever afterwards, manifesting
herself to him in like emergencies till the end of
the Odyssey. Telemachus is mentioned in this
Book of the Iliad. The distinction between Ulysses
and the aged Nestor is drawn: the latter has
appreciative wisdom, that of experience, while Ulysses
has creative wisdom, that of immediate divine insight,
coming directly from Pallas. This distinction
also will show itself in the Odyssey. Ulysses
is the real hero of the Second Book of the Iliad;
he appears in other Books with the same general character,
but never so prominently again.
In the Post-Iliad, or that portion
of the Trojan war which lies between the Iliad and
Odyssey, Ulysses will become the chief hero. After
the death of Achilles, there will be a contest for
the latter’s arms between him and Ajax; Ulysses
wins. That is, Brain not Brawn is to control
henceforth. Under the lead of Intelligence, which
is that of Ulysses, Troy falls.
The Odyssey, then, deals with the
return of Ulysses from the Trojan War, and lasts ten
years, as the account runs. But the poet is not
writing a history, not even a biography, in the ordinary
sense; he does not follow step by step the hero’s
wanderings, or state the events in chronological order;
we shall see how the poem turns back upon itself and
begins only some forty days before its close.
Still the Odyssey will give not merely the entire
return from Troy, but will suggest the whole cycle
of its hero’s development.
The first half of the cycle, the going
to Troy and the stay there, lasted ten years, though
some accounts have made it longer. The Iliad,
though its action is compressed to a few days, treats
generally of the first half of the cycle and hence
it is the grand presupposition of the Odyssey, which
takes it for granted everywhere. The Iliad, however,
is a unity and has its own center of action, which
is the wrath of Achilles and his reconciliation also;
it is in itself a complete cycle of individual experience
in the Trojan War.
We now begin to get an outline of
the Unity of Homer. In the first place the Iliad
is a unity from the stand-point of its hero Achilles,
who has a completely rounded period of his life portrayed
therein, which portrayal, however, gives also a vivid
picture of the Trojan War up to date. As an individual
experience it is a whole, and this is what makes it
a poem and gives to it special unity. But it is
only a fragment of the Trojan cycle a half
or less than a half; it leaves important problems
unsolved: Troy is not taken, Achilles is still
alive, the new order under the new hero Ulysses has
not yet set in, and chiefly there is no return to
Greece, which is even more difficult than the taking
of Troy. Hence the field of the second poem, the
Odyssey, which is also an individual experience has
to be so in order to be a poem embraces
the rest of the Trojan cycle after the Iliad.
Thus we may well hold to these unities
in Homer: the unity of the Iliad, the unity of
the Odyssey, and the unity of the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Both together make one grand cycle of human history
and of human consciousness; they portray a complete
world in its deed and in its thought, as well as in
manners and institutions.
Here is, then, the highest point of
view from which to look at these poems: they
are really one in two parts, written by one epoch,
by one consciousness, and probably by one man.
The Iliad as a poem is a complete cycle of individual
experience, but as an epoch is only half a cycle.
In like manner the Odyssey as a poem is a complete
cycle of individual experience, but as an epoch is
the second half of the cycle of which the Iliad is
essentially the first. Both together constitute
the one great movement usually called the Trojan War.
Much time has been spent in discussing
the question whether the Trojan War was historical
or mythical. We make bold to affirm that it was
both both historical and mythical.
It began long before the dawn of history and it exists
to this day. For the Trojan War is the conflict
between Orient and Occident, starting in the twilight
of time, and not yet concluded by any means.
The conflict between Orient and Occident runs through
all Greek Mythology, is indeed just the deepest, tone-giving
element thereof. It also runs through all Greek
history from the Persian War to the conquests of Alexander,
and lurks still in the present struggle between Greek
and Turk. The true Mythus gives in an image or
event the events of all time; it is an ideal symbol
which is realized in history.
We have above said that the Trojan
War was a complete cycle, of which the two poems portray
the two halves. Still further can the matter be
carried. The Trojan cycle, complete in itself
as a phase of Greek consciousness, is but a fragment,
a half of a still larger cycle of human development.
The Iliad and the Odyssey give the Greek half of the
grand world-movement of the Trojan epoch; there is
also an Oriental half which these poems presuppose
and from which they separate. Thus the grand
Homeric cycle, while a unit in itself, is really a
separation from the East, a separation which rendered
the Occident possible; the woes before Troy were the
birth-pangs of the new-born child, Europe, now also
grown a little old.
The reader naturally asks, will there
be any return to the Orient after the grand Greek
separation, first heralded on the plains of Ilium?
It may be answered that Europe has often returned
to the East in the course of history Alexander,
Rome, the Crusades; at present, western Europe seems
bent on getting to the far East. But the true
return of the Occident to the Orient will be round
the globe, by way of America, and that will be complete.
The recent war between Japan and China is really a
stage of the great new epoch in the world-historical
return to the Orient.
Such is the more external, the historical
phase of the Iliad and Odyssey. But they have
also a deep internal ethical phase, they show two
sides of one grand process of the human soul which
has been called self-alienation, the sacrifice of
the immediate self in order to gain true self-hood.
The Greeks had to immolate their dearest ties, those
of home and country, in order to preserve home and
country, which had been assailed to the very heart
by the rape of Helen. They had to educate themselves
to a life of violence, killing men, women, even children,
destroying home and country. For Troy also has
Family and State, though it be a complete contradiction
of Family and State by supporting Paris. But
when the Greeks had taken Troy, they were trained destroyers
of home and country, they were destruction organized
and victorious, yet their whole purpose was to save
home and country. Thus their self-alienation
has deepened into absolute self-contradiction, the
complete scission of the soul.
Now this is the spiritual condition
of which they are to get rid, out of which they are
to return to home and country. As before said
it may be deemed a harder problem than the taking
of Troy, which was simply a negative act, the destroying
the destroyers of home and country. But the great
positive act of the Trojan heroes is the restoration,
not merely the outer but the inner restoration, to
home and country.
With these considerations before the
mind of the reader, he is now ready to grasp the full
sweep of the Odyssey and understand its conflict.
It springs from the separation caused by a war, here
the Trojan War. The man is removed from his institutional
life and thrown into a world of violence and destruction.
Let us summarize the leading points of the process.
I. The absence of Ulysses leaves his
family without a head, his country without a ruler,
and his property without an owner. All these relations
begin to loosen and go to pieces; destructive forces
assail the decaying organism; the Suitors appear,
who consume his property, woo his queen, and seek
to usurp his kingly authority. Such are the dissolving
energies at work in Ithaca. Also his son Telemachus
is left without paternal training.
II. Next let us glance at the
individual. Ulysses, released from domestic life
and civil order, gives himself up to destroying domestic
life and civil order, though they be those of the enemy.
For ten years he pays no respect to Property, Family
and State in Troy; he is trained into their annihilation,
and finally does annihilate them. Yet his object
is to restore Helen, to vindicate Family and State,
and even Property.
III. Troy is destroyed because
it was itself destructive; it assailed the Greek domestic
and civil institutions in the rape of Helen. So
the destroying city itself is destroyed, but this
leaves Ulysses a destroyer in deed and in spirit;
home and country he is not only separated from but
is destructive of he is a negative man.
The previous three paragraphs contain
the leading presuppositions of the Odyssey, and show
the first half of the life of Ulysses. They indicate
three phases of the working of the negative in
Ithaca, in Troy, and in Ulysses. But now that
Troy is destroyed, how will Ulysses return to institutional
life, which he has destroyed in Troy, in himself,
and, through his absence, in Ithaca?
IV. The Return must in the first
place be within himself, he must get rid of the destructive
spirit begotten of war. For this purpose he has
the grand training told in his adventures; he must
put down the monsters of Fableland, Polyphemus, Circe,
Charybdis; he must endure the long servitude under
Calypso; he must see Phaeacia. When he is internally
ready, he can go forth and destroy the Suitors, destroy
them without becoming destructive himself, which was
his outcome at Troy. For the destruction of Troy
left him quite as negative as the Suitors, of which
condition he is to rid himself ere he can rid Ithaca
of the Suitors. This destruction thus becomes
a great positive act, now he restores Family and State,
and brings peace and harmony.
One result of separating from the
Family is that the son Telemachus has not the training
given by the father. But the son shows his blood;
he goes forth and gets his own training, the best
of the time. This is told in the Telemachiad.
Thus he can co-operate with his father.
The movement overarching the Odyssey.
The reader will note that in the preceding account
we have tried to unfold the movement of the Odyssey
as the return from the Trojan War. But as already
stated, it is itself but a part of a larger movement,
a segment of a great cycle, which cycle again suggests
a still greater cycle, which last is the movement
of the World’s History. Recall, then, that
the Odyssey by itself is a complete cycle as far as
the experience of its hero is concerned; but as belonging
to an epoch, it is but half of the total cycle of
the Trojan War. Then again this Trojan War is
but a fragment of a movement which is the total World’s
History. Now can this be set forth in a summary
which will suggest the movement not of the Odyssey
alone, but also the movement underlying and overlying
the poem? Let us make the trial, for a world-poem
must take its place in the World’s History,
which fact gives the final judgment of its worth.
I. In the prehistoric time before
Homer, there was an Orient, but no Occident; the spiritual
day of the latter had not yet dawned. Very early
began the movement toward separation, which had one
of its greatest epochs in the Trojan War.
1. Greece in those old ages was
full of the throes of birth, but was not yet born.
It was still essentially Oriental, it had no independent
development of its own, though it was moving toward
independence. The earliest objects dug out of
the long buried cities of Greece show an Oriental
connection; the famous sculptured lions over the gate
of Mycenae last to this day as a reminder of the early
Hellenic connection of European Greece with the Orient,
not to speak of Cyprus, Crete, and the lesser islands
of the AEgean.
2. Then came the great separation
of Greece from the Orient, which is the fundamental
fact of the Trojan War, and of which the Homeric poems
are the mighty announcement to the future. Troy,
an Orientalizing Hellenic city in Asia, seizes and
keeps Greek Helen, who is of Europe; it tears her
away from home and country, and through its deed destroys
Family and State. Greek Europe restores her, must
restore her, if its people be true to their institutional
principles; hence their great word is restoration,
first of their ideal Helen, and secondly of themselves.
So all the Greeks, in order to make
the separation from the Orient and restore Helen,
have to march forth to war and thus be separated themselves
from home and country, till they bring back Helen to
home and country. The deed done to Helen strikes
every Greek man till he undoes it. The stages
of this movement may be set down separately.
(a) The leaving home for Troy Achilles,
Agamemnon, Ulysses; all the heroes had their special
story of departure. Ulysses had to quit a
young wife, Penelope, and an infant son, Telemachus.
For if Helen can be abducted, no Greek family
is safe.
(b) Stay at Troy for
10 years. This is also a long training to
destruction. Ulysses
is an important man, but not the hero. Here
lies the sphere of the Iliad.
(c) Destruction of the city and
the restoration of Helen to her husband, both
of which are not told in the Iliad but are given subordinately
in the Odyssey. Thus is the separation from the
Orient completed on its negative side, that is,
as far as destruction can complete it.
3. The return to Greece of the
survivors. The question is, How can they truly
get back after so long a period of violence? The
Odyssey has this as its theme, and will give an account
of all the returns. Here, too, we observe various
stages.
(a) Leaving Troy for
home. This means a complete facing about and
a going the other way, not
only in geography, but also in conduct.
The Greeks must now quit destruction
and become constructive.
(b) It is no wonder that the
journey home was very difficult. Quarrels
arose at the start (see Nestor’s account Book
III., and that of Menelaus Book IV.). Many
perished on the way; some were lost in a storm
at sea, Agamemnon was slain on the threshold of his
own palace.
(c) Those who reached home, the
successful returners, were of three main kinds,
represented by Nestor, by Menelaus, and by Ulysses.
These were restored to home and family, and brought
peace and harmony. Such is the positive outcome
of the Trojan War, and the completion of its cycle.
II. But this rounding-off of
the Trojan cycle is, on the other hand, a final separation
from the Orient; the scission is now unfolded, explicit,
quite conscious. When Ulysses comes back to Ithaca,
and re-establishes Family and State, Greek life is
independent, distinct, self-determined. The Hellenic
world rises and fulfills its destiny in its own way;
it creates the Fine Arts, Literature, Science; it is
the beginning of the Occident.
Still the thought must come up that
the Orient is also a part of the grand movement of
the World’s History, whose cycle embraces both
Occident and Orient. The Odyssey has many glimpses
of this higher view. The first 12 books move
westward and have their outlook in that direction,
the last 12 books have their outlook eastward toward
Egypt, Phoenicia, and the Oriental borderland.
The earlier fairy tales of Ulysses have their scene
in the West, while the later romances or novelettes
interwoven in the last 12 Books have their scene in
the East, with one exception possibly.
The main fact, however, of the Trojan
cycle is the great separation, deepest in history,
between Orient and Occident, through the instrumentality
of Greece. The civilization of Europe and the
West is the offspring of that separation, which is
still going on, is a living fact, and is the source
of the vexed Eastern question of European politics.
III. We are living to-day in
that separation; our art, science, education, poetic
forms, our secular life largely come from ancient
Greece. Oriental art, customs, domestic life,
government, we do not as a rule fraternize with; the
Greek diremption is in us still; only in one way,
in our religious life, do we keep a connection with
an Oriental people. But is this separation never
to be overcome? Is there to be no return to the
East and completion of the world’s cycle?
The Cycle. We have often used
this word, and some may think that we have abused
it; still our object is to restore the Greek conception
of these poems, as they were looked at and spoken
of by Hellas herself. The idea of the cycle was
fundamental in grasping the epics which related to
the Trojan War, and this War itself was regarded as
a cycle of events and deeds, which the poets sang
and put into their poetic cycle. Let us briefly
trace this thought of the cycle as developed in old
Greece.
I. In two different passages of his
Organon, Aristotle calls the epic a cycle and
the poetry of Homer a cycle. Now both passages
are employed by him to illustrate a defective syllogism,
hence are purely incidental. But no instance
could better show the prevalence of the idea of a
cycle as applied to Homer and epic poetry, for the
philosopher evidently draws his illustration from something
familiar to everybody. It had become a Greek
common-place 350 B.C., and probably long before, that
an epic poem, such as the Iliad or Odyssey, is cyclical,
and that both together make a cycle.
II. But this idea develops, and
expands beyond the Iliad and Odyssey, which are found
to leave out many events of the Trojan Cycle.
Indeed the myth-making spirit of Greece unfolds new
incidents, deeds, and characters. The result
is that many poets, after Homer had completed his
cycle, began filling the old gaps, or really making
new ones that these might be filled by a fresh poem.
Hence arose the famous Epic Cycle, which has been
preserved in a kind of summary supposed to have been
written by Proclus, not the philosopher, but a grammarian
of the time of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius.
Meantime, let us carefully distinguish
some of our Cycles. The Trojan Cycle is one of
events and deeds, in general is the going to and the
returning from Troy. The Homeric Cycle is Homer’s
account, in his two poems, of this Trojan Cycle.
Finally the Epic Cycle is the expansion of Homer and
includes a number of Epics, which fill out to ultimate
completeness the Trojan Cycle. The latter, according
to Proclus, is made up of six Epics beside the Iliad
and Odyssey, to which they stand in the following
relations.
1. The Cypria, which deals
with events antecedent to the Iliad, such as the apple
of Discord, the visit of Paris at Sparta and the taking
of Helen, the mustering at Aulis, the sacrifice of
Iphigeneia, and many incidents at Troy. Ulysses,
to avoid going to the war, feigns madness (his first
disguise) and ploughs the sea-sand; but he is detected
by Palamedes who lays his infant Telemachus in the
track of the plough. The name Cypria comes
from Kypris, Venus, who caused the infatuation which
led to the war.
2. Four different epics fill
in between the Iliad and the Odyssey. The AEthiopis
takes up the thread after the death of Hector, introducing
Penthesilea, Queen of the Amazons, and Memnon, son
of the Dawn, both of whom are slain by Achilles who
is himself slain and is buried with funeral games.
After the death of Achilles, the Little Iliad
continues the story, installing Ulysses as hero over
Ajax in the contest for the arms of Achilles.
This is the grand transition from Brawn to Brain in
the conduct of the war. The Wooden Horse is made,
and the Palladium is carried out of Troy both
deeds being the product of the brain, if not of the
hand, of Ulysses. Next comes the Sack of Troy,
whose name indicates its character. Laocoon and
Sinon appear in it, but the main thing is the grand
slaughter (like that of the Suitors) and the dragging
of women and children into captivity; the city is
burned. Then follows the epic called the Nostoi
or the Returns, really an elaboration of the Odyssey,
specially of the Third Book, which tells of these
antecedent Returns. Then comes the great Return,
which is the Odyssey.
3. After the Odyssey follows
the Telegonia written by Eugammon of Cyrene
in two Books. It continues the life of Ulysses;
he now goes to that people who take an oar for winnowing
fan, and there he makes the offering to Neptune, enjoined
by Tiresias in Hades. Other incidents are narrated;
the final winding-up is that Ulysses is unwittingly
slain by Telegonus, his and Circe’s son, who
appears in Ithaca and takes Telemachus and Penelope
to Circe, who makes them immortal. The grand
Epic Cycle concludes with the strangest set of marriages
on record: Telegonus marries Penelope, his step-mother,
and Telemachus marries Circe who is also a kind of
step-mother.
III. After such a literary bankruptcy,
it is no wonder that we find the later Greek and Roman
writers using the words cyclic and cyclic
poet as terms of disparagement. The great
Mythus of Troy had run its course and exhausted itself;
the age of imitation, formalism, erudition had come,
while that of creation had passed away. Still
it has preserved for us the idea of the cycle, which
is necessary for the adequate comprehension of Homer,
and which the Greeks themselves conceived and employed.
Structure of the Odyssey. A
brief summary of the structural elements of the poem
may now be set forth. It falls into two grand
divisions, both of which are planned by Pallas in
Book I and XIII respectively. In the main these
divisions are the following:
I. The first takes up about one-half
of the Odyssey twelve Books, which
have as their chief object instruction and discipline the
training for the deed. This training has two
very distinct portions, as it pertains to a young
man and a middle-aged man Telemachiad
and Ulyssiad.
1. The Telemachiad, or the education
of Telemachus, who has been left without the
influence of his father, when the latter went to
Troy. But he has his father’s spirit, hence
he must know; from Ithaca he goes to Nestor
and Menelaus for instruction. Four Books.
2. The Ulyssiad, or the discipline
of Ulysses, who must have been a man over 40
years old. He is to be trained out of the negative
spirit which he imbibed from the Trojan war. Herein
lies his analogy to Faust, who is also a middle-aged
man, and negative, but from study and thought.
Both the Telemachiad and the Ulyssiad
are essentially one great movement in two phases,
showing the bud and the flower, the young and the
mature man. Father and son reveal an overcoming
of limitation; Telemachus overcomes his limit of ignorance,
Ulysses overcomes his limit of negation the
one by the instruction of the wise, the other by the
experience of life. Both are trained to a belief
in an ethical order which rules the world; therein
both are made internally ready for the great act of
delivering their country. The training of both
reaches forward to a supreme practical end the
destruction of the Suitors and the purification of
Ithaca. (For the further structure of these two parts the
Telemachiad and the Ulyssiad see preceding
commentary under these titles.)
II. The second grand division
of the Odyssey is the last twelve Books. The
scene is laid in Ithaca, where the great deed, to which
the poem hitherto has looked forward, is to be done.
The wanderings of the father have ceased, the son
returns from his schooling; every movement is now
directed toward action. Again Pallas (XII-415)
plans two subdivisions, without the Council of the
Gods however.
1. The hut of the swineherd.
Here the forces hostile to the Suitors gather in secret
and lay their plan. Ulysses, Telemachus, Eumaeus,
the gallant army of three, get ready for the execution
of the deed. Four Books.
2. The palace of the King.
Ulysses in disguise beholds the Suitors in their negative
acts; they are as bad as the Trojans, assailing Property,
Family, State, the Gods; they are really in their way
re-enacting the rape of Helen. Ulysses, as he
destroyed Troy, must destroy them, yet not become
merely destructive himself. Eight Books, in which
we can discern the following movement: (1) Suitors
as destroyers five Books; (2) Ulysses as
destroyer one Book; (3) Ulysses as restorer two
Books. Thus the outcome is positive..
The career of Ulysses is now complete,
and with it the Homeric Cycle has rounded itself out
to fullness. The Epic Cycle in the Telegonia
will expand this conclusion, but will deeply mar its
idea.
Note that the structure of the two
grand divisions of the Odyssey are symmetrical, each
a half of the poem; then each half subdivides into
two parts, and each of those parts is symmetrical,
being composed of four and eight Books each.
To be sure, the joint is not so plain in the second
division as in the first, which has the Telemachiad
and the Ulyssiad. Pallas is the orderer of both
divisions, and she orders them in a symmetrical manner.
For both divisions the grand horizon
is the Trojan War, yet both reach beyond it, the one
toward the West, the other toward the East. The
one weaves into its regular narrative the Fairy Tale,
the other takes up into its text what we have called
the Romantic Novelette. The former looks toward
the West and the Future, the latter looks back at the
East and the Past. Hence the Fairy Tale is prophetic
and has supernatural beings, the Novelette is retrospective,
giving the experiences of life without supernatural
agencies. In scenery also the contrast is great:
the one is largely a sea poem, the other is a land
poem.
Structural analogy between Iliad
and Odyssey. We have before said, and we may repeat
here at the end, that the final fruit of Homeric study
is to see and to fully realize that the Iliad and Odyssey
are one work, showing national consciousness, and
unfolding one great epoch of the World’s History.
Just here we may note the fundamental analogies of
structure between the two poems.
I. Both poems have the dual division,
separating into two symmetrical portions. The
Iliad has two Wraths of Achilles, and also two Reconciliations;
thus each division is subdivided:
1. His first attitude or cycle
of conduct toward the Greeks.
(a) His wrath both
rightful and wrongful.
(b) His reconciliation
with Agamemnon and his own people.
2. His second attitude, or cycle
of conduct toward the Trojans.
(a) His wrath both
rightful and wrongful.
(b) His reconciliation
with Priam and the Trojans.
Such is the general organism of the
Iliad which is seen to be perfectly symmetrical within
itself. Note that the negative
attitude of Achilles is that of wrath; in his anger
he will destroy his people and his cause, and finally,
in the dragging of Hector’s corpse, he disregards
the Gods. Yet be overcomes both these negative
attitudes in himself and becomes reconciled.
II. The Odyssey has two phases
of Negation, both of which the heroes (father and
son) must overcome.
1. The negative spirit caused
by the Trojan War and its overcoming.
(a) The ignorance of
the son and its overcoming.
(b) The destructive
tendency of the father and its overcoming.
2. The negative spirit abroad
in Ithaca (Suitors) and its overcoming.
(a) The hut of the
swineherd (preparation).
(b) The palace of the
King (execution).
That is, Ulysses and Telemachus have
the double problem, which organizes the Odyssey:
they must conquer their own internal negation, then
proceed to conquer that of the Suitors. Both poems
divide alike; both have the same fundamental thought:
the individual as hero is to master his own negative
spirit and that of the world, and then be reconciled
with himself and the world. The Iliad has essentially
but one thread of movement, that of Achilles; the
Odyssey has two such threads, if not three father,
son, and perchance wife, making the total Family as
the unit of movement.
Thus the Iliad and Odyssey are one
poem fundamentally, showing unity in thought and structure,
and portraying one complete cycle of national consciousness,
as well as one great phase of the World’s History.