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The Iliad By Homer (not Simpson)

The Iliad

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The Iliad. By Homer (not Simpson). Homer. Homer is thought to have been born between 700 and 1000 B.C. According to tradition, he was blind. He composed these tales orally by assembling a number of earlier and shorter narrative songs. . BOOK-ONE-INVOCATION. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: The Iliad

Homer

• Homer is thought to have been born between 700 and 1000 B.C.

• According to tradition, he

was blind.

• He composed these tales orally by assembling a number of earlier and shorter narrative songs.

Page 3: The Iliad

Homer begins by announcing the subject and asking a Muse—one of the nine goddesses of the arts, literature, and sciences—to inspire and help him write.

BOOK-ONE-INVOCATION

Page 4: The Iliad

The IliadThe Iliad is an epic poem that is a

significant piece of literature.

Iliad translates into “A poem about a Lion”

There are 24 books, each book was written on a scroll and would have taken about an hour for the bard to recite (sing)

Page 5: The Iliad

The Iliad Vocab

• An epic is a long narrative poem about the adventures of a hero whose actions reflect the ideals and values of a nation or race.

Page 6: The Iliad

The Iliad VocabEpic Hero

• An epic hero is a larger-than-life figure who embodies the ideals of a nation or race.

• Epic heroes take on long, dangerous adventures and accomplish great deeds

• They are known for having great courage and often possess superhuman strength

Page 7: The Iliad

The IliadEpic Hero

Examples of Epic Heroes

• Beowulf• Frodo• Hercules• King Arthur• Achilles• Luke Skywalker

Page 8: The Iliad

The Iliad VocabEpic Simile (Homeric Simile)

• An epic simile (aka. Homeric simile). It compares unlike subjects. Epic similes contain words such as like, or as, and may extend for a number of lines.

• In this example, Homer compares talks of truce to alliances between men and lions and wolves and sheep.

Page 9: The Iliad

The Iliad Epic Simile

“Hector, I’ll have no talk of pacts with you,

Forever unforgiven as you are. (Line 89)As between men and lions there are

none, no concord between wolves and sheep, but all hold one another hateful through and through, so there can be no courtesy between us.

Page 10: The Iliad

The Iliad The Odyssey, with Odysseus and

his men, is the sequel to the Iliad.

In other words, the Odyssey picks up where the Iliad left off.

Page 11: The Iliad

The Iliad-The Trojan War• Greece and Troy

were traditionally rivals. Their quarreling finally led to a 10 year war.

• It started with the love story of Paris and Helen (the most beautiful woman) aka Helen of Troy.

Page 12: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Paris takes

Helen back to Troy as his wife

• Helen is already married to King Menelaus

Page 13: The Iliad
Page 14: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War • Helen is the

daughter of Zeus and Leda

• Leda was raped by Zeus in the form of a Swan

• Helen was hatched 9 months later

Page 15: The Iliad

The Iliad--Achilles• Achilles is the epic hero in The Iliad. • Kleos—everlasting glory

• He is a great warrior but is not known for his intelligence

Page 16: The Iliad

The Odyssey—Odysseus, the Hero

Odysseus is one of the first Greek mythic heroes renowned for his guile as well as his muscle.

The Iliad begins with Wrath

The Odyssey begins with Man

Page 17: The Iliad

Achilles Heel

• Ironically, Achilles is killed by a poison arrow to the only vulnerable place on his body—His heel.

Page 18: The Iliad

Achilles Heel (a weakness)

Achilles had been dipped Into The

River Styx as a baby. His heel

was the only part of his body not protected.

Page 19: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• We begin in medias res; Achilles is

sulking in his tent while his soldiers are losing to the Trojans

• Patroclus, Achilles best friend, takes his armor and is killed by Hector

• Achilles’ mother and goddess, Thetis, visits him as he laments the loss of his friend

Page 20: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles complains that Hector has

killed Patroclus and taken his armor• He vows vengeance on Hector• Thetis reminds him that Hector’s

death will result in hastening his own• Achilles doesn’t care• He reminds his mother that everyone

dies, even the great hero Heracles

Page 22: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles goes to fight Hector• Apollo intervenes by opening Troy’s

gates, saving all Trojans except Hector

• Achilles chases Hector around the walls three times

• Athena disguises herself as Hector’s brother, Deiphobus, and convinces Hector to stand and fight

Page 23: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Hector attempts to get Achilles to

agree to that the victor will allow a proper burial to the defeated

• In an epic simile, Achilles likens this pact to an agreement between men and lions

• He stubbornly refuses to honor the pact

Page 24: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles talks more trash to Hector• The duel is on• Achilles throws his only spear and

misses• Unbeknownst to Hector, Athena has

retrieved Achilles’ spear• Now, Hector throws his only spear• A glancing blow off Achilles’ shield

Page 25: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Hector calls out for Deiphobus to

bring him a new spear• He realizes he has been tricked by

Athena• Hector gathers his courage and

attacks Achilles knowing this is the end

• Hector is wearing Achilles’ armor and Achilles knows the vulnerable point—the throat

Page 26: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles drives the spear into

Hector’s throat, not severing his windpipe

• Hector is able to beg Achilles to allow his parents to bury him so that his soul can go to the underworld in peace

• Hard-hearted Achilles refuses• Hector advises Achilles that this sin

could anger the gods against him

Page 27: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles swears to accept whatever

punishment Zeus desires• Other Achaeans (Greeks) joined

Achilles in stabbing Hector’s dead body

• Achilles discontinues the battle with the Trojans while he sees to the burial of Patroclus

Page 28: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War• Achilles defiles and desecrates

Hector’s body by dragging it around the city as Hector’s parents watched

• Priam, King of Troy and Hector’s father, goes to beg Achilles to give him his son’s body

• Hermes assists Priam by putting the sentries to sleep so that he can go to Achilles tent

Page 29: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan WarA Grace given in Sorrow (book 24)

• King Priam humbles himself to Achilles, kissing his hand (The hand that killed his son)

• Priam begs Achilles to think of his own father and how he might feel

• Priam tells Achilles that Ares (god of war) has taken all 50 of his sons

Page 30: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan WarA Grace given in Sorrow (book 24)

• Achilles then takes the ransom for Hector

• He orders that the body be cleansed and kept out of Priam’s sight for fear the defiled corpse might enrage him

• Priam’s anger might get him killed• Achilles asks Patroclus to forgive him

for honoring his killer

Page 31: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan WarA Grace given in Sorrow (book 24)

• Achilles promises Priam that he may have his son at dawn

• He then invites Priam for dinner—reminding him that even Niobe ate after her 12 children were slain

• Achilles and Priam agree to an 11 day truce to allow the Trojans time to mourn and bury Hector

Page 32: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan WarA Grace given in Sorrow (book 24)

• The evocation of Achilles father caused him to feel pity for King Priam

• They both wept for their losses• Achilles blames Fate for their

misfortune• Achilles tells Priam that his mother

told him that Zeus wished the return of Hector

Page 33: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan WarThe Trojan Horse

“Beware of Greeks bearing gifts”

• Troy finally fell thanks to the guile of Odysseus. The Greeks pretended to give up. They built a huge wooden horse as a gift to the goddess Athena

Page 34: The Iliad

The Iliad—The Trojan War

Page 35: The Iliad

STOP HERE