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IV. Homer (1967)
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There he sits in his tent singing, again singing to his lyre,
with his friend Patroklos. How does Homer trick him into the performance?
His friend Patroklos finally says to him "now let me fight Hektor
and give me your armament" (Achilles has wonderful weapons and armament).(2)
"Give me your armament" he says, "and they will perhaps get afraid
seeing me in it, and I will try my best to help the Hellenic forces".
And Achilles, in a weak moment, agrees. Patroklos is then slain
(by Hektor), and Achilles has to revenge him. It is human nature.
He was his friend, and all of the Hellenes would spit on him if
didn't go. He has to has to go, and so he goes and slays
Hektor and with that the fall of Troy is assured. The story ends
here, with this wonderful artistic trick. He does not tell the story
of how Achilles dies, or of the final fall of Troy as it is in the
sagas of the Greeks. He stops it short where Achilles has killed
Hektor, and Priam, the King of Troy comes to ask him for the body
of his dead son, and Achilles starts to weep.
A very short story so to speak. The life of man as a young man,
and there is a symbol in the story which shows how world wide it
is. It is the description of the shield of Achilles. In that
description you will find that every detail on the shield makes
a whole world as Homer was trying to compose it. I say trying, because
this might have been the young Homer. The Odyssey was written
for another purpose: Namely, the full life of man in its full length,
with all of the possibilities there. Not man as a young man, but
rather man as someone who grows old and achieves everything. It
is a quite different topic. The story seems at once to became world
wide. The idea is that man consciousness has become a consciousness
of independence and of freedom at all costs. Homer has found a place
for him in the middle, between nature and the gods. The consequence
of this is that he can only describe him by more and more humanizing
his description of the gods, even putting motives in their mouths
which make them, as Plato will say later, "all too human".
How Zeus behaves is sometimes not very moralistic. The other gods
are jealous of each other, and they fight like hell, almost like
human beings. So a lowering of this God consciousness is required,
in order to increase man consciousness and world consciousness.
Now world consciousness means to develop a united view of the world,
and here help comes to Homer again from Greek myth and from Greek
language. He describes the world as a cosmos, but it is a cosmos
that does not belong to the gods. To the cosmos belongs nature,
to the cosmos belongs man, they all belong in the cosmos.
There is no transcendent idea above the world, because the gods
are suffering from the same curse that man suffers. Not, that
they have to die, but that they might be dethroned. They run a risk.
Above them lies moira (fate) who decides all, and the gods have
a fate just as man has, and as nature has, and there is no getting
away from it.
When we first meet Odysseus we find that he is sitting on an island
with (the goddess) Calypso. He is paralyzed at the moment, because
Calypso loves him, wants to keep him, and he cannot get away. He
wants to go home to fulfill his life, and he cannot, because Calypso
promises him immortality. He refuses immortality (to refuse immortality
for a - Greek, for a Hellene: That is really fantastic). He rather
wants to die with his wife (Penelope) than to be immortal and lie
with Calypso. That is quite a rebuke, and he tells her "you are
so much more beautiful, beautiful you are". "It would be so much
more seducing but I have a purpose in life". What's the idea? The
idea is that if he accepts immortality (and we must suppose, within
the framework of Greek myth, that this could be done by Calypso)
that he will become somebody other than Odysseus. He will
be changed. He will not be the same man. He cannot pursue his purpose,
which is to go home and be victorious over the suitors of his wife,
and he prefers here clearly in Homer, to fulfill his fate. To die
as a man instead of living as a God. It is almost an atheistic idea.
So we meet him there. He is paralyzed, he cannot move. This man
who has gone everywhere, who has met every situation. He is at a
dead point, as if he were in the center, where nothing moves, of
a tremendous storm, a world storm. He sits there in complete stillness,
paralyzed, so to speak, for his whole life. He is sitting in the
center of all of his explorations. He has gone around the
whole of the Mediterranean. He has achieved it already. There is
only one wave of the past that must still go over him, and that
is the wave that will put him on the shore of the Phaeacians. The
very moment he is on that shore, and Nausicaa comes, his success
is guaranteed, and his future is open. The last piece of the past
is brought in by Homer with a storm that almost drowns Odysseus,
after he has made a raft in order to sail that last piece of space
between himself and the island of the Phaeacians. The gods intervene
in the meantime. Athena loves him, and tells Zeus that they must
help him in order that he may fulfill his promise. She has been
busy working for him in Olympus (while Poseidon is away getting
feasted and celebrated in Ethiopia) and since he cannot see what
they are doing they are able to save Odysseus. Why do they help
him to get away?
The story is that he defied a God. He defied Poseidon. Poseidon
hates him from the beginning, and doesn't want to let him get home.
He knows (the other gods tell him) that destiny (moira) will let
him get home, and they indeed let him get home, without any companions
or other conditions what so ever. But first Poseidon heaps suffering
after suffering upon Odysseus, because he hates him. This hatred
grows. What has Odysseus done? He has met the Cyclopes and the Cyclopes
is the son of Poseidon. He has blinded the Cyclopes, and then, he
was in a situation where the Cyclopes said to his comrades "no man
has ever blinded me", and so Odysseus has to give out his name.
He has (up until then) called himself no man, but now he
sits in his little boat, and cannot draw back from himself the spelling
of his name. Suddenly he shouts out "and that you might know who
did that to you, Odysseus, son of Laertes". At that moment Poseidon
knows that he can pursue him, the man who did that deed.
Why did Odysseus do that? We have met the cleverest man possible,
who knows every situation. He is a guy who can wriggle himself out
of every situation (with the help of the gods, with the presence
of Athena, or, what we might call in the twentieth century, with
this tremendous presence of mind that this man has). The presence
of mind is always there and he can meet any situation. He is crafty,
wiley, and another thing, just. He has been fighting for just causes,
fighting with Athena for the right to found a new state in Ithaca.
He sees it through, but why at this moment, does he risk to raise
the scorn of Poseidon? Because he cannot resist. He has become what
all Greek heroes want to become which makes him immortal. A monster
slayer. He has blinded a monster, and that is eternal glory. When
he comes home they all will have to sing about him, and this glory
he cannot resist. That, in a way, is what does him in.
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