The
Odyssey by Homer is the second oldest book
in the Western literary canon; Homer’s The
Iliad wins the prize for the oldest. The works are believed to have
been written sometime about the end of the 8th century B.C. (or
B.C.E., if you prefer). They describe the fall of the great city of Troy and its
aftermath, which occurred about 400 years earlier. (Two scholarly camps argue
about the identity of Homer; one says he is a single individual and the other
says he is actually a group of individuals.)
The two works
give us innumerable images and metaphors. The face that launched a thousand
ships. The Trojan horse. Achilles’ heel. The judgment of Paris. The sirens’
song. The Cyclops. Circe the witch. Scylla and Charybdis.
The Odyssey (Robert Fitzgerald translation)was the
source for the prompts for Tweetspeak Poetry’s most recent poetry party on
Twitter, held Dec. 10, where 10 would-be Homers wrote their own epic poem.
To continue
reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Photograph: A Hellenized version of what
Homer may have looked like.
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