Unit 5 | English
201: Masterpieces of Western Literature |
.Unit 5 Reading | Course Reading | Entry Page |
Introduction | Background | .Explication | Questions | Review |
The end of the ODY threatens to whirl out of control with
violence multiplied by the aggrieved relatives of the 118 suitors executed
by OD. The idealized (almost Phaiakian) end fails. Zeus promises
that:
24.499 we, for our part,
will blot out the memory
of sons & brothers slain
Apparently this is ineffective, because the relatives mass for a military
assault. Athena seems equivocal. She invigorates old Laertes,
commanding him:
24.538 heft your spear
& make your throw.
Power flowed into him [Laertes] from Pallas Athena
When the army of relatives flees & OD's family:
24.546 would have cut the
enemy down
to the last man, leaving not one survivor
Athena stops the mayhem & commands:
24.551 end your bloodshed,
Ithakans, & make peace.
At the very end of these 2 long works by Homer, the voice of Reason
still requires the threat of violence to be heard:
24.556 Those from the town
turned fleeing for their lives,
24.559 the lord OD reared
himself to follow--
at which the son of Kronos dropped a thunderbolt
smoking at his daughter's feet.
Because they are manifestations of libido, power & even violence
are ineradicable in our world. The best we can hope for is their
judicious use in defense of civil values (beauty). Are we not
disturbed by OD's plan for economic recovery?
24.363 as to the
flocks that pack of wolves laid waste
they'll be replenished: scores I'll get on raids
& other scores our island friends will give me
Give him? How freely? Don't you suspect extortion or intimidation? You might as well offer the gift, before it is taken by force. Before you condemn OD for regressing to the familiar & casual violence of The Iliad, think about the American use of violence & the threat of violence to keep the oil flowing from the mid-East or keep Khrushchev from putting missiles in Cuba or deciding not to try Emperor Hirohito for war crimes.
At the very end, the polis seems possible when:
24.567 He [OD] yielded
to her, & his heart was glad.
Both parties later swore to terms of peace
set by their arbiter, Athena
We will see how Aeschylus explicates this easy to miss shift from an exclusive commitment to blood values (I will defend my blood relatives no matter what they do) to values that we consciously vow to defend. The symbol for this is marriage, where the relationship is between 2 people who were once strangers to each other. The city works (or should work) much the same way. This is partly why Homer finds Klytemnestra's treachery so outrageous: it promises treason among civic partners.
Click on the next section: Explication
above.