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HOMER AND HIS AGE

ANDREW LANG

[Illustration: ALGONQUINS UNDER SHIELD _Frontispiece_]

To R. W. RAPER IN ALL GRATITUDE

PREFACE

In _Homer and the Epic_ ten or twelve years ago I examined
the literary objections to Homeric unity. These objections are
chiefly based on alleged discrepancies in the narrative of which
no one poet it is supposed could have been guilty. The critics
repose I venture to think mainly on a fallacy. We may style it
the fallacy of "the analytical reader." The poet is expected to
satisfy a minutely critical reader a personage whom he could not
foresee and whom he did not address. Nor are "contradictory
instances" examined--that is as Blass has recently reminded his
countrymen Homer is put to a test which Goethe could not endure.
No long fictitious narrative can satisfy "the analytical reader."

The fallacy is that of disregarding the Homeric poet's audience.
He did not sing for Aristotle or for Aristarchus or for modern
minute and reflective inquirers but for warriors and ladies. He
certainly satisfied them; but if he does not satisfy microscopic
professors he is described as a syndicate of many minstrels
living in many ages.

In the present volume little is said in defence of the poet's
consistency. Several chapters on that point have been excised. The
way of living which Homer describes is examined and an effort is
made to prove that he depicts the life of a single brief age of
culture. The investigation is compelled to a tedious minuteness
because the points of attack--the alleged discrepancies in
descriptions of the various details of existence--are so minute as
to be all but invisible.

The unity of the Epics is not so important a topic as the methods
of criticism. They ought to be sober logical and self-
consistent. When these qualities are absent Homeric criticism may
be described in the recent words of Blass as "a swamp haunted by
wandering fires will o' the wisps."

In our country many of the most eminent scholars are no believers
in separatist criticism. Justly admiring the industry and
erudition of the separatists they are unmoved by their arguments
to which they do not reply being convinced in their own minds.
But the number and perseverance of the separatists make on "the
general reader" the impression that Homeric unity is chose
_jugee_ that _scientia locuta est_ and has condemned
Homer. This is far from being the case: the question is still
open; "science" herself is subject to criticism; and new
materials accruing yearly forbid a tame acquiescence in hasty
theories.

May I say a word to the lovers of poetry who in reading Homer
feel no more doubt than in reading Milton that on the whole they
are studying a work of one age by one author? Do not let them be
driven from their natural impression by the statement that Science
has decided against them. The certainties of the exact sciences
are one thing: the opinions of Homeric commentators are other and
very different things. Among all the branches of knowledge which
the Homeric critic should have at his command only philology
archaeology and anthropology can be called "sciences"; and they
are not exact sciences: they are but skirmishing advances towards
the true solution of problems prehistoric and "proto-historic."

Our knowledge shifts from day to day; on every hand in regard to
almost every topic discussed we find conflict of opinions. There
is no certain scientific decision but there is the possibility of
working in the scientific spirit with breadth of comparison;
consistency of logic; economy of conjecture; abstinence from the
piling of hypothesis on hypothesis.

Nothing can be more hurtful to science than the dogmatic
assumption that the hypothesis most in fashion is scientific.

Twenty years ago the philological theory of the Solar Myth was
preached as "scientific" in the books primers and lectures of
popular science. To-day its place knows it no more. The separatist
theories of the Homeric poems are not more secure than the Solar
Myth "like a wave shall they pass and be passed."

When writing on "The Homeric House" (Chapter X.) I was
unacquainted with Mr. Percy Gardner's essay "The Palaces of
Homer" (_Journal of Hellenic Studies_ vol. iii. pp. 264-
282). Mr. Gardner says that Dasent's plan of the Scandinavian Hall
"offers in most respects not likeness but a striking contrast to
the early Greek hall." Mr. Monro who was not aware of the
parallel which I had drawn between the Homeric and Icelandic
houses accepted it on evidence more recent than that of Sir
George Dasent. Cf. his _Odyssey_ vol. ii. pp. 490-494.

Mr. R. W. Raper of Trinity College Oxford has read the proof
sheets of this work with his habitual kindness but is in no way
responsible for the arguments. Mr. Walter Leaf has also obliged me
by mentioning some points as to which I had not completely
understood his position and I have tried as far as possible to
represent his ideas correctly. I have also received assistance
from the wide and minute Homeric lore of Mr. A. Shewan of St.
Andrews and have been allowed to consult other scholars on
various points.

The first portion of the chapter on "Bronze and Iron" appeared in
the Revue _Archeologique_ for April 1905 and the editor
Monsieur Salomon Reinach obliged me with a note on the bad iron
swords of the Celts as described by Polybius.

The design of men in three shields of different shapes from a
Dipylon vase is reproduced with permission from the British
Museum _Guide to the Antiquities of the Iron Age_; and the
shielded chessmen from Catalogue of Scottish Society of
Antiquaries. Thanks for the two ships with men under shield are
offered to the Rev. Mr. Browne S.J. author of _Handbook of
Homeric Studies_ (Longmans). For the Mycenaean gold corslet I
thank Mr. John Murray (Schliemann's Mycenae and Tiryns) and for
all the other Mycenaean illustrations Messrs. Macmillan and Mr.
Leaf publishers and author of Mr. Leaf's edition of the
_Iliad_.

CONTENTS:

CHAPTER I: THE HOMERIC AGE

CHAPTER II: HYPOTHESES AS TO THE GROWTH OF THE EPICS

CHAPTER III: HYPOTHESES OF EPIC COMPOSITION

CHAPTER IV: LOOSE FEUDALISM: THE OVER-LORD IN "ILIAD" BOOKS I.
AND II.

CHAPTER V: AGAMEMNON IN THE LATER "ILIAD"

CHAPTER VI: ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE "ILIAD"--BURIAL AND CREMATION

CHAPTER VII: HOMERIC ARMOUR

CHAPTER VIII: THE BREASTPLATE

CHAPTER IX: BRONZE AND IRON

CHAPTER X: THE HOMERIC HOUSE

CHAPTER XI: NOTES OF CHANGE IN THE "ODYSSEY"

CHAPTER XII: LINGUISTIC PROOFS OF VARIOUS DATES

CHAPTER XIII: THE "DOLONEIA"--"ILIAD" BOOK X.

CHAPTER XIV: THE INTERPOLATIONS OF NESTOR

CHAPTER XV: THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY EPICS

CHAPTER XVI: HOMER AND THE FRENCH MEDIAEVAL EPICS

CHAPTER XVII: CONCLUSION

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS:

ALGONQUINS UNDER SHIELD

THE VASE OF ARISTONOTHOS

DAGGER WITH LION-HUNTERS

RINGS: SWORDS AND SHIELDS

FRAGMENTS OF WARRIOR VASE

FRAGMENT OF SIEGE VASE

ALGONQUIN CORSLET

GOLD CORSLET

CHAPTER I

THE HOMERIC AGE

The aim of this book is to prove that the Homeric Epics as
wholes and apart from passages gravely suspected in antiquity
present a perfectly harmonious picture of the entire life and
civilisation of one single age. The faint variations in the design
are not greater than such as mark every moment of culture for in
all there is some movement; in all cases are modified by
circumstances. If our contention be true it will follow that the
poems themselves as wholes are the product of a single age not
a mosaic of the work of several changeful centuries.

This must be the case--if the life drawn is harmonious the
picture must be the work of a single epoch--for it is not in the
nature of early uncritical times that later poets should adhere
or even try to adhere to the minute details of law custom
opinion dress weapons houses and so on as presented in
earlier lays or sagas on the same set of subjects. Even less are
poets in uncritical times inclined to "archaise" either by
attempting to draw fancy pictures of the manners of the past or
by making researches in graves or among old votive offerings in
temples for the purpose of "preserving local colour." The idea of
such archaising is peculiar to modern times. To take an instance
much to the point Virgil was a learned poet famous for his
antiquarian erudition and professedly imitating and borrowing
from Homer. Now had Virgil worked as a man of to-day would work
on a poem of Trojan times he would have represented his heroes as
using weapons of bronze. [Footnote: Looking back at my own poem
_Helen of Troy_ (1883) I find that when the metal of a
weapon is mentioned the metal is bronze.] No such idea of
archaising occurred to the learned Virgil. It is "the iron" that
pierces the head of Remulus (_Aeneid_ IX. 633); it is "the
iron" that waxes warm in the breast of Antiphates (IX. 701).
Virgil's men again do not wear the great Homeric shield
suspended by a baldric: AEneas holds up his buckler
(_clipeus_) borne "on his left arm" (X. 26 i). Homer
familiar with no buckler worn on the left arm has no such
description. When the hostile ranks are to be broken in the
_Aeneid_ it is "with the iron" (X. 372) and so throughout.

The most erudite ancient poet in a critical age of iron does not
archaise in our modern fashion. He does not follow his model
Homer in his descriptions of shields swords and spears. But
according to most Homeric critics the later continuators of the
Greek Epics about 800-540 B.C. are men living in an age of iron
weapons and of round bucklers worn on the left arm. Yet unlike
Virgil they always give their heroes arms of bronze and unlike
Virgil (as we shall see) they do not introduce the buckler worn
on the left arm. They adhere conscientiously to the use of the
vast Mycenaean shield in their time obsolete. Yet by the theory
in many other respects they innovate at will introducing corslets
and greaves said to be unknown to the beginners of the Greek
Epics just as Virgil innovates in bucklers and iron weapons. All
this theory seems inconsistent and no ancient poet not even
Virgil is an archaiser of the modern sort.

All attempts to prove that the Homeric poems are the work of
several centuries appear to rest on a double hypothesis: first
that the later contributors to the _ILIAD_ kept a steady eye
on the traditions of the remote Achaean age of bronze; next that
they innovated as much as they pleased.

Poets of an uncritical age do not archaise. This rule is
overlooked by the critics who represent the Homeric poems as a
complex of the work of many singers in many ages. For example
Professor Percy Gardner in his very interesting _New chapters
in Greek History_ (1892) carries neglect of the rule so far as
to suppose that the late Homeric poets being aware that the
ancient heroes could not ride or write or eat boiled meat
consciously and purposefully represented them as doing none of
these things. This they did "on the same principle on which a
writer of pastoral idylls in our own day would avoid the mention
of the telegraph or telephone." [Footnote: _Op. cit._ p.
142.] "A writer of our own day"--there is the pervading fallacy!
It is only writers of the last century who practise this
archaeological refinement. The authors of _Beowulf_ and the
_Nibelungenlied_ of the Chansons de _Geste_ and of the
Arthurian romances always describe their antique heroes and the
details of their life in conformity with the customs costume and
armour of their own much later ages.

But Mr. Leaf to take another instance remarks as to the lack of
the metal lead in the Epics that it is mentioned in similes only
as though the poet were aware the metal was unknown in the heroic
age. [Footnote: _Iliad_ Note on xi. 237.] Here the poet is
assumed to be a careful but ill-informed archaeologist who wishes
to give an accurate representation of the past. Lead in fact was
perfectly familiar to the Mycenaean prime. [Footnote: Tsountas and
Manatt p. 73.] The critical usage of supposing that the ancients
were like the most recent moderns--in their archaeological
preoccupations--is a survival of the uncritical habit which
invariably beset old poets and artists. Ancient poets of the
uncritical ages never worked "on the same principle as a writer
in our day" as regards archaeological precision; at least we are
acquainted with no example of such accuracy.

Let us take another instance of the critical fallacy. The age of
the Achaean warriors who dwelt in the glorious halls of Mycenae
was followed at an interval by the age represented in the relics
found in the older tombs outside the Dipylon gate of Athens an
age beginning probably about 900-850 B.C. The culture of this
"Dipylon age" a time of geometrical ornaments on vases and of
human figures drawn in geometrical forms lines and triangles
was quite unlike that of the Achaean age in many ways for
example in mode of burial and in the use of iron for weapons. Mr.
H. R. Hall in his learned book _The Oldest Civilisation of
Greece_ (1901) supposes the culture described in the Homeric
poems to be contemporary in Asia with that of this Dipylon period
in Greece. [Footnote: Op. cit. pp. 49 222.] He says "The
Homeric culture is evidently the culture of the poet's own days;
there is no attempt to archaise here...." They do not archaise as
to the details of life but "the Homeric poets consciously and
consistently archaised in regard to the political conditions of
continental Greece" in the Achaean times. They give "in all
probability a pretty accurate description" of the loose feudalism
of Mycenaean Greece. [Footnote: Op. cit. pp. 223 225.]

We shall later show that this Homeric picture of a past political
and social condition of Greece is of vivid and delicate accuracy
that it is drawn from the life not constructed out of historical
materials. Mr. Hall explains the fact by "the conscious and
consistent" archaeological precision of the Asiatic poets of the
ninth century. Now to any one who knows early national poetry
early uncritical art of any kind this theory seems not easily
tenable. The difficulty of the theory is increased if we suppose
that the Achaeans were the recent conquerors of the Mycenaeans.
Whether we regard the Achaeans as "Celts" with Mr. Ridgeway
victors over an Aryan people the Pelasgic Mycenaeans; or whether
with Mr. Hall we think that the Achaeans were the Aryan
conquerors of a non-Aryan people the makers of the Mycenaean
civilisation; in the stress of a conquest followed at no long
interval by an expulsion at the hands of Dorian invaders there
would be little thought of archaising among Achaean poets.
[Footnote: Mr. Hall informs me that he no longer holds the opinion
that the poets archaised.]

A distinction has been made it is true between the poet and
other artists in this respect. Monsieur Perrot says "The vase-
painter reproduces what he sees; while the epic poets endeavoured
to represent a distant past. If Homer gives swords of bronze to
his heroes of times gone by it is because he knows that such were
the weapons of these heroes of long ago. In arming them with
bronze he makes use in his way of what we call "local
colour...." Thus the Homeric poet is a more conscientious
historian than Virgil!" [Footnote: La _Grete de l'Epopee_
Perrot et Chipiez p. 230.]

Now we contend that old uncritical poets no more sought for
antique "local colour" than any other artists did. M. Perrot
himself says with truth "the _CHANSON DE ROLAND_ and all
the _Gestes_ of the same cycle explain for us the Iliad and
the Odyssey." [Footnote: op. cit. p. 5.] But the poet of the
_CHANSON DE ROLAND_ accoutres his heroes of old time in the
costume and armour of his own age and the later poets of the same
cycle introduce the innovations of their time; they do not hunt
for "local colour" in the _CHANSON DE ROLAND_. The very words
"local colour" are a modern phrase for an idea that never occurred
to the artists of ancient uncritical ages. The Homeric poets like
the painters of the Dipylon period describe the details of life
as they see them with their own eyes. Such poets and artists never
have the fear of "anachronisms" before them. This indeed is
plain to the critics themselves for they detect anachronisms as
to land tenure burial the construction of houses marriage
customs weapons and armour in the _Iliad_ and
_Odyssey_. These supposed anachronisms we examine later: if
they really exist they show that the poets were indifferent to
local colour and archaeological precision or were incapable of
attaining to archaeological accuracy. In fact such artistic
revival of the past in its habit as it lived is a purely modern
ideal.

We are to show then that the Epics being as wholes free from
such inevitable modifications in the picture of changing details
of life as uncritical authors always introduce are the work of
the one age which they represent. This is the reverse of what has
long been and still is the current theory of Homeric criticism
according to which the Homeric poems are and bear manifest marks
of being a mosaic of the poetry of several ages of change.

Till Wolf published his _Prolegomena_ to [blank space] (1795)
there was little opposition to the old belief that the
_ILIAD_ and Odyssey were allowing for interpolations the
work of one or at most of two poets. After the appearance of
Wolfs celebrated book Homeric critics have maintained generally
speaking that the _ILIAD_ is either a collection of short
lays disposed in sequence in a late age or that it contains an
ancient original "kernel" round which "expansions" made
throughout some centuries of changeful life have accrued and
have been at last arranged by a literary redactor or editor.

The latter theory is now dominant. It is maintained that the
_Iliad_ is a work of at least four centuries. Some of the
objections to this theory were obvious to Wolf himself--more
obvious to him than to his followers. He was aware and some of
them are not of the distinction between reading the _ILIAD_
as all poetic literature is naturally read and by all authors is
meant to be read for human pleasure and studying it in the
spirit of "the analytical reader." As often as he read for
pleasure he says disregarding the purely fanciful "historical
conditions" which he invented for Homer; as often as he yielded
himself to that running stream of action and narration; as often
as he considered the _harmony_ of _colour_ and of
characters in the Epic no man could be more angry with his own
destructive criticism than himself. Wolf ceased to be a Wolfian
whenever he placed himself at the point of view of the reader or
the listener to whom alone every poet makes his appeal.

But he deemed it his duty to place himself at another point of
view that of the scientific literary historian the historian of
a period concerning whose history he could know nothing. "How
could the thing be possible?" he asked himself. "How could a long
poem like the _Iliad_ come into existence in the historical
circumstances?" [Footnote exact place in paragraph unknown:
Preface to Homer p xxii. 1794.]. Wolf was unaware that he did
not know what the historical circumstances were. We know how
little we know but we do know more than Wolf. He invented the
historical circumstances of the supposed poet. They were he said
like those of a man who should build a large ship in an inland
place with no sea to launch it upon. The _Iliad_ was the
large ship; the sea was the public. Homer could have no
_readers_ Wolf said in an age that like the old hermit of
Prague "never saw pen and ink" had no knowledge of letters; or
if letters were dimly known had never applied them to literature.
In such circumstances no man could have a motive for composing a
long poem. [Footnote: _Prolegomena to the Iliad_ p. xxvi.]

Yet if the original poet "Homer" could make "the greater part
of the songs" as Wolf admitted what physical impossibility stood
in the way of his making the whole? Meanwhile the historical
circumstances as conceived of by Wolf were imaginary. He did not
take the circumstances of the poet as described in the Odyssey.
Here a king or prince has a minstrel honoured as were the
minstrels described in the ancient Irish books of law. His duty is
to entertain the prince and his family and guests by singing epic
chants after supper and there is no reason why his poetic
narratives should be brief but rather he has an opportunity that
never occurred again till the literary age of Greece for producing
a long poem continued from night to night. In the later age in
the Asiatic colonies and in Greece the rhapsodists competing for
prizes at feasts or reciting to a civic crowd were limited in
time and gave but snatches of poetry. It is in this later civic
age that a poet without readers would have little motive for
...



 
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