Iliad Essay

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    The Iliad ranks as one of the most important and most influential works in terms of world literatures since its establishment. Between the underlying standard to which the Iliad offers us as audience members, along with the plethora of writers that have followed in the footsteps to which Homer’s Iliad paved, the impact that the Iliad has played is remarkable in itself. While the Iliad can be credited for much of present day literature we study today, Hollywood can be created for the plethora of

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    The Epic Of The Iliad

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    The Iliad tells the story of the battles between the Achaeans and the Trojans, and the events happening during the weeks of arguing between King Agamemnon, the leader of the Greeks, and Achilles, Greece’s greatest warrior. These events play the role of a playground for the gods, as they often intervene and usually change the outcome of certain events. In regard to Homer, Longinus claims that he feels “indeed that in recording as he does the wounding of the gods, their quarrels, vengeance, tears,

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    The Iliad And The Odyssey

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    “Hateful to me as the gates of Hades is that man who hides one thing in his heart and speaks another.” (The Iliad pg.405) The quote is relevant to the stories Homer created during the period of the Trojan War. Homer orally performed two of his best works The Iliad and The Odyssey. Homer’s stories are old and probably translated differently than their original telling. Homer’s The Iliad and The Odyssey still show the basic human emotions and are an inspiration to other authors, poets, and oral presenters

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    The Iliad Essay

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    “direct and obvious intervention by a god or goddess in the affairs of humans”. In various myths such as the Iliad, the Epic of Gilgamesh, and Herakles, divine intervention was called upon in order to restrain a hero’s destructive or too powerful forces. Although the divine intervention was used to impair different heroes, the purpose to constrain was the same in all the narratives. Homer’s The Iliad: Book XX features a battle between the Trojans and Achaians, shortly after Patroklus’ death (Lattimore

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    The Iliad and the Odyssey

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    The Iliad and the Odyssey are two classic stories told by Homer. Within these two stories the roles of the gods are very important to the story line and how they affect the characters throughout. In the Iliad, more gods are involved with the characters whereas in the Odyssey there are only two major gods that affect two major characters. The roles of the gods in the Iliad are through two different stances of immortal versus immortal and mortal versus immortal. The roles of the gods in the Odyssey

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    The Iliad By Homer

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    The Iliad by Homer depicts the great struggle by Agamemnon and the Greeks to take the mighty city state of Troy and return Helen to her rightful husband, Menelaus. While many ponder if the war actually happened, or why the gods always seemed to be more human than humans themselves, few ask the key but often overlooked question; why is Agamemnon the leader of the Greeks in the first place? What happened that put him in charge of the Greek forces? Why does there seem to be an underlying resentment

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    Violence In The Iliad

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    Action, thriller, romance… these are all the things people are attracted to, and the author Homer knew it. In The Iliad, Homer wrote exactly what the audience would like. In The Iliad, there is war, both between humans and gods alike. The people worship the gods, they use the gods to explain what they can’t explain. Why the crops grow in only some months of the year, and why the sun rises and falls. The Greeks also blame their gods for their misfortune or trials. If something bad happens, it’s because

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    Pride In The Iliad

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    to the good and bad things in life. In Book I and VI of the “The Iliad”, the author, Homer shows the importance and existence of pride in the ancient world. Achilleus and Agamemnon were driven by pride in the decision they made. Pride had led the characters to be arrogant, make selfish decisions and self centered. After reading “The Iliad”, it’s interesting how pride had affected the characters’ actions. In Book I of the “The Iliad”, Agamemnon wouldn’t give back Chryses’ daughter because it was something

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    Helen in Iliad

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    belonging, within and despite the many constraints to which she is subject.Helen appears in only six encounters in the Iliad, with a different audience in each. As the encounters progress, she reveals more and more aspects of her personality and becomes increasingly assertive, increasingly her own person, and increasingly a part of the society in which she is an outcast. In the Iliad, as in the Odyssey, Helen is repeatedly referred to as the woman for whose sake the Trojan War was fought.But Helen

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    Free Will In The Iliad

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    Summarize the action in each excerpt. (one page total - double space) In the Iliad, Zeus has a meeting with the Gods because he realizes that the Greeks will destroy the Trojans before the fated time unless the Gods intervene. The Gods formed two camps. Apollo gives Aeneas courage to fight Achilles by pretending to be Lycaon. Aeneas is worried that Achilles has all the Gods on his side but, Apollo, in the form of Lycaon, tells him that he should have the Gods on his side because after all his

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