Homer's Odyssey.

A Commentary


By

Denton J. Snider


The Sigma Publishing Co.
10 Van Buren St., Chicago, Ill.
210 Pine St., St. Louis, Mo.


TABLE OF CONTENTS.

 PAGE
Introduction5
  
I.First Twelve Books.
Telemachiad21
Ulyssiad121
(1)Ocygia129
(2)Phæacia156
(3)Fableland231
  
II.Second Twelve Books.
Ithakeiad396
Books 13-16 Preparation)407
Books 17-24 ( Execution)461
(1)Wrong(17-21)468
(2)Punishment(22)495
(3)Reconciliation(23-4)500
Summary511


HOMER'S ODYSSEY.

 

BOOK FIRST—INTRODUCTION.

The Odyssey starts by organizing itself; it maps out its own structure in what may be called a General Introduction. Herein lies a significant difference between it and the Iliad, which has simply an Invocation to the Muse, and then leaps into the thick of the action. The Iliad, accordingly, does not formulate its own organization, which fact has been one cause of the frequent assaults upon its unity. Still the architectonic principle is powerful in the Iliad, though more instinctive, and far less explicit than in the Odyssey. It is reasonable to suppose, therefore, that the poet has reached a profounder consciousness of his art in his later poem; he has come to a knowledge of his constructive principle, and he takes the trouble to unfold the same at the beginning. To be sure, certain critics have assailed just this structural fact as not Homeric; without good grounds, in our judgment.

The First Book, accordingly, opens with an Introduction which belon

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