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THE ILLIAD OF HOMER (translated by POPE) p1.217 2d Book Page 89The first verse of the IliadMap of Homeric Greece.
The Iliad[1] is the oldest surviving work of Greek literature. It was an oralepic poem. People spoke it without reading it. It was written down in the 8th century BC. It is an epic (or very long) poem with 24 chapters written in hexameter. The poem includes early Greek myths and legends. It may have been based on a Bronze Age attack on the city Troy. People usually say that Homer wrote the Iliad. However, scholars are not sure that only one person really wrote the whole poem.
The story happens during the Trojan War, some time around 1200 BC. It talks about the confrontations of the warriorAchilles and KingAgamemnon. The story is only about a few weeks at the end of the war, but it also talks about many of the Greek myths about the war. It tells the story from the wrath of Achilles, to the death and funeral of Hector and the siege of Troy.
Together with another of Homer's poems, the Odyssey, it is one of the two major Greek epic poems.
The poem starts with the god Apollo sending a plague to the Greeks, because they captured the daughter of one of his Trojan priests. Agamemnon is forced to give the daughter back. So that he has a girl of his own, Agamemnon takes the captured Trojan girl Briseis from her owner Achilles. Achilles is angry and refuses to fight in the war. When Achilles' friend Patroclus is killed by Hector, Achilles starts to fight again and kills Hector in a duel. Later, Hector's father Priam comes in secret to Achilles to take back his favorite son's body to give it a proper funeral, which Achilles allows him to do. The poem ends with the funeral of Hector.
Fagles, Robert (transl) 1990. The Iliad. Introduction and notes by Bernard Knox. Penguin. ISBN0-14-027536-3. Winner of the Academy of American Poets 1991 London translation award.
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Iliad
IliadArchived 2010-03-16 at the Wayback Machine, online version of the work by Homer (English). Pope translation.
Iliad in Ancient Greek: from the Perseus Project (PP), with the Murray and Butler translations and hyperlinks to mythological and grammatical commentary; via the Chicago HomerArchived 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine, with the Lattimore translation and markup indicating formulaic repetitions