Array Anacreon - Yale Required Reading - Collected Works (Vol. 1)

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Ancient Greek literature has a profound impact on western literature at large. In particular, many ancient Roman authors drew inspiration from their Greek predecessors. Ever since the Renaissance, European authors in general, including Dante Alighieri, William Shakespeare, John Milton, and James Joyce, have all drawn heavily on classical themes and motifs. Even today authors are fascinated with Greek literature, and still great works of literature are based on ancient myths and plays. The readers can still relate to these works of art and learn from them, even though written two millennials ago.
This collection is based on the required reading list of Yale Department of Classics. Originally designed for students, this anthology is meant for everyone wanting to know more about history and literature of this period, interested in poetry, philosophy and drama of Antient Greece.

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Homer, Hesiod, Archilochus, Alcaeus, Sappho, Anacreon, Theognis of Megara, Simonides of Ceos, Bacchylides, Pindar, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Lysias, Demosthenes, Apollonius, Callimachus, Theocritus, Plutarch, Epictetus, Gilbert Murray

Yale Required Reading - Collected Works (Vol. 1)

Translator:Andrew Lang, Hugh G. Evelyn-White, William Hay, James Stanislaus Easby-Smith, John Myers O'Hara, Henry Charles Beeching, Thomas Campbell, Robert Calverley Trevelyan, Thomas Moore, John Hookham Frere, James Davies, John Addington Symonds, John Sterling, John Herman Merivale, Francis Turner Palgrave, John Swinnerton Phillimore, Charles Apthorp Wheelwright, Edward Philip Coleridge, Gilbert Murray, George Campbell Macaulay, Richard Crawley, Benjamin Jowett, S. H. Butcher, Charles Rann Kennedy, R. C. Seaton, Alexander William Mair, Charles Stuart Calverley, John Dryden, A. H. Clough

e-artnow, 2021

Contact: info@e-artnow.org

EAN 4066338130112

Disclaimer: This collection is created exclusively for public educational purposes. It does not constitute an endorsement or an approval by Yale University and it should not be considered as an official textbook. This collection was made for the public in interest of open learning. The selection of works in this digitalized edition is based on the list of books required for ancient literature studies publicly issued by Yale University.

Table of Contents

Homer Homer Table of Contents

Introduction

Iliad

Odyssey

Homeric Hymns

Hesiod

Introduction

Works and Days

Theogony

Greek Lyric Poetry

Archilochus

Alcaeus

Sappho

Alcman

Anacreon

Theognis of Megara

Simonides of Ceos

Bacchylides

Pindar

The Oresteia (Aeschylus)

The Life and Work of Aeschylus

Agamemnon

The Choephori (The Libation-Bearers)

Eumenides

The Tragedies of Sophocles

The Life and Work of Sophocles

Ajax

Antigone

Oedipus at Colonus

The Tragedies of Euripides

The Life and Work of Euripides

Medea

Hippolytus

Bacchae

The Comedies of Aristophanes

The Life and Work of Aristophanes

Frogs

Birds

Lysistrata

Herodotus

The Life and Work of Herodotus

The Histories

Thucydides

The Life and Work of Thucydides

History of the Peloponnesian War

Plato

The Life and Work of Plato

Republic

The Apology of Socrates (Plato)

Symposium (Plato)

Phaedo (Plato)

Aristotle

The Life and Work of Aristotle

Poetics

Politics

Nicomachean Ethics

The Orations of Lysias

The Philippics (Demosthenes)

Argonautica (Apollonius)

Hymns of Callimachus

The Idylls of Theocritus

The Rise and Fall of Greek Supremasy (Plutarch)

The Life and Work of Plutarch

Theseus

Solon

Themistocles

Aristides

Cimon

Pericles

Nicias

Alcibiades

Phocion

Demosthenes

Epictetus

The Enchiridion

Homer

Table of Contents

Introduction

Table of Contents

The epos, as we know it, falls into three main divisions according to author and subject-matter. It is a vehicle for the heroic saga, written by ' Homêros'; for useful information in general, especially catalogues and genealogies, written by ' Hêsiodos'; and thirdly, for religious revelation, issuing originally from the mouths of such figures as 'Orpheus,' 'Musæus,' and the 'Bakides.' This last has disappeared, leaving but scanty traces, and the poems of ' Homer and Hesiod' constitute our earliest literary monuments.

All verse embodiments of the saga are necessarily less old than the saga itself. And more than that, it is clear that our Iliad, Odyssey, Erga, and Theogony are not the first, "nor the second, nor yet the twelfth," of such embodiments. These ostensibly primitive poems show a length and complexity of composition which can only be the result of many generations of artistic effort. They speak a language out of all relation to common speech, full of forgotten meanings and echoes of past states of society; a poet's language, demonstrably built up and conditioned at every turn by the needs of the hexameter metre. There must therefore have been hexameter poems before our Iliad. Further, the hexameter itself is a high and complex development many stages removed from the simple metres in which the sagas seem once to have had shape in Greece as well as in India, Germany, and Scandinavia. But if we need proof of the comparative lateness of our earliest records, we can find it in ' Homer' himself, when he refers to the wealth of poetry that was in the world before him, and the general feeling that by his day most great themes have been outworn. 1

The personalities of the supposed authors of the various epics or styles of epos are utterly beyond our reach. There is for the most part something fantastic or mythical in them. Orpheus, for instance, as a sagafigure, is of Greek creation; as a name, he is one of the 'Ribhus,' or heroic artificers, of the Vedas, the first men who were made immortal. Another early bard, 'Linos,' is the very perfection of shadowiness. The Greek settler or exile on Semitic coasts who listened to the strange oriental dirges and caught the often-recurring wail ' Ai-lenû' ('Woe to us'), took the words as Greek,

The books of the Iliad are denoted by the capital letters of the Greek alphabet, those of the Odyssey by the small letters ('Woe for Linos'), and made his imaginary Linos into an unhappy poet or a murdered prince. Homer's ancestors, when they are not gods and rivers, tend to bear names like 'Memory-son' and 'Sweet-deviser'; his minor connections -- the figures among whom the lesser epics were apt to be divided -- have names which are sometimes transparent, sometimes utterly obscure, but which generally agree in not being Greek names of any normal type. The name of his son-in-law, 'Creophŷlus,' suggests a comic reference to the 'Fleshpot-tribe' of bards with their 'perquisites.' A poet who is much quoted for the saga-subjects painted on the 'Leschê' or 'Conversation Hall' at Delphi, is called variously 'Leschês,' 'Lescheôs,' and 'Leschaios'; another who sang of sea-faring, has a name 'Arctinos,' derived, as no other Greek name is, from the Pole-star. The author of the Têlegoneia, * which ended the Odysseus-saga in a burst of happy marriages (see p. 48 ), is suitably named 'Eugamon' or 'Eugammon.' 2

As for 'Homêros' himself, the word means 'hostage': it cannot be a full Greek name, though it might be an abbreviated 'pet name,' e.g for 'Homêrodochos' ('hostage-taker'), if there were any Greek names at all compounded from this word. As it is, the fact we must start from is the existence of 'Homêridæ,' both as minstrels in general and as a clan. 'Homêros' must by all analogy be a primeval ancestor, invented to give them a family unity, as 'Dôros,' 'Iôn,' and 'Hellên' were invented; as even the League of the 'Amphictyones' or 'Dwellers-round [Thermopylæ]' had to provide themselves with a common ancestor called 'Amphictyôn' or 'Dweller-round.' That explains 'Homêros,' but still leaves 'Homêridæ' unexplained. It may be what it professes to be, a patronymic (' Homer-sons'). It is easy to imagine a state of society in which the Sons of the Hostages, not trusted to fight, would be used as bards. But it may equally well be some compound meaning 'fitters together,' with the termination modified into patronymic form when the minstrels began to be a guild and to feel the need of a common ancestor.

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