|
HOMER, PART THE 2ND; IlIUM'S DISTANT SHORES M.C. Gardner
For the first essay of this series I opened with an abridgement of a short story by Borges. The story was an account of a poet's descent into blindness. The poet was Homer. It was, for Borges, a metaphor of his own blindness. In a strange concatenation of reflections, I'm sure that the sightless Joyce was not far from his thoughts, not far from that night when the sky first lost its stars, far from Ilium's distant shores. For the 2nd essay in this series I've also selected a piece by Borges. It is from a volume of his poems. The volume is called In Praise of Darkness. The Poem is entitled, James Joyce.
The day to which Borges refers (in the assumed voice of the expatriate Irishman) is Bloomsday. June 16, 1904. Between dawn and dark lies the history of the world. Bloomsday is any day. Leopold Bloom is every man. We are each Ulysses. The passage of one day to another -- is an odyssey. For these metaphors we thank Homer and those indebted to him, whom down the millennia have followed in his lead. The Iliad concerns itself with 47 days near the end of a decade of war. The Trojan Horse episode is not found within its pages. Homer's great story begins with the wrath of Achilles for the slight he received from Agamennon. It ends when he takes his wrath out on Hector, symbolically slaying his nemesis and then symbolically forgiving him by granting King Priam access to his son's body for a proper funeral. Homer tells the story of the hollow horse in his second epic, the Odyssey. Here the poet sings of another decade of travail but as in the first epic, he concerns himself with 41 days in the 10th year of a hero's wanderings. This shrinkage of a decade to just over a month, in both epics is not dissimilar to the compression of Joyce's 260,000-word novel to a single day. The episode of the Trojan Horse in the Odyssey is worth noting because Homer makes an appearance thinly disguised as the blind poet Demodocus. This from Book VIII:
The harp image is one of pathos. The blind poet sings to his harp and not to the nobility of the court of which he is only provisionally aware. One is reminded of another musician lost in music he could not hear. At the conclusion of the premiere performance of his 9th symphony, Beethoven did not realize the orchestra had finished before him. When the audience saw him conducting the final phrases in silence - they realized with a shock that he had heard nothing of the fabled performance to which history has long since thrilled: "Now to his harp the blinded minstrel sang." Upon conclusion of that song, Odysseus cuts the finest portion of his "chine of pork" and gives it to the poet with this praise and request:
The poet sings the tale. More interesting than the heroic tale itself is the reaction of Odysseus upon hearing it:
To compare the great Odysseus with a weeping maiden bespeaks something of the Odyssey that Homer himself has made in his maturity. It is one of the earliest instances in Western Literature of the emotional commingling of the sexes. We see the same image in reverse when Othello welcomes Desdemona as his "fair warrior." Let us briefly note the structure of the poem. It begins in the 10th year of his odyssey, the 7th year of his imprisonment with the Goddess Calypso. We learn this from a council of the Gods who discuss his fate and employ his son Telemachus to their directed ends. Odysseus doesn't appear until Book V. His adventures during the first three years of his journey are told in flashback in Books 9 through 12. Each of these adventures are respectively parodied in Joyce's Ulysses and described in detail in Stuart Gilbert's Guide to Ulysses. Nabokov received Mr.Gilbert's efforts of elucidation only with the greatest exception.
I will resist the temptation of comparing the adventures of an Irish Jew with those of a waylaid Greek. In Homer, as noted, the tales are told in flashback at the same dinner party at which the blind poet sings of the Fall of Troy. Here Homer, in the guise of the hero Odysseus, tells the fantastical story of the Odyssey's wanderings. In Book Nine Homer can't resist another self-compliment as Odysseus begins the woeful tale of his storied peregrination
Thus chronologically begins an epic that had famously commenced "In Media Res," eight books earlier. Disguised as the blind poet Demodocus he had told the untold story of the Trojan Horse. Now as Odysseus he tells of the voyages of his Odyssey six years after his shipmates perished in his wine dark sea. Odysseus knows the gods must have their due. In both epics care is taken to propitiate them with suitable sacrifice. This "order" of the Homeric world is sidestepped only at the greatest peril. Shakespeare depicts his Ulysses as more cunning than courageous; nonetheless, on this point of order he gives the Greek one of the most apocalyptic speeches in the cannon:
His shipmates bring about their own demise as they butcher "The Golden Cattle of the Sun." Their boat is shattered by a thunderbolt and they are swallowed by the sea. Odysseus alone survives but seems destined to forever spin within a Charybdisian whirlpool. Mere days from home he is flung back into the sea by Poseidon's unforgiving trident. Odysseus, like Sisyphus, seems condemned to a living death upon the mountains of the sea. The Odyssey is a metaphor for life. It is also a metaphor of madness. The banquet at which he tells his story contains within it the possibility of a literature's first eternal regress. The tale includes the fact of its telling and hence could be eternally be retold. Of the thousand and one stories with which Scheherazade nightly distracts her husband from chopping of her lovely head, one of them contains the story of Scheherazade and so would eventually arrive at the tale being told.and hence, as well, proceed eternally. Homer senses this would be bad form and severely try the patience of his audience. As he approaches that juncture he says:
Only four of the Odyssey's 24 books deal with the heroic and fantastical tales of his adventures. The poet seems more interested in setting the stage for his homecoming and his battle with the suitors of Penelope. He must have identified more with an old man's longing than with youthful adventure modeled to some degree on story of Jason and the Argonauts, to which he alludes early in Book Twelve. Two weeks ago I noted many classics that can directly trace their lineage to Homer. I will close today by reading a passage of a book that is still fresh in manuscript but is, as well, full of longing and longitude, owing much to the work we have been considering. The book is called Marathonas. Its author is William Winokur. It might find its way through the Another American Press if the current publishing world is indifferent to the power of its telling.. Sufficeth to say that the book is an epic. It is a tale of loss and redemption worthy of Wagner's Dutchman, to which there is some small hint and resemblance. It is a dual story. Its ancient subtext is the story of Pheidippides and his heroic runs both preceding and following the battle of Marathon. Marathon is at the fabled crossroads of Western Civilization. Had the outcome been different, the Orient would have overwhelmed the West. What we glory as 5th century Greece would not have existed. The ancient story is serialized at the beginning of each chapter and is eagerly anticipated as each chapter concludes. The modern story concerns a pair of odysseys -- one by the female narrator and the other by an old man of the author's actual acquaintance. Each of these odysseys will end upon the plain of Marathonas, twenty-five hundred years from the earlier enactment of the drama. After the death of her father the narrator seeks out a remembered friend of the family. He is a retired Classics professor who had once known fame in the Olympics. As a little girl she had known the professor as "Uncle" Ion Theodore. She tracks her unrelated "uncle" to a rest home - old, neglected and staring lost in the labyrinthine dementia of ill heath and old age.
|