Digitized by the Internet Archive 
 
 in 2007 with funding from 
 
 Microsoft Corporation 
 
 http://www.archive.org/details/familiarstudiesiOOclerrich 
 
FAMILIAE- STUDIES" 
 
 IN " 
 
 S 
 
 HOM E R 
 
 ^/ 
 
 BY 
 
 AGNES M. CLERKE 
 
 AB HOMERO OMNE PRINCIP1UM 
 
 P* OF THB^> 
 
 [UHI7BRSIT7] 
 
 LONDON 
 LONGMANS, GREEN, AND GO. 
 
 AND NEW YOEK : 15 EAST 16 th STREET 
 1892 
 
 All rights reserved 
 
& 
 
 
 H
^ OF THS >£\ 
 
 otbesityI 
 
 ^ /% n« «. ft 
 
10 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 sideration of where, when, and how the great Epics 
 were composed. 
 Seven cities — 
 
 Smyrna, Chios, Colophon, Salamis, Rhodos, Argos, Athenae — 
 
 competed for the honour of having given birth to 
 their author. Wherever, in short, their study was 
 localised by the foundation of a school of ' Homerids,' 
 there was asserted to be the native place of the ep- 
 onymous bard. The truth is that no really authen- 
 tic tradition regarding him reached posterity. The 
 very name of ' Homer,' or the 'joiner together,' 
 is obviously rather typical than personal; and it 
 gradually came to aggregate round it all that was 
 antique and unclaimed in the way of verse. The 
 aggregation, it is true, was presumably formed in 
 Asiatic Ionia ; the ' Cyclic Poems,' supplementary 
 to the Iliad, were mainly the work of Ionic poets; 
 and the Epic was substantially an Ionic dialect. 
 Yet the inference of an Asiatic origin thence naturally 
 arising now clearly appears to be invalid. The lin- 
 guistic argument, to begin with, has been completely 
 disposed of by Fick's remarkable demonstration that 
 the Iliad and Odyssey underwent an early process of 
 Ionicisation. 1 So far as metrical considerations per- 
 mitted, they were actually translated from the iEolic, 
 or rather Achaean tongue, in which they were com- 
 
 1 Die Homerische Odyssec in der urspriinglichen Sprachforme 
 wiedergestellt, 1883. 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 11 
 
 posed, into the current idiom of Colophon and 
 Miletus. Objections urged from this side against 
 their production in Europe have accordingly lost 
 their force; and the reasons favouring it, always 
 strong, have of late grown to be well-nigh irresistible. 
 Some of the more cogent were briefly stated by Mr. 
 D. B. Monro in 1886 ; l and others might now be 
 added. One only, but one surely conclusive, need 
 here be mentioned. It is this. Homer could not 
 have been an Asiatic Greek, because Asiatic Greece 
 did not exist in Homer's time. He was aware of no 
 AchsGan settlements in Asia Minor; not one of the 
 twelve cities of the Ionian confederacy emerges in the 
 Catalogue, Miletus only excepted, and Miletus with a 
 special note of ' barbarian ' habitation attached to it. 2 
 The Ionian name is, in the Iliad, once applied to the 
 Athenians 3 (presumably), but does not occur at all in 
 the Odyssey; where, on the other hand, Dorians, 
 unknown in the Iliad, are casually named as forming 
 an element in the mixed population of Crete. 4 The 
 reputed birthplaces of Homer, then, on the eastern 
 coast of the iEgean, were, when he had reached his 
 singing prime, still occupied by Carians and Mseo- 
 nians ; and we must accordingly look for his origin in 
 the West. There is no escape from this conclusion 
 except by the subterfuge of imagining the geography 
 of the Epics to be artificially archaic. They related 
 
 1 English Historical Review, January, 1886. 
 a Iliad, ii. 868. a lb. xiii. 685. 4 Od. xix. 177. 
 
12 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 to a past time, it might be said, they should then 
 reproduce the conditions of the past. But this is a 
 notion essentially modern. No primitive poet ever 
 troubled himself about such scruples of congruity. 
 Nor if he did, could the requisite detailed information 
 by possibility be at his command, while his painful 
 care to avoid what we call anachronisms would cause 
 nothing but perplexity to his unsophisticated audience. 
 Homer's map of Greece must accordingly be accepted 
 as a true picture of what came under his personal 
 observation. It is, indeed, as Mr. Freeman says, ' so 
 different from the map of Greece at any later time 
 that it is inconceivable that it can have been invented 
 at any later time.' l Since, however, it affords the 
 Greek race no Asiatic standing ground, it follows of 
 necessity that Homer was a European. 
 
 This same consideration helps to determine the 
 age in which he lived. Homeric geography is en- 
 tirely pre-Dorian. Total unconsciousness of any 
 such event as the Dorian invasion reigns both in the 
 Iliad and Odyssey. Not a hint betrays acquaintance 
 with the fact that the polity described in them had, in 
 the meantime, been overturned by external violence. 
 A silence so remarkable can be explained only by , the 
 simple supposition that when they were composed, 
 the revolution in question had not yet occurred. 
 Other circumstances confirm this view. Practical ex- 
 plorations have shown pre-Hellenic Greece to have 
 
 1 Historical Geography, p. 25. 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEitf. 13 
 
 been the seat of a rich, enterprising, and cultivated 
 nation. They have hence removed objections on the 
 score of savagery, inevitably to be encountered, for- 
 merly urged against pushing the age of Homer very 
 far back into the past. The life carried on at 
 Mycenae, in fact, twelve or thirteen centuries before 
 the Christian era, was in many respects more refined 
 than that depicted in the poems. It was known to 
 their author only after it had lost something of its 
 pristine splendour. But the Mycenaean civilisation 
 of his experience, if a trifle decayed, was complete 
 and dominant ; and this it never was subsequently to 
 the Dorian conquest. To have collected, however, 
 into an imaginary organic whole the fragments into 
 which it had been shattered by that catastrophe, 
 would assuredly have been a task beyond his powers. 
 Nothing remains, then, but to admit that he lived in 
 the pre-Dorian Greece which he portrayed. More- 
 over, the state of seething unrest ensuing upon the 
 overthrow of the Mycenaean order must have been 
 absolutely inconsistent with the development of a 
 great school of poetry. If Homer, then, was a Euro- 
 pean — as appears certain — the inference is irresis- 
 tible that he flourished before the society to which he 
 belonged was thrown by foreign invaders into irre- 
 deemable disarray — that is, at some section of the 
 Mycenaean epoch. • 
 
 There are many convincing reasons for holding 
 that section to have been a late one. One of the 
 
14 FAMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER, 
 
 principal is the familiar use of iron in the poems, 
 although none has been met with in the old shaft- 
 tombs within the citadel of Mycenae, and only small 
 quantities in the less distinguished graves below. It 
 is, to be sure, conceivable that a substance intro- 
 duced as a vulgar novelty devoid of traditional or 
 ancestral associations might have been employed for 
 the ordinary purposes of everyday life long before it 
 was allowed to form part of sepulchral equipments ; 
 a similar motive prescribing its virtual exclusion from 
 the Homeric Olympus. Still, the discrepancy can 
 hardly be explained away without the concession of 
 some lapse of time as well. 
 
 The Homeric and Mycenaean modes of burial, too, 
 were different. Cremation is practised throughout 
 the Epics ; the Mycenaean dead were preserved intact. 
 1 The contrast,' Dr. Leaf remarks, 1 ' is a striking one ; 
 but it is easy to lay too much stress upon it. It may 
 well be that the conditions of sepulture on a cam- 
 paign were perforce different from those usual in 
 times of peace at home. The mummifying of the 
 body and the carrying of it to the ancestral burying- 
 place in the royal citadel were not operations such as 
 could be easily effected amidst the hurry of marches 
 or the privations of a siege; least of all after the 
 slaughter of a pitched battle. It is therefore quite 
 conceivable *that two methods of sepulture may of 
 necessity have been in use at the same time. And 
 1 Introduction to Schliemann's Excavations, p. 26, 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 15 
 
 for this assumption the Iliad itself gives us positive 
 grounds. One warrior who falls is taken home to be 
 buried ; for to a dead son of Zeus means of carriage 
 and preservation can be supplied which are not for 
 common men. Sarpedon is cleansed by Apollo, and 
 borne by Death and Sleep to his distant home in 
 Lycia, not that his body may be burnt, but that his 
 brethren and kinsfolk may preserve it ' with a tomb 
 and gravestone, for such is the due of the dead.' 
 
 He said ; obedient to his father's words, 
 
 Down to the battlefield Apollo sped 
 
 From Ida's height ; and from amid the spears 
 
 Withdrawn, he bore Sarpedon far away, 
 
 And lav'd his body in the flowing stream ; 
 
 Then with divine ambrosia all his limbs 
 
 Anointing, cloth' d him in immortal robes ; 
 
 To two swift bearers gave him then in charge, 
 
 To Sleep and Death, twin brothers ; in their arms 
 
 They bore him safe to Lycia's wide-spread plains. 1 
 
 The Mycenaean custom of embalming corpses was 
 not, then, strange to Homer; and the Homeric custom 
 of burning them has perhaps — for the evidence is in- 
 decisive — left traces in the more recent graves of the 
 Mycenaean people. "What is certain is that simple 
 interment was everywhere primitively in use, and 
 that the pyre was a subsequent innovation, at first 
 only partially adopted, and perhaps nowhere exclu- 
 sively in vogue. 
 
 1 Iliad-, xvi. 676-88 (Lord Derby's translation). 
 
16 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 The plastic art of Mycenae seems to have been 
 on the decline when the ' sovran poet ' arose. This 
 can be inferred from the wondering admiration dis- 
 played in his verses for what must once have been its 
 ordinary performances, as well as from the marked 
 superiority assigned in them to foreign over native 
 artists. They include besides no allusion to the 
 signet-rings so plentiful at Mycenae, no notice, in any 
 connexion, of the art of gem-engraving, nor of the 
 indispensable luxury — to ladies of high degree — of 
 toilet-mirrors. Active intercourse with Egypt, again, 
 had evidently ceased long prior to the Homeric age. 
 The Nile is, in the poems, not even known by name, 
 but only as the ' river of Egypt ; ' and the country is 
 reached, not in the ordinary course of navigation, 
 but through recklessness or ill-luck, by adventurers 
 or castaways. 
 
 We can now gather the following indications re- 
 garding the date of the Homeric poems. They must 
 have originated during the interval between the 
 Trojan War — which, in some shape, may be accepted 
 as an historical event — and the Dorian invasion of 
 the Peloponnesus. They probably originated not 
 very long before the latter event, when the Myce- 
 naean monarchy was of itself tottering towards a fall 
 precipitated by the frequently repeated incursions of 
 ruder tribes from the north. The generally accepted 
 date for the final event is eighty years after the 
 taking of Troy, or 1104 B.C. But this rests on no 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 17 
 
 authentic circumstance, and may very well be a cen- 
 tury or more in error. A preferable chronological ar- 
 rangement would place Homer's flourishing in the 
 eleventh century, and the overthrow of Mycense near 
 its close. Difficulties of sundry kinds can thus be, 
 in a measure, evaded or conciliated, without encroach- 
 ing overmuch on the voiceless centuries available for 
 the unrecorded readjustment of the disturbed ele- 
 ments of Greek polity. 
 
 As to the mode of origin of the two great poems 
 which have come down to us from so remote an age, 
 much might be said ; but a few words must here 
 suffice. It is a topic on which the utmost diversity 
 of opinion has prevailed since F. A. Wolf published, 
 in 1795, his famous ' Prolegomena,' and as to which 
 unity of views seems now for ever unattainable. For 
 demonstrative evidence is naturally out of the ques- 
 tion, and estimates of opposing probabilities are apt 
 to be strongly tinctured with 'personality.' Pre- 
 possessions of all kinds warp the judgment, even in 
 purely literary matters, and, in this case especially, 
 have led to the learned advocacy of extreme opinions. 
 Thus, partisans of destructive criticism have carried 
 the analysis of the Homeric poems to the verge of 
 annihilation ; while ultra-conservatives insist upon a 
 seamless whole, and regard the Iliad and the Odyssey 
 as the work of Homer, in the same sense and with 
 the same implicit confidence that they hold the iEneid 
 and the Eclogues to be Virgilian, or ' Paradise Lost ' 
 
 c 
 
18 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 and ' Samson Agonistes * to be Miltonic productions. 
 Between these widely diverging paths, how r ever, there 
 is a middle way laid down by common sense, which 
 it is tolerably safe to follow. A few simple considera- 
 tions may help us to find it. 
 
 We must remember, in the first place, that the 
 Homeric poems were composed, not to be privately 
 read, but to be publicly recited. They remained un- 
 written during at least a couple of centuries, flung on 
 the waves of unaided human memory. Oral tradition 
 alone preserved them ; and not the punctilious oral 
 tradition of a sacerdotal caste like the Brahmins, but 
 that of a bold and innovating class of * rhapsodes,' 
 themselves aspiring to some share in the Muse's im- 
 mediate favours, and prompt to flatter the local 
 vanities and immemorial susceptibilities of their 
 varied audiences. Within very wide limits, they were 
 free to 'improve' what^ioilg" training had enabled 
 them to appropriate. Their licence infringed no lite- 
 rary property ; there was no authorised text to be cor- 
 rupted ; one man's version was as good as another's. 
 It is not, then, surprising that the primitive order of 
 the Epics became here and there disarranged, or 
 that interpolated and substituted passages usurped 
 positions from which they could not afterwards easily 
 be expelled. Expository efforts have, indeed, some- 
 times succeeded only in adding fresh knots to the 
 already tangled skein. Pisistratus, however, did good 
 service by for the first time editing t| ie Homeric 
 
HOMEE AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 19 
 
 poems. 1 Scattered manuscripts of them had doubt- 
 less existed long previously ; but it was their col- 
 lection and collation at Athens, and the disposal in 
 a determinate succession of the still disjointed 
 materials they afforded, which placed the Greek 
 people in the earliest full possession of their epical 
 inheritance. 
 
 As the general result of a century of Homeric 
 controversy, instinctive appreciation may be said 
 broadly to have got the better of verbal criticism. 
 Not but that the latter has done valuable work ; but 
 it is now pretty plainly seen to have been, in some 
 quarters, carried considerably too far. The triumphs 
 enjoyed by German advocates of the ' Kleinlieder- 
 theorie ' — of the disjunction, that is to say, of the 
 Epics into numerous separate lays — are generally re- 
 cognised to have been merely temporary. A large 
 body of opinion was, at the outset, captivated by their 
 arguments ; it has of late tended to swing back 
 towards some approximation to the old orthodoxy. 
 There is, indeed, much difficulty in conceiving the 
 profound and essential unity apparent to unprejudiced 
 readers of the Iliad and Odyssey to be illusory; nor 
 should it be forgotten that the evoking of a cosmos 
 from a chaos implies a single regulative intelligence. 
 And a cosmos each poem might very well be called ; 
 while the 'embryon atoms' from which they sprang, 
 
 1 German critics doubt the fact. See Niese, Die Entwickelung 
 der Homerischcn Poesie, p. 5. 
 
 c 2 
 
'20 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMEK. 
 
 of legends, stories, myths, and traditions, constituted 
 scarcely less than an 
 
 Ocean without bound, 
 Without dimension ; where length, breadth, and highth, 
 And time, and place, are lost. 
 
 The Odyssey and the Iliad, however, stand in this 
 respect by no means on the same footing. In the 
 former, fundamental unity is obvious ; the develop- 
 ment of the plot is logical and continuous ; there are 
 no considerable redundancies, no superfluous adven- 
 tures, no oblivious interludes ; the sense of progress 
 towards a purposed end pervades the whole. Careful 
 scrutiny, it is true, detects, in the details of the 
 narrative, some few trifling discrepancies ; but at- 
 tempts to remove them by tampering with the general 
 plan of its structure lead at once to intolerable anoma- 
 lies. So much cannot be said for the Iliad. Here 
 the component strata are manifestly dislocated, and 
 some intruded masses can be clearly identified. Thus 
 the Tenth Book at once detaches itself both in sub- 
 stance and style from the remaining cantos. It nar- 
 rates an adventure wholly disconnected from the 
 main action unfolded in them, and narrates it with a 
 coolness and easy fluency very unlike the rush and 
 glow of genuine Iliadic verse. { Few, accordingly, are 
 the critics who venture to claim the episode, bril- 
 liant and interesting though it be, as an integral part 
 of the original poem. Yet even when it has been set 
 aside, things do not go altogether straight. The basis 
 
HOMEE AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 21 
 
 of the story is furnished by the wrath of Achilles and 
 its direful consequences ; but while the hero sulks in 
 his tent, a good deal of miscellaneous and largely 
 irrespective righting proceeds, during which he sinks 
 out of sight, and is only transiently kept in mind. 
 Zeus himself is allowed to forget his solemn promise 
 to Thetis of avenging, through the defeat of the 
 Greeks, the injury done to her son by Agamemnon ; 
 and the Olympian machinery generally works in an 
 ill-regulated and haphazard fashion. Moreover, the 
 embassy of conciliation in the Ninth Book is ignored 
 later on ; while the Twenty -third and Twenty- fourth 
 Books, devoted mainly to the obsequies of Patroclus 
 and Hector, have by some critics been deemed super- 
 fluous, by others inconsistent with an exordium an- 
 nouncing—as Pope has it — 
 
 The wrath that hurled to Pluto's gloomy reign 
 The souls of mighty chiefs untimely slain, 
 Whose limbs unburied by the naked shore, 
 Devouring dogs and hungry vultures tore. 
 
 Through the weight of these objections, Mr. Grote 
 felt compelled to dissever the Iliad into a primitive 
 part, which he called the Achilleid, and a mass of ac- 
 cessional poetry, most likely of diverse origin and 
 date. And a similar view still prevails. Only that 
 the Achilleid has been cut down, by further re- 
 trenchments, to the compass of a somewhat prolix 
 Lay, treating, as its express subject, of the ' Wrath ' 
 of Achilles. Dr. Leaf indeed accentuates the separa- 
 
22 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 tion by upholding the probable origin, on opposite 
 sides of the iEgean, of the nuclear and adventitious 
 portions of the Epic. 
 
 The force of some of the arguments urging to this 
 analysis cannot be denied, yet there are others, per- 
 haps of a higher order of importance, which indicate 
 the former predominance of a partially destroyed 
 entirety of design through by far the larger portion 
 of this wonderful prehistoric work. Speaking 
 broadly, an identical spirit pervades the whole. The 
 Tenth Book, and a few notoriously interpolated pas- 
 sages, such as the feeble and futile Theomachy, make 
 the sole exceptions to this rule of ethical homogeneity. 
 Elsewhere, from beginning to end, we meet the same 
 spontaneous fervour of expression, the same magni- 
 ficent energy kept in hand like a spirited steed ; an 
 unfailing sense of the splendour of heroic achieve- 
 ment, and a glowing joy in human existence, tem- 
 pered by the heart-thrilling remembrance of its 
 pathetic mystery of sorrow. This prevalent unifor- 
 mity in manner and spirit is certainly unfavourable 
 to the hypothesis of divided authorship. 
 
 The marvellous beauty and power of those sections 
 of the poem believed to be adventitious is also a 
 circumstance to be considered. They include many 
 of its most famous scenes — the parting of Hector and 
 Andromache, the arming of Athene, the meeting of 
 Glaucus and Diomed, and the whole vivid interlude 
 of Diomed' s prowess, the orations in the tent of 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 23 
 
 Achilles, the chariot-race, the reception of Priam as 
 his suppliant by the fierce slayer of his son. To them 
 exclusively, above all, belongs the personal presenta- 
 tion of Helen ; outside their limits, she has no place 
 in the Iliad. 
 
 These same accretions are not merely magnificent 
 in themselves, and rich in shining incidents, but they 
 add incalculably to the general effect of the Epic. 
 They contribute, in fact, a great part of its dramatic 
 force and the whole of its moral purport. Without 
 them it would be a bald and unfinished performance 
 — the abortive realisation of a sublime conception. 
 The arming of Agamemnon, for instance, and his 
 feats of private valour, could never have been designed 
 as the immediate sequel to the Promise of Zeus ; 
 while they constitute a most fitting climax to the 
 series of the baffled Greek efforts for victory. They 
 are admirably prepared for by the stories of the duel 
 between Menelaus and Paris, of the broken pact, of 
 the prowess of Diomed, of the nocturnal embassy to 
 Achilles. Moreover, the irresistible might of Pelides 
 is brought with tenfold impressiveness on the scene 
 after the fighting powers of each of the other Achaean 
 chiefs have been fully displayed, and proved fruit- 
 less. Above all, the Achillean drama itself would 
 lose its profound significance by the retrenchment of 
 the Ninth and two closing Books. For it was the 
 implacability of the ' swift-footed ' hero that was justly 
 punished by the calamity of the death of Patroclus ; 
 
24 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 and he showed himself implacable only when he 
 haughtily rejected a formal offer of ample reparation. 1 
 At that point he became culpable; and might only 
 win revenge at the cost of the acutest anguish of 
 which his nature was capable. The Ninth Book, in 
 short, constitutes the ethical crisis of the Iliad ; and 
 the moralising at second-hand, to the innermost core 
 of its structure, of a work purporting to be already 
 complete, is certainly a unique, if not an impossible 
 phenomenon. 
 
 Nor is it easily credible that the ransom of the 
 body of Hector made no part of its fundamental plan. 
 Greek feelings of propriety would have been outraged 
 — and outraged in the most distasteful way — by disre- 
 gard of the dying petition of so spotless and disin- 
 terested a champion, albeit of a lost cause, and by the 
 abandonment of his body as carrion to unclean beasts 
 and birds. And Achilles, without the elevating traits 
 of his courtesies in the Games, and his pity for 
 Priam, would have remained colossal only in bru- 
 tality, a blind instrument of fury, an example of the 
 triumph of ignoble instincts. But such a presentation 
 of his character could never have been purposed by 
 the author of the First Iliad. Not of this base stamp 
 was the hero whom Thetis rose from the sea to comfort. 
 For even in the first rush of his tremendous passion, 
 
 1 Mr. A. Lang urges this point with great effect in an article on 
 ' Homer and the Higher Criticism ' (National Review, Feb. 1892), 
 published after the present Chapter had been sent to press. 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 25 
 
 he still saw the radiant eyes and listened to the voice 
 of Athene ; he did not wholly desert celestial wisdom ; 
 and celestial wisdom could never have suffered the 
 balance of his stormy soul to be finally overthrown. 
 But just the needed compensatory touches are sup- 
 plied by his noble bearing in the Patroclean celebra- 
 tion, and far more, by his chivalrous compassion for 
 the hapless old king of Troy. They could not have 
 been omitted by a poet of supreme genius — could not, 
 since the imagination has its logical necessities, among 
 which may be reckoned that of equilibration. There 
 is accordingly no possibility of founding a truly great 
 poem, wholly, or mainly, on the crude brutalities of 
 actual warfare. Humanity revolts from them in the 
 long run ; and humanity prescribes its laws to art. 
 The slaughtering rage of Achilles demands a corre- 
 sponding height of generosity and depth of pity ; it 
 would else be atrocious. His wrath, in fact, postu- 
 lates his tenderness; and hence the great difficulty 
 in believing that the singer of the First Book failed 
 to insert the Ninth, or stopped short at the Twenty- 
 second Book of the Iliad. 
 
 The upshot of our little discussion, then, is to as- 
 sign both to the Iliad and Odyssey a European origin, 
 in the pre-Dorian time, when Mycenae was the politi- 
 cal centre of the Achaean world. Provisionally, they 
 may be said to date from the eleventh century b.c. 
 Moreover, the Odyssey in its essential integrity, and 
 the Iliad in large part, are each the work of one 
 
26 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 master-mind. The Iliad, none the less, can no longer 
 be said to present a poem ' of one projection ' ; it 
 shows seams, and junctures, and discrepancies ; its 
 mass has, perhaps, been broken up and awkwardly 
 pieced together again ; it is a building, in fact, which 
 has suffered extensive restoration. 
 
 The further question remains as to the united 
 or divided authorship of these antique monuments, 
 regarded as separate wholes. Are they twin-pro- 
 ductions, or did they spring up independently, 
 favoured by the same prevailing climate, from a 
 soil similarly prepared ? The answer may be left 
 to the dispassionate judgment of any ordinary, 
 uncritical reader. Supposing his mind, per impos- 
 sibile, a blank on the point, it would certainly not 
 occur to him to attribute the two poems to a single 
 individual. They are probably as unlike in style as, 
 under the circumstances, it was possible for them to 
 be. A great deal, indeed, belongs to them in com- 
 mon. They were rooted in the same traditions; 
 they arose under the same sky and in the same ideal 
 atmosphere ; the inexhaustible storehouse of their 
 legendary raw material was the same. Strictly ana- 
 logous conditions of politics and society are depicted 
 in them ; they were addressed to similarly constituted 
 audiences ; their verses were constructed on the same 
 rhythmical model. Moreover, the author of one was 
 familiar with the grand example set him by the other. 
 Yet the temper and spirit of each are profoundly dif- 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 27 
 
 ferent. In the Iliad, a magnificent ardour prevails ; 
 the singer is aflame with his theme ; his words glow ; 
 vivid impressions crowd upon his mind ; it takes all 
 the power of his genius to restrain their riotous auda- 
 city and marshal them into orderly succession. The 
 author of the Odyssey, on the other hand, is in no 
 danger of being swept away by the impetuosity of his 
 thoughts. He is always collected and at leisure ; he 
 has even esprit, which implies a low mental tempera- 
 ture ; he can stand by with a smile, and look on, 
 while his characters unfold themselves ; his passion 
 never blazes ; it is smouldering and sustained, like 
 that of his protagonist. 
 
 Numerous small discrepancies, besides, seem to 
 betray a personal diversity of origin. So Iris, the 
 frequent, indeed the all but invariable messenger of 
 the gods in the Iliad, drops into oblivion in the Odys- 
 sey, and is replaced by Hermes ; Charis is the wife of 
 Hephaestus in the Iliad, Aphrodite in the Odyssey ; 
 Neleus has twelve sons in the Iliad, three in the 
 Odyssey ; Pylos is a district in the Iliad, a town in 
 the Odyssey ; the oracle of the Dodonaaan Zeus is 
 located in Thessaly in the Iliad, in Epirus in the 
 Odyssey, and so on. 1 The Odyssey, moreover, is ob- 
 viously junior to the Iliad. It gives evidence of an 
 appreciable development of the arts of life relatively 
 to their state in the rival poem ; the processes of 
 
 1 See an article on the ' Doctrine of the Chorizontes,' in the 
 Edinburgh Review, vol. 133. 
 
28 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 verbal contraction have advanced in the interval; the 
 ethical standard has become more refined ; while for- 
 mulaic and other expressions common to both are 
 unmistakably 'in place/ as geologists say, in the 
 Iliad, ' erratic/ or ' transported/ in the Odyssey. 
 
 A difference in the place of origin, perhaps, helps 
 to accentuate the effect due to a difference of time. 
 The thread of tradition regarding these extraordinary 
 works is indeed hopelessly broken. Their prehistoric 
 existence is divided from their historical visibility by 
 the chasm opened when the civilisation of which they 
 were the choicest flowers was subverted by the irre- 
 pressible Dorians. The Iliad, however, contains 
 strong internal evidence of owning Thessaly as its 
 native region. The vast pre-eminence of the local 
 hero, the Olympian seat of the gods, the partiality 
 displayed for the horse, intimacy with Thessalian 
 traditions and topography, all suggest the relation- 
 ship. The name of Thessaly, it is true, does not 
 occur either in the Iliad or in the Odyssey ; nor had 
 the semi-barbarous Thessalians, when they were com- 
 posed, as yet crossed the mountains from Thesprotia 
 to trample down the Achaean culture of the land of 
 Achilles. It thus became, after Homer's time, the 
 scene of a revolution analogous in every respect to 
 that which overwhelmed the Peloponnesus. 
 
 The Homer of the Odyssey, who was not impro- 
 bably of Peloponnesian birth, must have travelled 
 widely. He had undeniably some personal acquaint- 
 
HOMER AS A POET AND AS A PROBLEM. 29 
 
 ance with Ithaca, his topographical indications, apart 
 from the gross blunder of planting the little island 
 west, instead of east of Cephalonia, corresponding on 
 the whole quite closely with reality. And he knew 
 something besides of most parts of the mainland of 
 Greece, of Crete, Delos, Chios, and the Ionian coast 
 f of Asia Minor. The experience of the Iliadic bard 
 was doubtless somewhat, though not greatly, more 
 limited. Its range extended, at any rate, from 
 1 Pelasgic Argos ' to the Troad, familiarity with which 
 is shown in all sections of the Trojan epic. The cos- 
 mopolitan character of both poets is only indeed' what 
 might have been expected. The privileged members 
 of an Achaean community must have enjoyed wide 
 opportunities of observation. For Mycenaean cul- 
 ture was strongly eclectic. Elements from many 
 quarters were amalgamated in it, Asiatic influences, 
 however, predominating. The men of genius who 
 acted as the interpreters of its typical ideas would 
 hence have been unfit for their task unless they had 
 personally tried and proved all such elements and 
 influences. They were presumably to some extent 
 adventurers by sea and land. But, further than this, 
 their individuality remains shrouded in the impene- 
 trable veil of their silence. 
 
30 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTEE II. 
 
 HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 
 
 The Homeric ideas regarding the heavenly bodies 
 were of the simplest description. They stood, in fact, 
 very much on the same level with those entertained 
 by the North American Indians, when first brought 
 into European contact. What knowledge there wa3 
 in them was of that * broken ' kind which (in Bacon's 
 phrase) is made up of wonder. Fragments of obser- 
 vation had not even begun to be pieced in one with 
 the other, and so fitted, ill or well, into a whole. In 
 other words, there was no faintest dawning of a celes- 
 tial science. 
 
 But surely, it may be urged, a poet is not bound 
 to be an astronomer. "Why should it be assumed 
 that the author (or authors) of the Iliad and Odys- 
 sey possessed information co-extensive on all points 
 with that of his fellow-countrymen ? His profession 
 was not science, but song. The argument, however, 
 implies a reflecting backward of the present upon the 
 past. Among unsophisticated peoples, specialists, 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 31 
 
 Unless in the matter of drugs or spells, or some few 
 practical processes, do not exist. The scanty stock 
 of gathered knowledge is held, it might be said, 
 in common. The property of one is the property 
 of all. 
 
 More especially of the poet. His power over his 
 hearers depends upon his presenting vividly what they 
 already perceive dimly. It was part of the poetical 
 faculty of the Ithacan bard Phemius that he ' knew 
 the works of gods and men.' l His special function 
 was to render them famous by his song. What he 
 had heard concerning them he repeated ; adding, of 
 his own, the marshalling skill, the vital touch, by 
 which they were perpetuated. He was no inventor : 
 the actual life of men, with its transfiguring traditions 
 and bafned aspirations, was the material he had to 
 work with. But the life of men was very different 
 then from what it is now. It was lived in closer 
 contact with Nature ; it was simpler, more typical, 
 consequently more susceptible of artistic treatment. 
 
 It was accordingly looked at and portrayed as a 
 whole ; and it is this very wholeness which is one of 
 the principal charms of primitive poetry — an irre- 
 coverable charm ; for civilisation renders existence a 
 labyrinth of which it too often rejects the clue. In 
 olden times, however, its ways were comparatively 
 straight, and its range limited. It was accordingly 
 capable of being embraced with approximate entirety. 
 
 1 Odyssey, i. 338. 
 
32 FAMILIAE STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 Hence the encyclopaedic character of the early epics. 
 Humani nihil alienum. Whatever men thought, 
 and knew, and did, in that morning of the world 
 when they spontaneously arose, found a place in 
 them. 
 
 Now, some scheme of the heavens must always 
 accompany and guide human existence. There is 
 literally no choice for man but to observe the move- 
 ments, real or apparent, of celestial objects, and to 
 regulate his actions by the measure of time they mete 
 out to him. Nor had he at first any other means of 
 directing his wanderings upon the earth save by 
 regarding theirs in the sky. They are thus to him 
 standards of reference and measurement as regards 
 both the fundamental conditions of his being— time 
 and space. 
 
 This intimate connexion, and, still more, the ideal- 
 ising influence of the remote and populous skies, has 
 not been lost upon the poets in any age. It might 
 even be possible to construct a tolerably accurate 
 outline-sketch of the history of astronomy in Europe 
 without travelling outside the limits of their works. 
 But our present concern is with Homer. 
 
 To begin with his mode of reckoning time. This 
 was by years, months, days, and hours. 1 The week 
 of seven days was unknown to him ; but in its place 
 we find 2 the triplicate division of the month used by 
 Hesiod and the later Attics, implying a month of 
 
 1 Odyssey, x. 4G9 ; xi. 294. a lb. xix. 307. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 33 
 
 thirty, and a year of 360 days, corrected, doubtless, 
 by some rude process of intercalation. These ten-day 
 intervals were perhaps borrowed at an early stage of 
 Achaean civilisation from Egypt, where they corre- 
 spond to the Chaldean ' decans ' — thirty-six minor 
 astral divinities presiding over as many sections of 
 the Zodiac. 1 But no knowledge of the Signs accom- 
 panied the transfer. A similar apportionment of 
 the hours of night into three watches (as amongst the 
 Jews before the Captivity), and of the hours of day 
 into three periods or stages, prevails in both the 
 Iliad and Odyssey. The seasons of the year; too, 
 were three — spring, summer, and winter — like those 
 of the ancient Egyptians and of our Anglo-Saxon 
 forefathers ; 2 for the Homeric Opora was not, properly 
 speaking, an autumnal season, but merely an aggra- 
 vation of summer heat and drought, heralded by the 
 rising of Sirius towards the close of July. It, in fact, 
 strictly matched our * dog-days,' the dies caniculares 
 of the Komans. The first direct mention of autumn 
 is in a treatise of the time of Alcibiades ascribed to 
 Hippocrates. 3 This rising of the dog-star is the only 
 indication in the Homeric poems of the use of a 
 stellar calendar such as we meet full-grown in Hesiod's 
 
 1 Brugsch, Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenlandischen Gesell- 
 schaft, Bd. ix. p. 513. 
 
 2 Lewis, Astronomy of the Ancients, p. 11. Tacitus says of the 
 Germans, ' Autumni perinde nomen ac bona ignorantur ' (Germania, 
 cap. xxvi.) 
 
 3 Smith's Dictionary of Antiquities, article 'Astronomy.' . 
 
 D 
 
34 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Works and Days. The same event was the harbin- 
 ger of the Nile-flood to the Egyptians, serving to 
 mark the opening of their year as well as to correct 
 the estimates of its length. 
 
 The annual risings of stars had formerly, in the 
 absence of more accurate means of observation, an 
 importance they no longer possess. Mariners and 
 husbandmen, accustomed to watch, because at the 
 mercy of the heavens, could hardly fail no less to be 
 struck with the successive effacements by, and re- 
 emergences from, the solar beams, of certain well- 
 known stars, as the sun pursued his yearly course 
 amongst them, than to note the epochs of such events. 
 Four stages in these periodical fluctuations of visi- 
 bility were especially marked by primitive observers. 
 The first perceptible appearance of a star in the dawn 
 was known as its ' heliacal rising.' This brief glimpse 
 extended gradually as the star increased its seeming 
 distance from the sun, the interval of precedence in 
 rising lengthening by nearly four minutes each morn- 
 ing. At the end of close upon six months occurred 
 its * acronycal rising,' or last visible ascent from the 
 eastern horizon after sunset. Its conspicuousness 
 was then at the maximum, the whole of the dark 
 hours being available for its shining. To these two 
 epochs of rising succeeded and corresponded two 
 epochs of setting — the ' cosmical ' and the ' heliacal.' 
 A star set cosmically when, for the first time each 
 year, it reached the horizon long enough before break 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 35 
 
 of day to be still distinguishable; it set heliacally 
 on the last evening when its rays still detached 
 themselves from the background of illuminated 
 western sky, before getting finally immersed in twi- 
 light. The round began again when the star had 
 arrived sufficiently far on the other side of the sun 
 to show in the morning — in other words, to rise 
 heliacally. 
 
 "Wide plains and clear skies gave opportunities for 
 closely and continually observing these successive 
 moments in the revolving relations of sun and stars, 
 which were soon found to afford a very accurate index 
 to the changes of the seasons. By them, for the most 
 part, Hesiod's prescriptions for navigation and agri- 
 culture are timed ; and although Homer, in conformity 
 with the nature of his subject, is less precise, he was 
 still fully aware of the association. 
 
 His sun is a god — Helios — as yet unidentified with 
 Apollo, who wears his solar attributes unconsciously. 
 Helios is also known as Hyperion, ' he who walks on 
 high,' and Elector, ' the shining one.' Voluntarily 
 he pursues his daily course in the sky, and voluntarily 
 he sinks to rest in the ocean-stream — subject, how- 
 ever, at times to a higher compulsion ; for, just after 
 the rescue of the body of Patroclus, Here favours her 
 Achaean clients by precipitating at a critical juncture 
 the descent of a still unwearied and unwilling lumi- 
 nary. 1 On another occasion, however, Helios memor- 
 
 ! Iliad, xviii. 239, 
 
86 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 ably asserts his independence, when, incensed at the 
 slaughter of his sacred cattle by the self-doomed com- 
 panions of Ulysses, he threatens to l descend into 
 Hades, and shine among the dead.' l And Zeus, in 
 promising the required satisfaction, virtually admits 
 his power to abdicate his office as illuminator of gods 
 and men. 
 
 Once only, the solstice is alluded to in Homeric 
 verse. The swineherd Eumseus, in describing the 
 situation of his native place, the Island of Syrie, states 
 that it is over against Ortygia (Delos), ' where are the 
 turning-places of the sun.' 2 The phrase was pro- 
 bably meant to indicate that Delos lay just so much 
 south of east from Ithaca as the sun lies at rising on 
 the shortest day of winter. But it must be confessed 
 that the direction was not thus very accurately laid 
 down, the comprised angle being 15^°, instead of 
 23 ^°. 3 To those early students of nature, the travel- 
 ling to and fro of the points of sunrise and sunset 
 furnished the most obvious clue to the yearly solar 
 revolution ; so that an expression, to us somewhat 
 recondite, conveyed a direct and unmistakable mean- 
 ing to hearers whose narrow acquaintance with the 
 phenomena of the heavens was vivified by immediate 
 personal experience of them. And in point of fact, 
 
 1 Odyssey, xii. 383. 
 
 2 lb. xv. 404. 
 
 3 Sir W. Geddes believes that the solstitial place of the setting 
 sun, as viewed from the Ionic coast, is that used to define the position 
 of Ortyg a. — Problem of the Homeric Poems, p. 294. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 37 
 
 the idea in question is precisely that conveyed by the 
 word ' tropic.' 
 
 Selene first takes rank as a divine personage in 
 the pseudo-Homeric Hymns. No moon-goddess is 
 recognised in the Iliad or Odyssey. Nor does the 
 orbed ruler of ' ambrosial night,' regarded as a mere 
 light-giver or time-measurer, receive all the attention 
 that might have been expected. A full moon is, how- 
 ever, represented with the other * heavenly signs ' on 
 the shield of Achilles, and figures somewhat super- 
 fluously in the magnificent passage where the Trojan 
 watch-fires are compared to the stars in a cloudless 
 
 sky: 
 
 As when in heaven the stars about the moon 
 Look beautiful, when all the winds are laid, 
 And every height comes out, and jutting peak 
 And valley, and the immeasurable heavens 
 Break open to their highest, and all the stars 
 Shine, and the shepherd gladdens in his heart : 
 So many a fire between the ships and stream 
 Of Xanthus blazed before the towers of Troy, 
 A thousand on the plain ; and close by each 
 Sat fifty in the blaze of burning fire ; 
 And eating hoary grain and pulse, the steeds, 
 Fixt by their cars, waited the golden dawn. 1 
 
 Here, as elsewhere, the simile no sooner presents 
 itself than the poet's imagination seizes upon and 
 develops it without overmuch regard to the illustrative 
 fitness of its details. The multitudinous effect of a 
 thousand fires blazing together on the plain inevitably 
 
 1 Iliad, viii. 551-61 (Tennyson's translation). 
 
38 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 suggested the stars. But with the stars came the 
 complete nocturnal scene in its profound and breath- 
 less tranquillity. The ' rejoicing shepherd,' mean- 
 time, who was part of it, would have been ill-pleased 
 with the darkness required for the innumerable stellar 
 display first thought of. And since, to the untutored 
 sense, landscape is delightful only so far as it gives 
 promise of utility, brilliant moonlight was added, for 
 his satisfaction and the safety of his flock, as well as 
 for the perfecting of that scenic beauty felt to be de- 
 ficient where human needs were left uncared for. 
 Just in proportion, however, as rocks, and peaks, and 
 wooded glens appeared distinct, the lesser lights of 
 heaven, and with them the fundamental idea of the 
 comparison, must have become effaced ; and the poet, 
 accordingly, as if with a misgiving that the fervour of 
 his fancy had led him to stray from the rigid line of 
 his purpose, volunteered the assurance that ' all the 
 stars were visible' — as, to his mind's eye, they 
 doubtless were. 
 
 Of the ' vivid planets ' thrown in by Pope there is 
 no more trace in the original, than of the ' glowing 
 pole.' Nor could there be ; since Homer was totally 
 ignorant that such a class of bodies existed. This 
 curious fact affords (if it were needed) conclusive 
 proof of the high antiquity of the Homeric poems. 
 Not the faintest suspicion manifests itself in them 
 that Hesperus, ' fairest of all stars set in heaven,' is 
 but another aspect of Phosphorus, herald of light 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 39 
 
 upon the earth, * the star that saffron-mantled Dawn 
 cometh after, and spreadeth over the salt sea.' 1 The 
 identification is said by Diogenes Laertius to have 
 been first made by Pythagoras ; and it may at any 
 rate be assumed with some confidence that this 
 elementary piece of astronomical knowledge came to 
 the Greeks from the East, with others of a like nature, 
 in the course of the seventh or sixth century B.C. 
 Astonishing as it seems that they should not have 
 made the discovery for themselves, there is no evi- 
 dence that they did so. Hesiod appears equally un- 
 conscious with Homer of the distinction between 
 ' fixed ' and ' wandering ' stars. According to his 
 genealogical information, Phosphorus, like the rest 
 of the stellar multitude, sprang from the union of 
 Astraeus with the Dawn, 2 but no hint is given of any 
 generic difference between them. 
 
 There is a single passage in the Iliad, and a 
 parallel one in the Odyssey, in which the constella- 
 tions are formally enumerated by name. Hephaestus, 
 we are told, made for the son of Thetis a shield great 
 and strong, whereon, by his exceeding skill, a multi- 
 tude of objects were figured. 
 
 ' There wrought he the earth, and the heavens, 
 and the sea, and the unwearying sun, and the moon 
 waxing to the full, and the signs every one wherewith 
 the heavens are crowned, Pleiads, and Hyads, and 
 Orion's might, and the Bear that men call also the 
 
 1 Iliad, xxiii. 226-27. 2 Theogony, 381. 
 
 
40 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Wain, her that turneth in her place, and watcheth 
 Orion, and alone hath no part in the baths of 
 Ocean/ L 
 
 The corresponding lines in the Odyssey occur in 
 the course of describing the hero's voyage from the 
 isle of Calypso to the land of the Phaeacians. Alone, 
 on the raft he had constructed of Ogygian pine- wood, 
 he sat during seventeen days, ' and cunningly guided 
 the craft with the helm ; nor did sleep fall upon his 
 eyelids, as he viewed the Pleiads and Bootes, that 
 setteth late, and the Bear, which they likewise call 
 the Wain, which turneth ever in one place, and keepeth 
 watch upon Orion, and alone hath no part in the 
 baths of Ocean.' 2 
 
 The sailing-directions of the goddess were to keep 
 the Bear always on the left — that is, to steer due 
 east. 
 
 It is clear that one of these passages is an adapta- 
 tion from the other ; nor is there reason for hesitation 
 in deciding which was the model. Independently of 
 extrinsic evidence, the verses in the Iliad have the 
 strong spontaneous ring of originality, while the 
 Odyssean lines betray excision and interpolation. 
 The ' Hyads and Orion's might ' are suppressed for 
 the sake of introducing Bootes. Variety was doubt- 
 less aimed at in the change ; and the conjecture is at 
 least a plausible one, that the added constellation 
 may have been known to the poet of the Odyssey 
 
 1 Iliad, xviii. 483-89. 2 Odyssey, v. 271-75. 
 
HOMEKIC ASTRONOMY. 41 
 
 (admitting the hypothesis of a divided authorship), 
 though not to the poet of the Iliad — known, that 
 is, in the sense that the stars comprising the figure of 
 the celestial Husbandman had not yet, at the time 
 and place of origin of the Iliad, become separated 
 from the anonymous throng circling in the ' murk of 
 night.' 
 
 The constellation Bootes— called Mate-setting/ 
 probably from the perpendicular position in which it 
 descends below the horizon — was invented to drive 
 the Wain, as Arctophylax to guard the Bear, the same 
 group in each case going by a double name. For the 
 brightest of the stars thus designated we still pre- 
 serve the appellation Arcturus (from arktos, bear, 
 ouros, guardian), first used by Hesiod, who fixed upon 
 ics acronycal rising, sixty days after the winter 
 solstice, as the signal for pruning the vines. 1 It is 
 not unlikely that the star received its name long 
 before the constellation was thought of, forming the 
 nucleus of a subsequently formed group. This was 
 undoubtedly the course of events elsewhere ; the Great 
 and Little Dogs, for instance, the Twins, and the 
 Eagle (the last with two minute companions) having 
 been individualised as stars previous to their recog- 
 nition as asterisms. 
 
 There is reason to believe that the stars 
 enumerated in the Iliad and Odyssey constituted 
 the whole of those known by name to the early Greeks. 
 
 1 Works and Days, 564-70. 
 
42 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER 
 
 This view is strongly favoured by the identity of the 
 Homeric and Hesiodic stars. It is difficult to believe 
 that, had there been room for choice, the same list 
 precisely would have been picked out for presentation 
 in poems so widely diverse in scope and origin as the 
 Iliad and Odyssey on the one side, and the 
 Works and Days on the other. As regards the 
 polar constellations, we have positive proof that none 
 besides Ursa Major had been distinguished. For the 
 statement repeated in both the Homeric epics, that 
 the Bear alone was without part in the baths of 
 Ocean, implies, not that the poet veritably ignored 
 the unnumbered stars revolving within the circle 
 traced out round the pole by the seven of the Plough, 
 but that they still remained a nameless crowd, unas- 
 sociated with any terrestrial object, and therefore 
 attracting no popular observation. 
 
 The Greeks, according to a well-attested tradition, 
 made acquaintance with the Lesser Bear through 
 Phoenician communication, of which Thales was the 
 medium. Hence the designation of the group as 
 Phoinike. Aratus (who versified the prose of Eudoxus) 
 has accordingly two Bears, lying (in sailors' phrase) 
 * heads and points ' on the sphere ; while he expressly 
 states that the Greeks still (about 270 b.c.) continued 
 to steer by Helike (the Twister, Ursa Major), while 
 the expert Phoenicians directed their course by the 
 less mobile Kynosoura (Ursa Minor). The absence 
 of any mention of a Pole-star seems at first sight sur- 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 43 
 
 prising. Even the Iroquois Indians directed their 
 wanderings from of old by the one celestial luminary 
 of which the position remained sensibly invariable. 1 
 Yet not the gods themselves, in Homer's time, were 
 aware of such a guide. It must be remembered, 
 however, that the axis of the earth's rotation pointed, 
 2800 years ago, towards a considerably different part 
 of the heavens from that now met by its imagi- 
 nary prolongation. The precession of the equinoxes 
 has been at work in the interval, slowly but unre- 
 mittingly shifting the situation of this point among 
 the stars. Some 600 years before the Great Pyra- 
 mid was built, it was marked by the close vicinity 
 of the brightest star in the Dragon. But this in 
 the course of ages was left behind by the onward- 
 travelling pole, and further ages elapsed before the 
 star at the tip of the Little Bear's tail approached 
 its present position. Thus the entire millennium 
 before the Christian era may count for an inter- 
 regnum as regards Pole-stars. Alpha Draconis had 
 ceased to exercise that office ; Alruccabah had not yet 
 assumed it. 
 
 The most ancient of all the constellations is 
 probably that which Homer distinguishes as never- 
 setting (it then lay much nearer to the pole than it 
 now does). In his time, as in ours, it went by two 
 appellations — the Bear and the Wain. Homer's Bear, 
 however, included the same seven bright stars con- 
 
 • ' Lafitau, Mc&urs des Sauvages Americains, p. 240. 
 
44 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 stituting the Wain, and no more ; whereas our Great 
 Bear stretches over a sky-space of which the Wain is 
 only a small part, three of the striding monster's far- 
 apart paws being marked by the three pairs of stars 
 known to the Arabs as the ' gazelle's springs.' How 
 this extension came about, we can only conjecture ; 
 but there is evidence that it was fairly well established 
 when Aratus wrote his description of the constella- 
 tions. Aratus, however, copied Eudoxus, and Eu- 
 doxus used observations made — doubtless by Accad 
 Or Chaldean astrologers — above 2000 b.c. 1 We infer, 
 then, that the Babylonian Bear was no other than the 
 modern Ursa Major. 2 
 
 But the primitive asterism — the Seven Eishis of 
 the old Hindus, the Septem Triones of the Latins, 
 the Arktos of Homer — included no more than seven 
 stars. And this is important as regards the origin of 
 the name. For it is impossible to suppose a likeness 
 to any animal suggested by the more restricted group. 
 Scarcely the acquiescent fancy of Polonius could find 
 it ' backed like a weasel,' or ' very like a whale.' Yet 
 a weasel or a whale would match the figure equally 
 well with, or better than, a bear. Probably the 
 growing sense of incongruity between the name and 
 the object it signified may have induced the attempt 
 to soften it down by gathering a number of additional 
 
 1 According to Mr. Proctor's calculation. See R. Brown, Erida- 
 nus : River and Constellation, p. 3. 
 
 2 See Houghton, Trans. Soc. Bibl. Arch. vol. v. p. 333. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 45 
 
 stars into a group presenting a distant resemblance to 
 a four-legged monster. 
 
 The name of the Bear, this initial difficulty not- 
 withstanding, is prehistoric and quasi- universal. It 
 was traditional amongst the American-Indian tribes, 
 who, however, sensible of the absurdity of attributing 
 a conspicuous protruding tail to an animal almost 
 destitute of such an appendage, turned the three 
 stars composing it into three pursuing hunters. No 
 such difficulty, however, presented itself to the 
 Aztecs. They recognised in the seven ' Arctic ' stars 
 the image of a Scorpion, 1 and named them accord- 
 ingly. No Bear seems to have bestridden their 
 sky. 
 
 The same constellation figures, under a divinified 
 aspect, with the title Otaica, in the great Finnish epic, 
 the ' Kalevala.' Now, although there is no certainty 
 as to the original meaning of this word, which has no 
 longer a current application to any terrestrial object, 
 it is impossible not to be struck with its resemblance 
 to the Iroquois term Okowari, signifying ' bear,' both 
 zoologically and astronomically. 2 The inference seems 
 justified that Otavm held the same two meanings, and 
 that the Finns knew the great northern constellation 
 by the name of the old Teutonic king of beasts. 
 
 It was (as we have seen) similarly designated on 
 the banks of the Euphrates ; and a celestial she-bear, 
 
 1 Bollaert, Memoirs Anthrop. Society \ vol. i. p. 216. 
 
 2 Lafitau, op. cit. p. 236. 
 
46 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 doubtfully referred to in the Eig-Veda, becomes the 
 starting-point of an explanatory legend in the Eama- 
 yana. 1 Thus, circling the globe from the valley of 
 the Ganges to the great lakes of the New World, we 
 find ourselves confronted with the same sign in the 
 northern sides, the relic of some primeval association 
 of ideas, long since extinct. 
 
 Extinct even in Homer's time. For the myth of 
 Callisto (first recorded in a lost work by Hesiod) was 
 a subsequent invention - an effect, not a cause — a 
 mere embroidery of Hellenic fancy over a linguistic 
 fact, the true origin of which was lost in the mists of 
 antiquity. 
 
 There is, on the other hand, no difficulty in under- 
 standing how the Seven Stars obtained their second 
 title of the Wain, or Plough, or Bier. Here we have 
 a plain case of imitative name-giving — a suggestion 
 by resemblance almost as direct as that which estab- 
 lished in our skies a Triangle and a Northern Crown. 
 Curiously enough, the individual appellations still 
 current for the stars of the Plough, include a reminis- 
 cence of each system of nomenclature — the legendary 
 and the imitative. The brightest of the seven, a Ursse 
 Majoris, the Pointer nearest the Pole, is designated 
 Dubhe, signifying, in Arabic, ' bear ' ; while the title 
 Benetnasch — equivalent to Bendt-en-Nasch, ' daughters 
 of the bier ' — of the furthest star in the plough- 
 handle, m perpetuates the lugubrious fancy, native in 
 
 1 Gubernatis, Zoological Mythology, vol. ii. p. 109, 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 47 
 
 Arabia, by which the group figures as a corpse at- 
 tended by three mourners. 
 
 Turning to the second great constellation men- 
 tioned in both Homeric epics, we again meet traces of 
 remote and unconscious tradition : yet less remote, 
 probably, than that concerned with the Bear — cer- 
 tainly less inscrutable ; for recent inquiries into the 
 lore and language of ancient Babylon have thrown 
 much light on the relationships of the Orion fable. 
 
 There seems no reason to question the validity of 
 Mr. Robert Brown's interpretation of the word by the 
 Accadian Ur-ana, ' light of heaven.' l But a proper 
 name is significant only where it originates. More- 
 over, it is considered certain that the same brilliant 
 star-group known to Homer no less than to us as 
 Orion, was termed by Chaldeo- Assyrian peoples 
 1 Tammuz,' 2 a synonym of Adonis Nor is it difficult 
 to divine how the association came to be established. 
 For, about 2000 b.c., when the Euphratean constella- 
 tions assumed their definitive forms, the belt of 
 Orion began to be visible before dawn in the month 
 of June, called * Tammuz,' because the death of 
 Adonis was then celebrated. It is even conceivable 
 that the heliacal rising of the asterism may origin- 
 ally have given the signal for that celebration. We 
 can at any rate scarcely doubt that it received the 
 name of ' Tammuz ' because its annual emergence 
 
 1 Myth of Kirke, p. 146. 
 
 2 Lenormant, Origines de VHistoirc, t. i. p. 247, 
 
48 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 from the solar beams coincided with the period of 
 mystical mourning for the vernal sun. 
 
 Orion, too, has solar connexions. In the Fifth 
 Odyssey (121-24), Calypso relates to Hermes how the 
 love for him of Aurora excited the jealousy of the 
 gods, extinguished only when he fell a victim to it, 
 slain by the shafts of Artemis in Ortygia. Obviously, 
 a sun-and-dawn myth slightly modified from the com- 
 mon type. The post-Homeric stories, too, of his 
 relations with (Enopion of Chios, and of his death by 
 the bite of a scorpion (emblematical of darkness, like 
 the boar's tusk in the Adonis legend), confirm his 
 position as a luminous hero. 1 Altogether, the evidence 
 is strongly in favour of considering Orion as a variant 
 of Adonis, imported into Greece from the East at an 
 early date, and there associated with the identical 
 group of stars which commemorated to the Accads of 
 old the fate of Dumuzi (i.e. Tammuz), the ' Only Son 
 of Heaven.' 
 
 It is remarkable that Homer knows nothing of 
 stellar mythology. He nowhere attempts to account 
 for the names of the stars. He has no stories at his 
 fingers' ends of translations to the sky as a ready 
 means of exit from terrestrial difficulties. The Orion 
 of his acquaintance — the beloved of the Dawn, the 
 mighty hunter, surpassing in beauty of person even 
 the divinely-born Aloidse — died and descended to 
 
 1 R. Brown, Archmologia, vol. xlvii. p. 352; Great Dionysiak 
 Myth, chap. x. § v. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 49 
 
 Hades like other mortals, and was there seen by 
 Ulysses, a gigantic shadow ' driving the wild beasts 
 together over the mead of asphodel, the very beasts 
 which he himself had slain on the lonely hills, with 
 a strong mace all of bronze in his hand, that is 
 ever unbroken.' l His stellar connexion is treated as 
 a fact apart. The poet does not appear to feel any 
 need of bringing it into harmony with the Odyssean 
 vision. 
 
 The brightest star in the heavens is termed by 
 Homer the ' dog of Orion.' The name Seirios (signi- 
 ficant of sparkling), makes its debut in the verses of 
 Hesiod. To the singer of the Iliad the dog-star is 
 a sign of fear, its rising giving presage to ' wretched 
 mortals ' of the intolerable, feverish blaze of late 
 summer (opora) . The deadly gleam of its rays hence 
 served the more appropriately to exemplify the lustre 
 of havoc-dealing weapons. Diomed, Hector, Achilles, 
 ' all furnish'd, all in arms,' are compared in turn, by 
 way of prelude to an ' a?isteia,' or culminating epoch 
 of distinction in battle, to the same brilliant but bale- 
 ful object. Glimmering fitfully across clouds, it not 
 inaptly typifies the evanescent light of the Trojan 
 hero's fortunes, no less than the flashing of his 
 armour, as he moves restlessly to and fro. 2 Of Achilles 
 it is said : 
 
 Him the old man Priam first beheld, as he sped across the 
 plain, blazing as the star that cometh forth at harvest-time, and 
 
 1 Odyssey, xi. 572-75. ' Iliad, xi. 62- 
 
50 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER, 
 
 plain seen his rays shine forth amid the host of stars in the 
 darkness of night, the star whose name men call Orion's Dog. 
 Brightest of all is he, yet for an evil sign is he set, and bringeth 
 much fever upon hapless men. Even so on Achilles' breast the 
 bronze gleamed as he ran. 1 
 
 In the corresponding passage relating to Diomed 
 (v. 4-7), the naive literalness with which the * baths 
 of Ocean ' are thought of is conveyed by the hint 
 that the star shone at rising with increased brilliancy 
 through having newly washed in them. 
 
 Abnormal celestial appearances are scarcely noticed 
 in the Homeric poems. Certain portentous darknesses, 
 reinforcing the solemnity of crises of battle, or im- 
 pending doom, 2 are much too vaguely defined to be 
 treated as indexes to natural phenomena of any kind. 
 Nevertheless, Professor Stockwell finds that, by a 
 curious coincidence, Ajax's Prayer to Father Zeus for 
 death — if death was decreed — in the light, might very 
 well have been uttered during a total eclipse of the 
 sun, the lunar shadow having passed centrally over 
 the Hellespont at 2 h. 21 min. p.m. on August 28, 1184 
 b.cy* Comets, however, have left not even the suspi- 
 cion of a trace in these early songs ; nor do they em- 
 body any tradition of a star shower, or of a display 
 of Northern Lights. The rain of blood, by which 
 Zeus presaged and celebrated the death of Sarpedon, 4 
 
 1 Iliad, xxii. 25-32. 
 
 2 Iliad, xv. 668 ; xvii. 366 ; Odyssey, xx. 356. 
 
 3 Astronomical Journal, Nos. 220, 221. 
 
 4 Iliad, xvi. 450 ; also xi. 53. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 51 
 
 might, it is true, be thought to embody a reminiscence 
 of a crimson aurora, frequently, in early times, chroni- 
 cled under that form ; but the portent indicated is 
 more probably an actual shower of rain tinged red by 
 a microscopic alga. An unmistakable meteor, how- 
 ever, furnishes one of the glowing similes of the 
 Iliad. By its help the irresistible swiftness and un- 
 expectedness of Athene's descent from Olympus to 
 the Scamandrian plain are illustrated. 
 
 Even as the son of Kronos the crooked counsellor sendeth a 
 star, a portent for mariners or a wide host of men, bright shin- 
 ing, and therefrom are scattered sparks in multitude; eyen in 
 such guise sped Pallas Athene to earth, and leapt into their 
 midst. 1 
 
 In the Homeric verses the Milky Way — the ' path 
 of souls ' of prairie-roving Indians, the mediaeval 
 ' way of pilgrimage ' 2 — finds no place. Yet its con- 
 spicuousness, as seen across our misty air, gives an 
 imperfect idea of the lustre with which it spans the 
 translucent vault which drew the wondering gaze of 
 the Achaean bard. 
 
 The point of most significance about Homer's 
 scanty astronomical notions is that they were of home 
 growth. They are precisely such as would arise 
 among a people in an incipient stage of civilisation, 
 simple, direct, and childlike in their mode of regard- 
 
 1 Iliad, iv. 75-79. 
 
 2 To Compostella. The popular German name for the Milky 
 Way is still Jakobsstrasse, while the three stars of Orion's belt are 
 designated, in the same connexion, Jakobsstab, staff of St James. 
 
 e 2 
 
52 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 ing natural phenomena, yet incapable of founding 
 upon them any close or connected reasoning. Of 
 Oriental mysticism there is not a vestige. No occult 
 influences rain from the sky. Not so much as a 
 square inch of foundation is laid for the astrological 
 superstructure. It is true that Sirius is a ' baleful 
 star ' ; but it is in the sense of being a harbinger of 
 hot weather. Possibly, or probably, it is regarded 
 as a concomitant cause, no less than as a sign of 
 the August droughts ; indeed the post hoc and the 
 propter hoc were, in those ages, not easily sepa- 
 rable; the effect, however, in any case, was purely 
 physical, and so unfit to become the starting-point of 
 a superstition. 
 
 The Homeric names of the stars, too, betray com- 
 mon reminiscences rather than foreign intercourse. 
 They are all either native, or naturalised on Greek 
 soil. The transplanted fable of Orion has taken root 
 and flourished there. The cosmopolitan Bear is 
 known by her familiar Greek name. Bootes is a 
 Greek husbandman, variously identified with Areas, 
 son of Callisto, or with Icarus, the luckless manda- 
 tory of Dionysus. The Pleiades and the Hyades are 
 intelligibly designated in Greek. The former word is 
 usually derived from plezn, to sail ; the heliacal rising 
 of the * tangled ' stars in the middle of May having 
 served, from the time of Hesiod, to mark the opening 
 of the season safe for navigation, and their cosmical 
 setting, at the end of October, its close. But this 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 53 
 
 etymology was most likely an after-thought. Long 
 before rules for navigating the iEgean came to be 
 formulated, the ' sailing-stars ' must have been desig- 
 nated by name amongst the Achsean tribes. Besides, 
 Homer is ignorant of any such association. Now in 
 Arabic the Pleiades are called Eth Thuraiyd, from 
 therwa, copious, abundant. The meaning conveyed is 
 that of many gathered into a small space ; and it is 
 quite similar to that of the Biblical kimah, a near 
 connexion of the Assyrian himtu, family. 1 Analogy, 
 then, almost irresistibly points to the interpretation 
 of Pleiades by the Greek pleiones, many, or *pleios y 
 full; giving to the term, in either case, the obvious 
 signification of a ' cluster.' 
 
 Of the Hyades, similarly, the ' rainy ' association 
 seems somewhat far-fetched. They rise and set re- 
 spectively about four days later than the Pleiades ; so 
 that, as prognostics of the seasons, it would be diffi- 
 cult to draw a permanent distinction between the two 
 groups ; yet one was traditionally held to bring fair, 
 the other foul weather. There can be little doubt 
 that an etymological confusion lay at the bottom of 
 this inconsistency. ' To rain,' in Greek is huein; but 
 hus (cognate with ' sow ') means a * pig.' Moreover, 
 in old Latin, the Hyades were called Sucalce (' little 
 pigs ') ; although the misapprehension which he sup- 
 posed to be betrayed by the term was rebuked by 
 
 1 R. Brown, Phainomena of Arattis, p. 9 ; Delitzsch, The Hebrew 
 Language, p. 69. 
 
54 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Cicero. 1 Possibly the misapprehension was the other 
 way. It is quite likely that ' Suculse ' preserved the 
 original meaning of 'Hyades,' and that the pluvious 
 derivation was invented at a later time, when the 
 conception of the seven stars in the head of the Bull 
 as a ■ litter of pigs ' had come to appear incongruous 
 and inelegant. It has, nevertheless, just that charac- 
 ter of naivete which stamps it as authentic. Witness 
 the popular names of the sister-group — the widely- 
 diffused 'hen and chickens,' Sancho Panza's 'las 
 siete cabrillas,' met and discoursed with during 
 his famous aerial voyage on the back of Clavilefio, 
 the Sicilian 'seven dovelets,'— all designating the 
 PJeiades. Still more to the purpose is the Anglo- 
 Saxon 'boar-throng,' which, by a haphazard identifi- 
 cation, has been translated as Orion, but which 
 Grimm, on better grounds, suggests may really apply 
 to the Hyades. 2 It is scarcely credible that any other 
 constellation can be indicated by a term so mani- 
 festly reproducing the ' SucuIsb ' of Latin and Sabine 
 husbandmen. 
 
 The Homeric scheme of the heavens, then (such 
 as it is), was produced at home. No stellar lore had 
 as yet been imported from abroad. An original com- 
 munity of ideas is just traceable in the names of some 
 of the stars ; that is all. The epoch of instruction by 
 more learned neighbours was still to come. The Signs 
 
 1 De Naturd Deorum, lib. ii. cap. 43. 
 
 5 Teutonic Mythology (Stallybrass), vol. ii. p. 729. 
 
HOMERIC ASTRONOMY. 55 
 
 of the Zodiac were certainly unknown to Homer, yet 
 their shining array had been marshalled from the 
 banks of the Euphrates at least 2000 years before 
 the commencement of the Christian era. Their intro- 
 duction into Greece is attributed to Cleostratus of 
 Tenedos, near, or shortly after, the end of the sixth 
 century b.c. By that time, too, acquaintance had 
 been made with the ' Phoenician ' constellation of the 
 Lesser Bear, and with the wanderings of the planets. 
 Astronomical communications, in fact, began to pour 
 into Hellas from Egypt, Babylonia, and Phoenicia 
 about the seventh century b.c. Now,' if there were 
 any reasonable doubt that ' blind Melesigenes ' lived 
 at a period anterior to this, it would be removed by 
 the consideration of what he lets fall about the 
 heavenly bodies. For, though he might have ignored 
 formal astronomy, he could not have remained un- 
 conscious of such striking and popular facts as the 
 identity of Hesperus and Phosphorus, the Sidonian 
 pilots' direction of their course by the ' Cynosure,' or 
 the mapping-out of the sun's path among the stars 
 by a series of luminous figures of beasts and men. 
 
 Thus the hypothesis of a late origin for the Iliad 
 and Odyssey is negatived by the astronomical igno- 
 rance betrayed in them. It has, however, gradations ; 
 whence some hints as to the relative age of the two 
 epics may be derived. The differences between them 
 in this respect are, it is true, small, and they both 
 stand approximately on the same astronomical level 
 
56 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 with the poems of Hesiod. Yet an attentive study of 
 what they have to tell us about the stars affords some 
 grounds for placing the Iliad, the Odyssey, and 
 the Works and Days in a descending series as to 
 time. 
 
 In the first place, the division of the month into 
 three periods of ten days each is unknown in the 
 Iliad, is barely hinted at in the Odyssey, but is 
 brought into detailed notice in the Hesiodic calendar. 
 Further, the ' turning-points of the sun ' are unnien- 
 tioned in the Iliad, but serve in the Odyssey, by 
 their position on the horizon, to indicate direction ; 
 while the winter solstice figures as a well-marked 
 epoch in the Works and Days. Hesiod, moreover, 
 designates the dog- star (not expressly mentioned in 
 the Odyssey) by a name of which the author of the 
 Iliad was certainly ignorant. Besides which an 
 additional constellation (Bootes) to those named in 
 the Iliad appears in the Odyssey and the Works 
 and Days ; while the title * Hyperion,' applied sub- 
 stantively to the sun in the Odyssey, is used only 
 adjectivally in the Iliad. Finally, stellar mythology 
 begins with Hesiod ; Homer (whether the Iliadic or 
 the Odyssean) takes the names of the stars as he finds 
 them, without seeking to connect them with any sub- 
 lunary occurrences. 
 
 To be sure, differences of place and purpose might 
 account for some of these discrepancies, }^et their 
 cumulative effect in fixing relative epochs is consider- 
 
HOMEEIC ASTRONOMY. 57 
 
 able ; and, even apart from chronology, it is some- 
 thing to look towards the skies with the ' most high 
 poet,' and to retrace, with the aid of our own better 
 knowledge, the simple meanings their glorious aspect 
 held for him. 
 
58 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTEE III. 
 
 THE DOG IN HOMER. 
 
 Two sets of strongly contrasted, nay, one might be- 
 forehand have thought mutually exclusive qualities, 
 go to make up the canine character. In all ages, and 
 amongst all nations, the dog has become a byword for 
 its uncleanly habits, disgusting voracity, its quarrel- 
 some and aggressive selfishness. The cynic, or ' dog- 
 like ' philosopher, is a type of what is unamiable in 
 human nature. Growling, snarling, whining, barking, 
 snapping and biting, crouching and fawning, consti- 
 tute a vocabulary descriptive of canine deportment 
 conveying none but repulsive and odious associations. 
 Our language pursues the animal through its different 
 varieties and stages of existence in order to find 
 varying epithets of contumely and reproach. The 
 universal and almost prehistoric term of abuse formed 
 by the simple patronymic — so to speak — has lost little 
 of its pristine favour, and none of its pristine force ; 
 while amongst ourselves * hound,' ' puppy,' i cur,' 
 'whelp,' and 'cub,' come in as harmonics of the 
 fundamental note of insult. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 59 
 
 On the other hand, some millenniums of experi- 
 ence have constituted the dog a type of incorruptible 
 fidelity, patient abnegation, devoted attachment reach- 
 ing unto and beyond the grave. Many animals have 
 been made the slaves and victims of man ; some have 
 been found capable of becoming his willing allies ; 
 none, save the dog, affords to his master a true and 
 intelligent companionship. Other members of the 
 brute creation are subdued by domestication ; the 
 dog is, it might be said, transfigured by it. A new 
 nature awakes in him. A higher ideal presents itself 
 to him. His dormant affections are, kindled ; his 
 latent intelligence develops. The overwhelming 
 fascination of humanity submerges his native ignoble 
 instincts, evokes virtues which man himself admires 
 rather than practises, engages a pathetic confidence, 
 inspires an indomitable love. Literature teems with 
 instances of canine constancy and self-devotion. The 
 long life-in-death of * Grey Friars Bobby ' forms no 
 prodigy in the history of his race. From the dog of 
 Colophon to the dog of Bairnsdale, man's four-footed 
 friend has been found capable of the supreme sacrifice 
 which one living creature can make for another. 
 Even in the dim d awnings of civilisation this animal 
 was chosen as the symbol of watchful attendance and 
 untiring subordination. The bright star Sirius, owing 
 to its close waiting on the ' giant ' of the skies, was 
 from the earliest time known as the ' dog of Orion.' 
 A brace of hounds typified to the ardent imagination 
 
60 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 of the Vedic poets the inseparable association with the 
 sun of the morning and evening twilight. iEschylus 
 elevates and enlarges the idea of divine companion- 
 ship in the eagle by calling it the ' winged dog of 
 Zeus.' ' Clytemnestra, in her hypocritical protesta- 
 tions before the elders of Argos, could find no more 
 striking image of fidelity than that of a house-dog left 
 by its master to guard his hearth and possessions. 2 
 
 Two opposing currents of sentiment regarding the 
 animal have thus from the first set strongly in — one 
 of repulsion verging towards abhorrence, the other 
 of sympathy touched by the yearning pity which a 
 superior being cannot choose but feel towards an 
 inferior laying at his feet the priceless gift of love. 
 But since his higher qualities develop, as it would 
 seem, exclusively under the stimulation of human 
 influence, it might have been anticipated, and it is 
 actually the case, that in those countries where the 
 dog is neglected, he is also despised, as by an in- 
 evitable reaction it must follow that where he is 
 despised, he will also be neglected. It is accordingly 
 among peoples whose pursuits repel his co-operation 
 that the sinister view prevails, while in hunting and 
 pastoral regions his credit grows as his faculties are 
 cultivated, and from the minister and delegate, he 
 creeps by insensible gradations into the place of 
 canine beatitude as the friend of man. The attitude 
 
 1 Agamemnon, 133 ; and Prometheus, 1057. - Agamemnon, 520. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 61 
 
 of repulsion is, as is well known, general amongst 
 Mahometan populations, and may be described-— 
 although with notable exceptions, such as of the 
 ancient Egyptians and Assyrians, the modern Parsees 
 and Japanese — as the Oriental position towards the 
 species ; while a benevolent sentiment is, on the 
 whole, characteristic of Western nations. 
 
 Now each of these opposite views is strongly and 
 characteristically represented in the Homeric poems ; 
 represented not as the mere reflection of a popular 
 instinct, but with a certain ardour of personal feeling 
 which now and again seems for a moment to draw 
 back the veil of epic impersonality from before the 
 living face of the poet. To the bigoted believers in 
 an indivisible Homer the fact is, no doubt, of most 
 perplexing import, and we leave them to account for 
 it as best they may; but to impartial inquirers it 
 affords at once a clue and an illumination. For the 
 Epic of Troy is not more sharply characterised by 
 canine antipathy than the Song of Ulysses by canine 
 sympathy ; while, to enhance the contrast, dislike 
 to the dog is most remarkably associated with a vivid 
 and untiring enthusiasm for the horse ; and deep 
 feeling for the dog with comparative indifference to 
 the equine race. More effectually than the most 
 elaborate arguments of the Separatists, this innate 
 disparity of sentiment appears to shiver the long con- 
 tested unity of Homeric authorship. 
 
 To descend, however, to particulars. Homeric 
 
62 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 dogs may be divided into four categories. (1) Dogs 
 used in the chace; (2) shepherds' dogs; (3) watch-dogs 
 and house-dogs ; (4) scavenger dogs. In the Iliad, the 
 first two classes occur incidentally only, either by way 
 of illustration or in the course of some episodical 
 narrative, such as that of the Calydonian boar-hunt 
 in the Ninth Book. The plastic circumference of the 
 Shield of Achilles includes a cameo of dog- life ; but it 
 is noticeable that the position there assigned to the 
 animal is of a somewhat ignominious character, and 
 is indicated with a perceptible touch of contempt. 
 The scene is depicted in the following lines : — 
 
 Of straight-horn'd cattle too a herd was grav'n ; 
 
 Of gold and tin the heifers all were wrought ; 
 
 They to the pasture from the cattle -yard, 
 
 With gentle lowings, by a babbling stream, 
 
 Where quiv'ring reed- beds rustled, slowly moved. 
 
 Four golden shepherds walk'd beside the herd, 
 
 By nine swift dogs attended ; then amid 
 
 The foremost heifers sprang two lions fierce 
 
 Upon the lordly bull ; he, bellowing loud, 
 
 Was dragg'd along, by dogs and youths pursuYl. 
 
 The tough bull's hide they tore, and gorging lapp'd 
 
 Th' intestines and dark blood ; with vain attempt 
 
 The herdsmen following closely, to th' attack 
 
 Cheer 'd their swift dogs ; these shunn'd the lions' jaws, 
 
 And close around them baying, held aloof. 1 
 
 It can scarcely be maintained that a lover of the 
 
 1 Iliad, xviii. 573-86 (Lord Derby's translation). For illustra- 
 tions drawn from the dog's instinctive fear of the lion, see also v. 
 476; xvii. 65-67. 
 
THE DOO IN HOMER. 63 
 
 species would have selected the incident for typical 
 representation in his great world-picture. 
 
 The direct Iliadic references to dogs, on the other 
 hand, show clearly that they were domesticated in 
 Troy, that they lived in the tents of the Achaean chiefs, 
 (probably with a guarding office), and that they 
 roamed the camp, devouring offal, and hideously con- 
 tending with vultures and other feathered rivals for 
 the human remains left unburied on the field of 
 battle. The circumstance that in this revolting capa- 
 city they were predominantly present to the mind of 
 the poet unveils the secret of his profound aversion. 
 Not as the humble and faithful minister of man, 
 hearkening to his voice, hanging on his looks, holding 
 his life at a pin's fee in comparison with his service, 
 the author of the Iliad conceived of the dog ; but as a 
 filthy and bloodthirsty beast of prey, the foul outrager 
 of the sanctities of death, the ravenous and undis- 
 criminating violator of the precious casket of the 
 human soul. In the tragic appeal of Priam to Hector 
 as lie awaits the onslaught of Achilles beneath the 
 walls of Troy, this aversion touches its darkest depth, 
 and obtains an almost savage completeness of expres- 
 sion. Anticipating the imminent catastrophe of his 
 house and kingdom, the despairing old man thus 
 portrays his own approaching doom — 
 
 Me last, when by some foeman's stroke or thrust 
 The spirit from these feeble limbs is driv'n, 
 
64 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Insatiate dogs shall tear at my own door ; 
 The dogs my care has rear'd, my table fed. 
 The guardians of my gates shall lap my blood, 
 And crave and madden, crouching in the porch. 1 
 
 Is it credible that the same mind which was 
 capable of conjuring up this abhorrent vision should 
 have conceived the pathetic picture of the faithful 
 hound in the Odyssey ? Nor can there be found, in 
 the wide range of the great Ilian epic, a single passage 
 inconsistent in spirit with the lines cited above. 
 Throughout its cantos, in which the usefulness of the 
 animal is nevertheless amply recognised, and his 
 peculiarities sketched with graphic power and truth- 
 fulness, runs, like a dark thread, the remembrance of 
 his hateful office as the inflictor of the last and most 
 atrocious insult upon ' miserable humanity.' 2 One 
 of the leading * motives ' of the poem is, indeed, the 
 fate, of the body after death. The overmastering im- 
 portance attached to its honourable interment forms 
 the hinge upon which a considerable portion of the 
 action turns. The dread of its desecration continu- 
 ally haunts the imagination of the poet, and broods 
 alike over the ramparts of Ilium and the tents of 
 Greece. From the first lines almost to the last the 
 loathsome processes of canine sepulture stand out as 
 the direst result of defeat — the crowning terror of 
 death. Among the disastrous effects of the wrath of 
 Achilles foreshadowed in the opening invocation, the 
 
 1 Book xxii. 66-71. (Author.) 2 Book xxii. 76. 
 
THE DOG- IN HOMER. 65 
 
 visible and tangible horror is afforded by ' devouring 
 dogs and hungry vultures ' exercising their revolting 
 function on the corpses of the slain ; before the dying 
 eyes of Hector rises, like a nightmare, the horrible 
 anticipation of becoming the prey of ' Achaean hounds,' ! 
 while his fierce adversary refuses to impair the gloomy 
 perfection of his vengeance by remitting that supreme 
 penalty ; 2 next to the honours of his funeral-pyre, 
 the chiefest consolation offered to the Shade of Patro- 
 clus is the promise to make the body of his slayer 
 food for curs ; 3 in her despair, Hecuba shrieks that 
 she brought forth her son to 'glut swift-footed dogs,' 4 
 and bids Priam not seek to avert the abhorred doom. 
 These instances, which it would be easy to multiply, 
 are unmodified by a solitary expression of tenderness 
 towards canine nature, or a single example of canine 
 affection towards man. 
 
 It is true that a different view has been advocated 
 by Sir William Geddes, who, in his valuable work, 
 ' The Problem of the Homeric Poems/ first dwelt in 
 detail on the contrasted treatment of the horse and 
 clog in those early epics. He did not, however, stop 
 there. A theory, designed to solve the secular puzzle 
 of Homeric authorship, had presented itself to him, 
 and demanded for its support a somewhat complex 
 marshalling of facts. His contention was briefly 
 this : — that the Odyssey, with the ten books of the 
 
 1 Iliad, xxii. 339. 2 lb. 348. 
 
 3 lb, xxiii. .183. 4 lb. xxiv. 211. 
 
66 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Iliad l amputated by Mr. Grote's critical knife from 
 the trunk of a supposed primitive Achilleid, are the 
 work of one and the same author, an Ionian of Asia 
 Minor, to whom the venerable name of Homer pro- 
 perly belongs ; while the fourteen books constituting 
 the nucleus and main substance of our Iliad are 
 abandoned to an unknown Thessalian bard. He has 
 not, indeed, succeeded in engaging on his side the 
 general opinion of the learned, yet it cannot be denied 
 that his ingenious and patient analysis of the Homeric 
 texts has served to develop some highly suggestive 
 minor points. The validity of his main argument 
 obviously depends, in the first place, upon the dis- 
 covery of striking correspondences between the 
 Odyssey and the non-Achillean cantos of the Iliad ; 
 in the second, upon the exposure of irreconcilable dis- 
 crepancies between the Odyssey and the Grotean 
 Achilleid. But the attempt is really hopeless to 
 transplant the canine sympathy manifest in the 
 Odyssey to any part of the Iliad, or to localise in 
 any particular section of the Iliad the equine sympa- 
 thies displayed throughout the many-coloured tissue 
 of its composition. 
 
 Everywhere alike enthusiasm for the horse is 
 evoked, vividly and spontaneously, on all suitable 
 occasions. Ardent admiration is uniformly bestowed 
 upon his powers and faculties. He is nowhere passed 
 
 1 These are Books ii. to vii. inclusive, ix. x. xxiii. and xxiv. The 
 Achilleid thus consists of Books i. viii. and xi.-xxii. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 67 
 
 by with indifference. The verses glow with a kind of 
 rapture of enjoyment that describe his strength and 
 beauty, his eager spirit and fine nervous organisation, 
 his intelligent and disinterested participation in human 
 struggles and triumphs. In the region of the Iliad 
 claimed for the Odyssean Homer, it suffices to point 
 to the episode of the capture by Diomed and Sthene- 
 lus of the divinely-descended steeds of iEneas ; * to 
 the careful provision of ambrosial forage for the 
 horses of Here along the shores of Simoeis ; 2 to the 
 resplendent simile of Book vi. ; 3 to the gleeful zeal 
 with which Odysseus and Diomed secure, as the fruit 
 and crown of their nocturnal expedition, the milk- 
 white coursers of Rhesus ; 4 to the living fervour im- 
 ported into the chariot-race at the funeral games of 
 Patroclus ; to the tender pathos with which Achilles 
 describes the grief of his immortal horses for their 
 well-loved charioteer. 5 The enumeration of similar 
 examples from non-Achillean cantos might be carried 
 much further, but where is the use of ' breaking in an 
 open door ' ? The evidence is overwhelming as to 
 homogeneity of sentiment, in this important respect, 
 through the entire Iliad. If more than one author 
 was concerned in its production, the coadjutors were 
 at least unanimous in their glowing admiration for 
 the heroic animal of battle. 
 
 1 Iliad, v. 267. - lb. 115-11. 
 
 3 This is certainly original in book vi. It comes in as an awkward 
 interpolation at xv. 263. 
 
 4 Iliad, x. 474-569. 5 lb. xxiii. 230-84, 
 
 f 2 
 
68 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Nor can the search, in the same ten cantos, for 
 indications of a sympathetic feeling towards the dog 
 consonant to that displayed in the Odyssey, be pro- 
 nounced successful. Certainly much stress cannot be 
 laid, for the purpose, upon the striking passage in the 
 Twenty-third Book, descriptive of the cremation of 
 Patroclus ; yet it makes the nearest discoverable 
 approach to the desired significance. It runs as 
 follows in Lord Derby's translation : 
 
 A hundred feet each way they built the pyre, 
 And on the summit, sorrowing, laid the dead. 
 Then many a sheep and many a slow-pac'd ox 
 They flay'd and dress'd around the fun'ral pyre ; 
 Of all the beasts Achilles took the fat. 
 And covered o'er the dead from head to foot, 
 And heap'd the slaughter'd carcases around ; 
 Then jars of honey plac'd, and fragrant oils, 
 Resting upon the couch ; next, groaning loud, 
 Four pow'rful horses on the pyre he threw; 
 Then, of nine * dogs that at their master's board 
 Had fed, he slaughter'd two upon his pyre ; 
 Last, with the sword, by evil counsel sway'd, 
 Twelve noble youths he slew, the sons of Troy. 
 The fire's devouring might he then applied, 
 And, groaning, on his lov'd companion call'd. 2 
 
 These sanguinary rites have been thought to 
 afford proof that canine companionship was necessary 
 
 1 The number nine is curiously associated with the canine species. 
 The herdsmen's pack on the Shield of Achilles consists of nine ; 
 nine were the dogs of Patroclus ; and we learn from Mr. Richardson 
 (Dogs : their Origin and Varieties, p. 37), that Fingal kept nine 
 great dogs, and nine smaller game-starting dogs, 
 
 2 Iliad, xxiii. 164-78. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 69 
 
 to the happiness of a Greek hero in the other world. 
 For, amongst rude peoples, from the Scythians of 
 Herodotus 1 to the Indians of Patagonia, such sacri- 
 fices have been a common mode of testifying respect 
 to the dead. And it may readily be admitted that 
 their originally inspiring idea was that of continued 
 association after death with the objects most valued 
 in life. But such an idea appears to have been very 
 remotely, if at all, present to the mind of our 
 poet. The Ghost of Patroclus, at any rate, though 
 sufficiently communicative, expresses no desire for 
 canine, equine, bovine, or ovine society, although 
 specimens of all four species were immolated in its 
 honour. The purpose of Achilles in instituting the 
 ghastly solemnity was, as he himself expressed it, 
 
 That with provision meet the dead may pass 
 Down to the realms of night. 2 
 
 But the motives that crowded upon his fierce soul 
 were probably in truth as multitudinous as the waves 
 of passion which rolled over it. He desired to appease 
 the parted spirit of his friend with a sacrifice match- 
 ing his own pride and the extent of his bereavement. 
 Still more, he sought to glut his vengeance, and allay, 
 if possible, the intolerable pangs of his grief. He 
 perhaps dimly imaged to himself a pompous funeral 
 throng accompanying the beloved soul even to the 
 gates of Hades, provision for the way being supplied 
 
 1 Book iv. 71, 72. 2 Geddes, Problem, &c, p. 227. 
 
70 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 by the flesh of sheep and oxen, an escort by horses 
 and dogs, while an air of gloomy triumph was im- 
 parted to the shadowy procession by the hostile 
 presence of outraged and indignant human shades. A 
 similar ceremony was put in practice, by comparison 
 recently, in Lithuania. When the still pagan Grand 
 Duke Gedimin died in 1841, his body was laid on 
 a pyre and burned with two hounds, two falcons, 
 his horse saddled and still living, and a favourite 
 servant. 1 But here the disembodied company was 
 altogether friendly, and may have been thought of 
 as willingly paying a last tribute of homage to their 
 lord. 
 
 The information is in any case worth having that 
 Patroclus, like Priam, kept a number of i table-dogs,' 
 whose presence doubtless contributed in some degree 
 to the stateliness of his surroundings. It is, however, 
 given casually, without a word of comment, as if the 
 bard instinctively shrank from dwelling on the inti- 
 mate personal relations of the animal to man. The 
 son of Menoetius had a gentle soul, and we cannot 
 doubt, although no hint of such affection is communi- 
 cated, that he loved his dogs, and was loved by them. 
 Of the horses accustomed to his guidance — the im- 
 mortal pair of Achilles — we indeed hear how they 
 stood, day after day, with drooping heads and silken 
 manes sweeping the ground, in sorrow for his and 
 their lost friend ; but no dog is permitted to whine 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, Wanderings of Plants and Animals, p. 417. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 71 
 
 his sense of bereavement beside the body of Patroclus ; 
 no dog misses the vanished caress of his master's 
 hand; no dog crouches beside Achilles in his soli- 
 tude, or offers to his unsurpassed grief the dumb and 
 wistful consolation of his sympathy. The privilege 
 of sharing the sorrows, as of winning the applause of 
 humanity, is, in the Iliad, reserved exclusively for the 
 equine race. 
 
 Turning to the Odyssey, we find ourselves in a 
 changed world. Ships have here become the ' chariots 
 of the sea ' ; l navigation usurps the honour and in- 
 terest of charioteering; a favourable breeze imparts 
 the cheering sense of companionship felt by a practised 
 rider with his trusty steed. The scenery on shore 
 leaves this sentiment undisturbed. Eocky Ithaca, 
 Telemachus informs Menelaus, 2 contains neither wide 
 tracks for chariot-driving, nor deep meadows for 
 horse-pasture ; it is a goat-feeding land, though more 
 beautiful, to his mind, in its ruggedness than even 
 the ' spacious plain ' of Sparta, with its rich fields 
 of lotus-grass, its sedgy flats, its waving tracts of 
 1 white barley,' wheat, and spelt. A suitable habitat 
 is thus, in his native island, wanting for the horse, 
 who is accordingly relegated to an obscure corner 
 of the stage, while the foreground of animal life is 
 occupied by his less imposing rival in the regard of 
 man. The dog is, in fact, the characteristic and con- 
 
 1 Odyssey, iv. 708 ; cf. Geddes, Problem, &c, p. 215. 
 
 2 Odyssey, iv. 605. 
 
72 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 spicuous animal of the Odyssey, as the horse is of the 
 Iliad. Xanthus and Balius, the wind-begotten steeds 
 bestowed by Poseidon upon the sire of Achilles, who 
 own the sorrowful human gift of tears, and the super- 
 human gift of prophetic speech, are replaced l by the 
 more homely, but not less pathetic, figure of Argus, 
 the dog of Odysseus, whose fidelity through a score of 
 years we feel to be no poetical fiction, but simply a 
 poetical enhancement of a familiar fact. Canine 
 society is, indeed, placed by the author of the Odyssey 
 on a higher level than it occupies, perhaps, in any 
 other work of the imagination. When Telemachus, 
 starting into sudden manhood under the tutelage of 
 Athene, goes forth to lay his wrongs before the first 
 Assembly convened in Ithaca since his father's 'hollow 
 ships ' sailed for Troy, we are told that he carried in 
 his hand a brazen spear, and that the goddess poured 
 out upon him a divine radiance of beauty such that 
 the people marvelled as they gazed on him. But the 
 most singular and significant part of the description 
 lies in the statement (thrice repeated on similar 
 occasions 2 ) that he went ' not alone ; two swift-footed 
 dogs followed him.' Alone indeed he was, as far as 
 human companionship was concerned — a helpless 
 youth, isolated and indignant in the midst of a riotous 
 and overbearing crew, intent not less upon wasting 
 his substance than upon wooing his un widowed 
 
 1 Mahaffy, Social Life in Greece, pp. 57, 63. 
 
 2 Odyssey, ii. 11; xvii. 62 ; xx. 145. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 73 
 
 mother. Comrade or attendant he had none, but 
 instead of both, a pair of four-footed sympathisers, 
 evidently regarded as adding dignity to his appear- 
 ance in public, as well as imparting the strengthening 
 consciousness of social support. The conjunction, as 
 Mr. Mahaffy well remarks, shows an intense appre- 
 ciation of dog-nature. 
 
 In the cottage of Eumseus the swineherd, Odysseus, 
 disguised as a beggar, weary with long wanderings, a 
 stranger in peril of his life in his own islet-kingdom, 
 finds his first hospitable refuge. Here again we are 
 met by graphic and frequent sketches of canine 
 manners and character. In the office of guarding 
 and governing the 960 porkers composing his herd, 
 Eumseus had the aid of four dogs reared by himself. 
 They were large and fierce, ' like wild beasts ' ; ! but 
 the savage instincts even of these half-reclaimed 
 creatures are discovered to be directed towards duty, 
 to be subdued by affection, nay, to be elevated by a 
 touch of supersensual awe. If they erred, it was by 
 excess of zeal in the cause of law and order. For 
 when Odysseus (it must be remembered, in extremely 
 disreputable guise) approached the thorn-hedged en- 
 closure, they set upon him together, barking furiously, 
 and threatening to tear him to pieces on the spot. 
 He had not, however, edged his w T ay between Scylla 
 and Charybdis to perish thus ingloriously. With 
 
 1 Odyssey, xiv. 21. 
 
74 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMEK. 
 
 unfailing presence of mind he instantly took up an 
 attitude of non-resistance, stood still and laid aside 
 his staff. This passivity doubtless produced some 
 hesitation on the part of his assailants, for when the 
 swineherd hurried out to the rescue, he was still un- 
 hurt. No small amount of compulsion, both moral 
 and physical — exerted by means of objurgatory re- 
 monstrance, coupled with plentiful stone-pelting — 
 was, however, required to calm the ardour of such 
 impetuous allies. 
 
 Nevertheless, their ferocity is represented as far 
 from undiscriminating. It is, in fact, strictly limited 
 by their official responsibilities. They know how to 
 suit their address to their company, from an Olym- 
 pian denizen to a homeless tramp, and get unexpected 
 opportunities of displaying these social accomplish- 
 ments. For the rustic dwelling of Euma^us becomes 
 a rendezvous for the principal personages of the 
 story, and the demeanour of the four dogs is a lead- 
 ing incident, carefully recorded, connected with the 
 arrival of each. We have just seen what an obstre- 
 perous reception they gave to the disguised king of 
 Ithaca. Telemachus, on the other hand, they rushed 
 to welcome, fawning and wagging their tails without 
 barking, 1 as that quick-witted vagrant, whose arrival 
 had preceded his, was the first to observe. But 
 when Athene visited the farm for the purpose of 
 bringing about the recognition of the father by the 
 
 1 Odyssey, xvi. 4-10. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 75 
 
 son, which was the first step towards retribution 
 upon their common enemies, while Telemachus re- 
 mained unconscious of her presence — *■ for not to all 
 do the gods manifest themselves openly ' — it is said, 
 with a very remarkable coupling of man and beast, 
 that ' Odysseus and the dogs saw her ' ; l and the 
 mysterious sense of the supernatural attributed in 
 much folklore to the canine species found vent in 
 whimperings of fear and panic-stricken withdrawal. 
 
 We are next transported to the scene of the revel- 
 lings of the Suitors, and the fortitude of Penelope. 
 The sight of the once familiar turreted enclosure of 
 his palace, and the sound of the well-remembered 
 voice and lyre of the minstrel Phemius, proclaiming 
 the progress of the festivities, all but overturned the 
 equanimity of the counterfeit mendicant. His prac- 
 tised powers of dissimulation, however, came to his 
 aid,; and grasping the hand of his unsuspecting re- 
 tainer, he brought, with a cunningly devised speech, 
 his tell-tale emotion into harmony with his assumed 
 character. They advanced to the threshold, and there, 
 on a dung-heap, half devoured with insect parasites, 
 lay a dog — the dog Argus. But we must allow the 
 poet to tell the story in his own way. 
 
 Thus as they spake, a dog that lay apart, 
 Lifted his head, and pricked his list'ning ears, 
 Argus, whom erst Odysseus patient bred, 
 But use of him had none ; for ere that day, 
 
 , xvi. 162. 
 
76 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 He sailed for sacred Troy ; and other men 
 
 Had trained and led hini forth o'er field and fell, 
 
 To chase wild goats, hares, and the pricket deer. 
 
 But now, his master gone, in foul neglect, 
 
 On dung of ox and mule he made his couch ; 
 
 Fattening manure, heaped at the palace-gate, 
 
 Till spread to enrich Odysseus' wide domain ; 
 
 Thus stretched, with vermin swarming, Argus lay. 
 
 But when he saw Odysseus close approach, 
 
 He knew, and wagged his tail, and dropped his ears, 
 
 Yet could not rise to fawn upon his lord, 
 
 Who paused, and stood, and brushed aside a tear, 
 
 Hiding his grief. Then thus with crafty speech : 
 
 ' Eumaeus, sure 'tis wonder in such plight 
 
 To see this dog, of goodly form and limbs ; 
 
 But tell me did his fleetness match his shape, 
 
 Or was he such as, reared for pride and show, 
 
 Inactive at their masters' tables feed ? ' 
 
 Emnaeus heard, and quickly made reply : 
 
 ' To one who perished in a distant land 
 
 This dog belongs. But couldst thou see him now 
 
 Such as Odysseus left him, 'bound for Troy, 
 
 Thou well might' st wonder at his strength and speed. 
 
 'Mid the deep thickets of the forest glades, 
 
 No game escaped his swift pursuing feet, 
 
 Nor hound could match his prowess in the chace. 
 
 But now his days are evil, since his lord 
 
 Is dead, and careless women heed him not. 
 
 For when the master's hand no longer rules, 
 
 Servants no longer work in order due. 
 
 Full half the virtue leaves the man condemned 
 
 By wide-eyed Zeus to drag the servile chain.' 
 
 Thus as he spake, he crossed the stately hall, 
 
 And took his place amidst the suitors' train. 
 
 But Argus died ; for dark doom ravished him, 
 
 Greeting Odysseus after twenty years. 1 
 
 1 Odyssey, xvii. 290-327 (Author's translation). 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 77 
 
 Surely — even thus inadequately rendered — the 
 most poignantly pathetic narrative of dog-life in 
 literature ! The hero, returning after a generation 
 of absence, in a disguise impenetrable to son, ser- 
 vants, nay to the wife of his bosom, is recognised by 
 one solitary living creature, a dog. And to this 
 faithful animal, unforgetting in his forlorn decrepi- 
 tude, whose affectionate gestures form his only wel- 
 come to the home now occupied by unscrupulous 
 foes, ready to take his life at the first hint of his 
 identity, he is obliged to refuse a stroke of his hand, 
 or so much as a glance of his eye, to soothe the fatal 
 spasm of his joy. A case that might well draw a 
 tear, even from the much-enduring son of Laertes. 
 
 It has not escaped the acumen of Sir William 
 Geddes l that the compliment of an individual name 
 is, in the Iliad, paid exclusively amongst the brute 
 creation to horses ; in the Odyssey (setting aside the 
 mythical coursers of the Dawn, Book xxiii. 246) to a 
 single dog. Now this may at first sight seem to be a 
 trifling point ; but a very little consideration will 
 suffice to show its significance. To the author of the 
 Odyssey, at least, the imposition, or even the dis- 
 closure of a name, was a matter clothed with a cer- 
 tain solemn importance. He lets us know how and 
 why his hero came to be called ' Odysseus/ and 
 furnishes us, to the best of his ability, with an 
 
 1 Problem of the Homeric Poems, p. 218, 
 
78 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 etymological interpretation of that ill-omened title. 1 
 How distinctively human a thing it is to have a 
 name we are made to feel when Alcinous conjures 
 his mysterious guest to reveal the designation by 
 which he is known to his parents, fellow-citizens, and 
 countrymen, ' since no man, good or bad, is anony- 
 mous ' ! 2 And the reply is couched in an earnest 
 and exalted strain, conveying at once the extent of 
 the trust reposed, and the momentousness of the 
 revelation granted — 
 
 Ulysses, from Laertes sprung, am I, 
 Vers'd in the wiles of men, and fam'd afar. 3 
 
 The same scene, thrown into a grotesque form, is 
 repeated in the cave of Polyphemus, where the up- 
 shot of the adventure depends wholly upon the pru- 
 dence of the storm-tossed chieftain in responding to 
 the monster's vinous enthusiasm with the mock dis- 
 closure of a no-name. 
 
 These illustrations help to make it plain that, in 
 assigning to brutes individual appellations, we bestow 
 upon them something essentially human, which they 
 have not, and cannot have of themselves, but which 
 marks their share in human interests, and their 
 claim on human sympathy. So accurately is this 
 true, that a table showing the relative frequency 
 of individual nomenclature for different animals in 
 various countries would assuredly, on the strength 
 
 1 Odyssey, xix. 409. - lb, viii. 552, 3 lb. ix. 19, 20, 
 
THE DOG IN HOMEE. 79 
 
 of that fact alone, set forth their relative position in 
 the estimation of man. 
 
 The dog Argus belonged presumably to the famous 
 Molossian breed, the first specimen of which was fabled 
 to have been cast in bronze by Hephaestus, 1 and pre- 
 sented by Jupiter to Cephalus, the eponymous ruler of 
 the island of Cephallenia. These animals were not 
 more remarkable for fierceness than for fidelity. To the 
 race were assigned creatures of such evil mythological 
 reputation as the voracious hound of Hades, and 
 the barking pack of Scylla ; a Molossian sent to 
 Alexander was stated to have brought down a lion ; 
 while, on the other hand, the canine detective of 
 Montargis had a rival in the army of Pyrrhus, whose 
 funeral pile was signalised by a desperate act of 
 canine self-immolation ; and the dog of Eupolis (like- 
 wise a Molossian), after having torn to pieces a 
 thieving servant, died of grief and voluntary starva- 
 tion on the grave of the iEginetan poet. 2 These 
 qualities are presented and perpetuated in the four 
 dogs of Eumaeus and the neglected hound of Odysseus. 
 
 The Homeric poems ignore the varieties of the 
 
 species — 
 
 Mastiff, greyhound, mongrel grim, 
 Hound or spaniel, brach or lym, 
 Or bobtail tike, or trundle-tail. 
 
 1 From this legend the poet not improbably derived the idea of 
 the gold and silver watch-dogs, framed by Hephaestus for Alcinous 
 Odyssey, vii. 91-94. 
 
 2 iElian, De Natura Animalium, vii. 10 ; x, 41. 
 
 
SO FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 A dog is simply a dog, as a horse is a horse. But 
 individual horses are in the Iliad distinguished by 
 differences of colour, while no colour-epithet is any- 
 where applied to a dog. It is probable, however, that 
 in the shepherd-dogs of Albania an almost perfect 
 reproduction of the animals dear to the poet is still to 
 be found. For in that wild and mountainous region 
 the Chaonian or Molossian race is said to survive 
 undegenerate, and, judging by the reports of travel- 
 lers, its modern representatives preserve the same 
 vigilance in duty and alacrity in attack which distin- 
 guished the formidable band of the Odyssean swine- 
 herd. An English explorer, who had some serious 
 encounters with them, has described these fierce pas- 
 toral guardians as ' varying in colour from dark- 
 brown to bright dun, their long fur being very soft, 
 thick, and glossy. In size they are equal to an 
 English mastiff. They have a long nose, delicate ears 
 finely pointed, magnificent tail, legs of a moderate 
 length, with a body nicely rounded and compact.' J 
 It is added that they still possess the strength, swift- 
 ness, sagacity, and fidelity anciently ascribed to them, 
 showing their pedigree to be probably unimpaired. 
 
 The Suliot dog, or German boar-hound, comes 
 from the same region, and has also strong claims to 
 the honours of Molossian descent. Some of the breed 
 were employed by the Turkish soldiery in the earlier 
 
 1 Hughes, Travels in Albania, vol. i. p. 483. 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER. 81 
 
 part of this century, to guard their outposts against 
 Austrian attacks ; and one captured specimen, pre- 
 sented to the King of Naples, was reputed to be the 
 largest dog in existence. 1 Measuring nearly four feet 
 from the shoulder to the ground, he in fact rivalled 
 the dimensions of a Shetland pony. Others were 
 secured as regimental pets, and used to make a grand 
 show in Brussels, marching with their respective 
 corps to the blare of martial music. They were 
 fierce-natured animals, rough-coated, and coarsely 
 formed; mostly tan-coloured, but with blackish mark- 
 ings on the back, shoulders, and round the ears. 
 Tan- coloured, too, was probably the immortal Argus ; 
 and we can further picture him, on the assumption 
 that the modern races west of Pindus reproduce 
 many features of his aspect, as a wolf-like hound, 
 with a bushy tail, small, sensitive ears, and a glance 
 at once eager, intelligent, and wistful. Drooping ears 
 in dogs are, it may be remarked, a result of domesti- 
 cation ; and varieties distinguished by them were 
 unknown in Europe until Alexander the Great intro- 
 duced from Asia some specimens of the mastiff kind. 
 Consequently, Shakespeare's description of the pack 
 of Theseus — 
 
 With ears that sweep away the morning dew, 
 
 is one among many examples of his genial disregard 
 for archaeological detail. Argus, then, resembled 
 
 1 C. Hamilton Smith, Naturalist's Library, vol. v. p. 151. 
 
 G 
 
82 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 1 White-breasted Bran,' the dog of Fingal, in his pos- 
 session of ' an ear like a leaf.' 
 
 It is not too much to say that the opposed senti- 
 ments concerning the relations of men with animals 
 displayed in the Iliad and Odyssey suffice in them- 
 selves to establish their diversity of origin. For they 
 render it psychologically impossible that they could 
 have been the work of one individual. The varying 
 prominence assigned respectively to the horse and the 
 dog might, it is true, be plausibly accounted for by 
 the diversified conditions of the two epics; but no 
 shifting of scene can explain a reversal of sympathies. 
 Such sentiments form part of the ingrained structure 
 of the mind. They take root before consciousness is 
 awake, or memory active ; they live through the de- 
 cades of a man's life ; are transported with him from 
 shore to shore ; survive the enthusiasm of friendship 
 and the illusions of ambition ; they can no more be 
 eradicated from the tenor of his thoughts than the 
 type of his features can be changed from Tartar to 
 Caucasian, or the colour of his eyes from black to 
 blue. 
 
 After all, the difficulty of separating the origin of 
 these stupendous productions is considerably dimi- 
 nished by the reflection that they are but the sur- 
 viving members of an extensive group of poems, all 
 originally attributed without discrimination to a single 
 author. Not the Iliad and Odyssey alone, but the 
 ' Cypria,' the * jEthiopis,' the ' Lesser Iliad,' and 
 
THE DOG IN HOMER 83 
 
 other voluminous metrical compositions, were, in the 
 
 old, uncritical, individual sense, ' Homeric' So apt 
 
 is Fame to make 
 
 A testament 
 As worldlings do, giving the sum of more 
 To that which had too much. 
 
 The depreciatory tone of the query, ' What's in a 
 name ? ' should not lead us to undervalue that indis- 
 pensable requisite to sustained and specialised exist- 
 ence. A name is, indeed, a power in itself. It serves, 
 at the least, as a peg to hang a personality upon, 
 and not the most ' powerful rhyme ' can sustain a 
 reputation apart from its humble aid. But the bard 
 of Odysseus has long ceased to possess one. His only 
 appellation must remain for all time that of his 
 hero in the Cyclops' cave. The jealous Muses have 
 blotted him out from memory. We can only be sure 
 that he was a man who, like the protagonist of his 
 immortal poem, had known, and seen, and suffered 
 many things, who had tears for the past, and hopes 
 for the future, had roamed far and near with a ' hungry 
 heart,' and had listened long and intently to the 
 ' many voices ' of the moaning sea ; who had tried his 
 fellow-men, and found them, not all, nor everywhere 
 wanting ; who had faith in the justice of Heaven and 
 the constancy of woman ; who had experienced and 
 had not disdained to cherish in his heart the life-long 
 fidelity of a dog. 
 
 o 2 
 
84 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTEE IV. 
 
 HOMERIC HORSES. 
 
 The greater part of the Continent of Europe, including 
 Britain, not then, perhaps, insulated by a ' silver 
 streak,' was prehistorically overrun with shaggy 
 ponies, large-headed and heavily-built, but shown by 
 their short, pointed ears and brush-tails to have been 
 genuine horses, exempt from leanings towards the 
 asinine branch of the family. This* indeed, would be 
 a hazardous statement to make upon the sole evidence 
 of the fragmentary piles of these animals' bones pre- 
 served in caves and mounds ; since even a complete 
 skeleton could tell the most experienced anatomist 
 nothing as to the shape of their ears or the growth 
 of hair upon their tails. We happen, however, to be 
 in possession of their portraits. For the men of that 
 time had artistic instincts, and drew with force and 
 freedom whatever seemed to them worthy of imita- 
 tion ; and among their few subjects the contemporary 
 wild horse was fortunately included. With his out- 
 ward aspect, then, we are, through the medium of 
 
HOMEKIC HORSES. 85 
 
 these diluvial graffiti, on bone-surfaces and stags' 
 antlers, thoroughly familiar. 
 
 It was that of a sturdy brute, thirteen or fourteen 
 hands high, not ill represented, on a reduced scale, 
 by the Shetland ponies of our own time, but untamed, 
 and,, it might have been thought, untameable. The 
 race had not then found its true vocation. Man was 
 enabled, by his superior intelligence, to make it his 
 prey, but had not yet reached the higher point of 
 enlisting its matchless qualities in his service. Horses 
 were, accordingly, neither ridden nor driven, but 
 hunted and eaten. Piles of bones still attest the hip- 
 pophagous habits of the * stone-men.' At Solutre, near 
 Macon, a veritable equine Golgotha has been exca- 
 vated ; similar accumulations were found in the re- 
 cesses of Monte Pellegrino in Sicily ; and Sir Kichard 
 Owen made the curious remark that, evidently through 
 gastronomic selection, the osseous remains of colts 
 and fillies vastly predominated, in the debris from the 
 cave of Bruniquel, over those of full-grown horses. 1 
 
 The descent of our existing horses from the cave- 
 animals is doubtful, Eastern importations having at 
 any rate greatly improved and modified the breed. 
 Wild horses, indeed, still at the end of the sixteenth 
 century roamed the slopes of the Vosges, and were 
 hunted as game in Poland and Lithuania ; 2 but they 
 
 1 Phil Trans. 1869, p. 535. 
 
 2 Helm and Stallybrass, Wanderings of Plants and Animals, pp 
 38-39. 
 
86 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 may have been muzins, or runaways, like the mus- 
 tangs on the American prairies. Nowadays, cer- 
 tainly, the animal is found in a state of aboriginal 
 freedom nowhere save on the steppes of Central Asia, 
 in the primitive home of the race. There, in all like- 
 lihood, the noblest of brute-forms was brought to 
 perfection ; there it was dominated by man ; and 
 thence equestrian arts, with their manifold results for 
 civilisation, were propagated among the nations of 
 the world. They were taught to the Egyptians, it 
 would seem, by their shepherd conquerors, but were 
 not learned by the Arabs until a couple of millen- 
 niums later, the Arab contingent in Xerxes' army 
 having been a ' camel-corps.' The Persians, indeed, 
 early picked up the habit of riding from the example 
 of their Tartar neighbours ; yet that it was no original 
 Aryan accomplishment, the absence of a common 
 Aryan word to express the idea sufficiently shows. 
 The relations of our primitive ancestors with the 
 animal had, at the most, reached what might be called 
 the second, or Scythian stage, when droves of half- 
 wild horses took the place of cattle, and mares' milk 
 was an important article of food. The aboriginal 
 cavalry of the desert belonged, on the other hand, to 
 the wide kinship of Attila's Huns, who, separated 
 from their steeds, were as helpless as swans on shore. 
 The war-chariot, however, was an Assyrian invention, 
 dating back at least to the seventeenth century b.c. 
 It quickly reached Egypt on one side, India on the 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 87 
 
 other, and was adopted, some time before the Dorian 
 invasion, by the Achseans of the Peloponnesus. My- 
 cenaean grave-stones of about the twelfth century are 
 engraven with battle and hunting scenes, the actors 
 in which are borne along in vehicles of essentially the 
 same construction with those brought before us in 
 the Iliad. They show scarcely any variation from 
 the simple model developed on the banks of the Tigris; 
 yet there was no direct imitation. Homer was pro- 
 foundly unconscious of Ninevite splendours. He had 
 no inkling of the existence of a great Mesopotamian 
 monarchy far away to the East, beyond the rising- 
 places of the sun, where one branch of his dicho- 
 tomised Ethiopians dwelt in peace. Nevertheless, the 
 life that he knew, and that was glorified by him, was 
 touched with many influences from this unknown 
 land. If some of them filtered through Egypt on 
 their way, acquaintance with the art of charioteering 
 certainly took a less circuitous route. For the third 
 horse of the original Assyrian team was never intro- 
 duced into Egypt, and was early discarded in Assyria 
 itself. He figures continually, however, in Homeric 
 engagements, running, loosely attached, beside the 
 regularly yoked pair, one of whom he was destined to 
 replace in case of emergency. The presence, then, of 
 this 'silly,' or roped horse, 1 irapr]opos Xiriros, demon - 
 
 1 The word ' silly ' thus applied is evidently cognate with the 
 erman Seile — Greek a-ctpa, a rope, from the root swar, to tie. So in 
 he Ancient Mariner, the ' silly buckets on the deck' are the buckets 
 
88 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 strates both the high antiquity, and the Anatolian 
 negotiation, of the loan which included him. 
 
 The fertile plains of Babylonia probably furnished 
 the equine supplies of Egypt and Asia Minor during 
 some centuries before the Nissean stock, 1 cultivated in 
 Media, acquired its Hellenic reputation. So far as 
 can be judged from ancient vase-paintings, the horses 
 of Achilles and Hector were of pure Oriental type. 
 They owned the same points of breeding — the small 
 heads, slender yet muscular legs, and high-arching 
 necks, the same eager eye and proud bearing, charac- 
 terising the steeds that shared the triumphs of Asur- 
 banipal and Shalmaneser. The same quasi-heroic 
 position, too, belonged to the horse in the camp before 
 Troy and at Nineveh. He shared, in both scenes of 
 action, only the nobler pursuits of man, and was 
 exempt from the drudgery of servile work. The 
 beasts of burden, alike of the Iliad and of the sculp- 
 tures of Khorsabad and Kouyunjik, were mules and 
 oxen, not horses. Equine co-operation was reserved 
 for war and the chace — for war alone, indeed, by the 
 Homeric Greeks, who appear always to have hunted 
 on foot. This was inevitable. Modes of conveyance, 
 were they drawn by Sleipnir or Areion, would have 
 been an encumbrance in pursuing game through the 
 thickets of Parnassus, or over the broken skirts of 
 Mount Ida. 
 
 attached to a rope. Similarly, the third horse was sometimes called 
 by the Greeks 6pos, ' drawing by a rope.' 
 1 Blakesley's Herodotus, iii. 106. 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 89 
 
 Only the chief Greek and Trojan leaders rode in 
 chariots. Their possession was a mark of distinction, 
 and conferred the power of swift locomotion, but was 
 otherwise of no military use. Their owners alighted 
 from them for the serious business of fighting, al- 
 though glad, if worsted or disabled, to fall back upon 
 the utmost speed of their horses to carry them out of 
 reach of their foes. This fashion of warfare, how- 
 ever, had completely disappeared from Greece proper 
 before the historic era. Only in Cyprus, chariots are 
 heard of among the paraphernalia of battle in 
 498 b.c. 1 None figured at Marathon or Mantineia ; 
 brigades of mounted men had taken their place. 
 Cavalry, on the other hand, had no share in the en- 
 gagements before Troy. 
 
 The defmiteness of intention with which Homeric 
 epithets were bestowed is strikingly evident in the 
 distribution of those relating to equestrian pursuits. 
 That they have no place worth mentioning in the 
 Odyssey, readers of our last chapter will be pre- 
 pared to hear ; nor are they sprinkled at random 
 through the Iliad. Thus, while the Trojans collec- 
 tively are frequently called ' horse- tamers,' hipjjo- 
 damoi — a designation still appropriate to the dwellers 
 round Hissarlik — the Greeks collectively are never 
 so described. 2 They could not have been, in fact, 
 without some degree of incongruity. For many 
 
 1 Herodotus, v. 113. 
 
 2 Mure, Literature of Ancient Greece, vol. ii. p. 87. 
 
 far 0* THE ^^ 
 
 fuinVEItSXTTj 
 
90 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 of them, being of insular origin and maritime habits, 
 knew as much about hippogriffs as about horses, un- 
 less it were the white-crested ones ruled by Poseidon. 
 And the poet's close instinctive regard to such dis- 
 tinctions appears in the remarkable circumstance that 
 Odysseus and Ajax Telamon, islanders both, are the 
 only heroes of the first rank who invariably combat 
 on foot. 
 
 The individual Greek warriors singled out for 
 praise as * horse-tamers ' are only two— Thrasymedes 
 and Diomed. The choice had, in each case, readily 
 discernible motives. Thrasymedes was a son of 
 Nestor; and Nestor, through his father Peleus, was 
 sprung from Poseidon, the creator and patron of the 
 horse. This mythical association resulted from a 
 natural sequence of ideas. The absence of the horse 
 from the ' glist'ring zodiac ' is one of many proofs of 
 his strangeness to Eastern mythology; but the neglect 
 was compensated in the West. His position in Greek 
 folk-lore, according to Dr. Milchhofer, 1 indicates a 
 primitive confusion of thought between winds and 
 waves as cause and effect, or rather, perhaps, tells of 
 the transference to the sea of the cloud-fancies of an in- 
 land people. However this be, horse-headed monsters 
 are extremely prevalent on the archaic engraved 
 stones found numerously in the Peloponnesus and 
 the islands of the Egean ; and these monsters — winged, 
 and with birds' legs — represent, it would seem, the 
 
 1 Die Anfange der Kunst in Griechenland, pp. 58-61. 
 
HOMEKIC HORSES. 91 
 
 original harpy- form in which early Greek imagina- 
 tion embodied the storm- winds — 
 
 Boreas and Csecias and Argeste's loud — 
 Eurus and Zephyr with their lateral noise, 
 Sirocco and Libecchio. 
 
 The horse-headed Demeter, too, was one of the 
 Erinyes, under-world daemonic beings of windy origin, 
 merging indeed into the Harpies. The Homeric 
 Harpy Podarge, mother of the immortal steeds of 
 Achilles, was, moreover, of scarcely disguised equine 
 nature ; while the colts of Ericthonius had Boreas 
 for their sire. 
 
 These, o'er the teeming cornfields as they flew, 
 Skimm'd o'er the standing ears, nor broke the haulm, 
 And, o'er wide Ocean's bosom as they flew, 
 Skimm'd o'er the topmost spray of th' hoary sea. 1 
 
 So iEneas related to Achilles ; not perhaps without 
 some touch of metaphor. 
 
 The figure of speech by which the swiftest of 
 known animals was likened to a rushing tempest, lay 
 ready at hand ; and a figure of speech is apt to be 
 treated as a statement of fact by men who have not 
 yet learned to make fine distinctions. Upon this 
 particular one as a basis, a good deal of fable was 
 built. The northern legends, for instance, of the 
 Wild Huntsman, and of the rides of the blusterous 
 Odin upon an eight-legged charger equally at home 
 
 1 Iliad, xx. 226-29 (Lord Derby's translation). 
 
92 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER, 
 
 on land and on sea ; besides the story of the strong 
 horse Svadilfaxi, personifying the North Wind, who 
 helped his master, the icy Scandinavian winter, to 
 build the castle of the Asar. The same obvious 
 similitude was carried out, by southern imaginations, 
 in the subjection of the horse to the established 
 ruler of winds and waves, who is even qualified by 
 the characteristically equine epithet ' dark-maned ' 
 (/cvavoxalT7]9.y The attribution, however, to Poseidon 
 of a more or less equine nature may have been im- 
 mediately suggested by the resemblance, palpable to 
 unsophisticated folk, of his crested billows to the im- 
 petuous advance of galloping steeds, whose flowing 
 manes and curving lineaments of changeful move- 
 ment seemed to reproduce the tossing spray and 
 thunderous charge of the ' earth-shaking ' element. 
 
 In the Thirteenth Iliad, the closeness of this re- 
 lationship is naively brought into view. The occasion 
 was a pressing one. Nothing less was contemplated 
 than the affording of surreptitious divine aid to the 
 hard-pressed Achaean host ; and the ' shining eyes ' of 
 Zeus, whose interdict was still in full force, might at 
 any moment revert from the Thracians and Hippo- 
 molgi to the less virtuous Greeks and Trojans. 
 Everything, then, depended upon promptitude, and 
 Poseidon accordingly, in the absence of his consort 
 Amphitrite, did not disdain to act as his own groom. 
 
 1 Cf. Geddes, Problem of the Homeric Poems, p. 207. 
 
 
HOMEEIC HORSES. 93 
 
 Himself he harnessed to his brazen car the ' bronze- 
 hoofed ' coursers stabled beneath the sea at iEgae ; 
 himself wielded the golden scourge with which he 
 urged their rapid passage, amid the damp homage of 
 dutiful but dripping sea-monsters, to a submarine 
 recess between Tenedos and Imbros : 
 
 And the sea's face was parted with a smile, 
 And rapidly the horses sped the while. 1 
 
 There he himself provided ambrosial forage for their 
 
 support during his absence on the battle-field, taking 
 
 the precaution, before his departure, of attaching 
 
 infrangible golden shackles to the agile feet that might 
 
 else have been tempted to stray. Yet all this pains 
 
 was taken for the mere sake of what must be called 
 
 1 swagger.' Poseidon, calmly seated on the Samo- 
 
 thracian height, was already within full view of the 
 
 plain and towers of Ilium, when 
 
 Sudden at last 
 He rose, and swiftly down the steep he passed, 
 . The mountain trembled with each step he took, 
 The forest with the (making mountain shook. 
 Three strides he made, and with the fourth he stood 
 At Mgdd, where is founded 'neath the flood 
 His hall of glorious gold that cannot fade. 2 
 
 And the journey westward w T as deliberately made 
 for the purpose of fetching an equipage which proved 
 rather an embarrassment than an assistance to him. 
 
 1 Iliad, xiii. 29, 30. (Translation by E. Garnett, Universal Re- 
 view, vol. v.) - lb. xiii. 17-22. 
 
94 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 * But for the honour of the thing,' as an Irishman 
 remarked of his jaunt in a bottomless sedan-chair, he 
 1 might just as well have walked.' 
 
 Not without reason, then, was equestrian skill as- 
 sociated with Poseidonian lineage. Nestor himself 
 was an enthusiastic horse-lover ; yet the Pylian breed 
 was none of the best ; and he anxiously warned his 
 son Antilochus, preparatory to the starting of the 
 chariot-race commemorative of Patroclus, that he 
 must supply by finesse for the slowness of his team. 
 Poseidon himself, he reminded him, had been his 
 instructor ; and no less, it may be presumed, of his 
 brother Thrasymedes, whose feats in this direction, 
 however, are summed up in the laudatory expression 
 bestowed on him in common with Diomed. 
 
 The connoisseurship of this latter, on the con- 
 trary, is perpetually in evidence. As king of ' horse- 
 feeding Argos,' he knew and prized what was best in 
 horseflesh, and counted no risk too great for the pur- 
 pose of securing it. His brilliant success accordingly, 
 in the capture of famous steeds, rendered the original 
 inferiority of his own a matter of indifference. It 
 served, indeed, only to quicken his zeal to replace 
 them by force or fraud with better. And it fell out 
 most opportunely that, just at the conjuncture when 
 the protection of Athene rendered him irresistible, 
 iEneas, temporarily allied with the Lycian archer 
 Pandarus, undertook the hopeless task of staying his 
 victorious career. The Dardanian hero was driving a 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 95 
 
 matchless team, ' the best under the dawn or the sun ' ; 
 and he found leisure, notwithstanding the celerity 
 of their onset, to extol their qualities to his companion, 
 while Diomed recited the to him familiar tale of their 
 pedigree to his charioteer, Sthenelus. They were of 
 the race of those with which the ransom of Ganymede 
 had been paid by Zeus to Tros, King of Phrygia, his 
 father, and were hence known distinctively as Trojan 
 horses. Their possession was regarded as of inestim- 
 able importance. 
 
 That was the day of glory of the son of Tydeus, 
 whom ' Pallas Athene did not permit to tremble.' 
 Destiny waited on his desires. His spear sent Pan- 
 darus to the shades; iEneaswas barely rescued by the 
 maternal intervention of Aphrodite, who came off by no 
 means scatheless from the adventure. Above all, the 
 Dardanian ' messengers of terror ' were led in triumph 
 across to the Achaean camp. They did not remain 
 there idle. On the following day, Nestor was invited 
 to admire their paces, as they carried him and their 
 new master beyond the reach of Hector's fury, the 
 fortune of war having by that time effectively changed 
 sides, Their subsequent victory in the Patroclean 
 chariot-race was a foregone conclusion. For their 
 Olympian connexions would have made their defeat 
 by clover-cropping animals of ordinary lineage appear 
 a gross anomaly ; and the horses of Achilles, as being 
 immortal and invincible, were expressly excluded from 
 the competition. 
 
96 FAMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 The night-adventure of Diomed and Odysseus, 
 narrated in the Tenth Iliad, is unmistakably an 
 afterthought and interlude. To what precedes it is 
 in part irrelevant ; with what follows it is wholly un- 
 connected ; nor is it logically complete in itself. The 
 interpolation is, none the less, of respectable antiquity, 
 going back certainly to the eighth century b.c; it has 
 high merits of its own, and could ill be spared from 
 the body of what it is convenient to call Homeric 
 poetry. Its admission, to be sure, crowds into one 
 night performances enough to occupy several, but this 
 superfluity of business scarcely troubles any genially 
 disposed reader ; nor need he grudge Odysseus the 
 three suppers— one of them perhaps better described 
 as a breakfast — amply earned by his indefatigable 
 services in the epic cause, and counterbalanced by 
 many subsequent privations. The point, however, to 
 be specially noted by us here, is that in the ' Dolo- 
 neia' — as the tenth book is designated — equestrian 
 interests, its extraneous origin notwithstanding, are 
 paramount. 
 
 The opening situation is that magnificently de- 
 scribed at the close of the eighth book, when the 
 ' dark-ribbed ships ' by the Hellespont seemed to 
 cower before the menacing camp-fires of the victo- 
 rious Trojans. Indeed, most of those who lay in their 
 shadow would gladly have grasped, before it was too 
 late, at the means of escape they offered. Agamem- 
 non's fluctuating mind, too, might easily have been 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 97 
 
 brought to that inglorious decision ; but for the 
 moment, he relieved his restless anxiety by hastily 
 summoning to a nocturnal council a few of the most 
 prominent Achaean chiefs. The somewhat inadequate 
 result of their deliberations was the despatch of a 
 scouting party to the Trojan quarters, Diomed and 
 Odysseus being inevitably chosen for the discharge of 
 the perilous office — inevitably, since in the legend of 
 Troy, these two are again and again coupled in the 
 performance of venturesome, if not questionable, 
 exploits. 1 They had sallied forth unarmed on the 
 sudden summons of the ' king of men/ but collected 
 from the sympathetic bystanders a scratch-lot of 
 weapons; and Meriones lent to Odysseus for the 
 emergency a peculiar head-piece of leather lined with 
 felt, and strengthened with rows of boars' teeth, 2 the 
 like of which, judging from the profusion of sliced 
 tusks met with in Mycenaean graves, was probably 
 familiar of old in the Peloponnesus. 
 
 It was pitch dark as the adventurers traversed the 
 marshy land about the Simoeis ; but the rise, with 
 heavy wing-flappings, of a startled heron on their 
 right, dispelled their misgivings, and evoked their 
 pious rejoicings at the assurance it afforded of 
 Athene's protection. Their next encounter was with 
 Hector's emissary, the luckless Dolon, a poor creature 
 beyond doubt, vain, feather-headed, unstable, pusil- 
 
 1 Preller, Griechische Mythologie, Bd. ii. p. 405, 3te Auflage. 
 
 2 Iliad, x. 261-71. 
 
 H 
 
98 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 lanimous, yet piteous to us even now in the sanguine 
 loquacity that merged into a death-shriek as the 
 fierce blade of Diomed severed the tendons of his 
 throat. He had served his purpose, and was con- 
 temptuously, nay treacherously, dismissed from life. 
 But the temptation suggested by him was irresistible. 
 Instincts of cupidity, keen in both heroes, had been 
 fully roused by his account of the splendid and un- 
 guarded equipment of the newly-arrived leader of a 
 Thracian contingent to the Trojan army. As he told 
 them : 
 
 King Rhesus, Eioneus' son, commands them, who hath steeds, 
 More white than snow, huge, and well shaped ; their fiery pace 
 
 exceeds 
 The winds in swiftness ; these I saw, his chariot is with gold 
 And pallid silver richly framed, and wondrous to behold ; 
 His great and golden armour is not fit a man should wear, 
 But for immortal shoulders framed. 1 
 
 Now Odysseus and Diomed both loved plunder ; 
 each in his ow 7 n way was of a reckless and dare-devil 
 disposition ; and one at any rate was a passionate 
 admirer of equine beauty. They accordingly did not 
 hesitate to follow up Dolon's indications, which proved 
 quite accurate. The followers of Khesus w r ere weary 
 from their recent journey ; Diomed had no difficulty 
 in slaying a dozen of them in ranks as they slept, and 
 so reaching the king, whose premonitory nightmare of 
 destruction was abruptly dissolved by its realisation. 
 
 1 Iliad, x. 435-41 (Chapman's trans.). 
 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 99 
 
 The coveted horses tethered alongside having been 
 meanwhile secured by Odysseus, swiftly conveyed the 
 exultant raiders back to the Achaean ships. 
 
 But in what manner ? On their backs or drawn 
 behind them in the glittering Thracian chariot? 
 Opinions are divided. Euripides assumed that the 
 latter formed part of the booty, 1 yet the Homeric ex- 
 pressions rather imply that it was left in statu quo. 
 They are not, on the other hand, easily reconciled 
 with the supposition of an escape on horseback from 
 the scene of carnage. This, none the less, was almost 
 certainly what the poet meant to convey, and his un- 
 familiarity with the art of riding was doubtless the 
 cause of his conveying it badly. 2 Homeric heroes, as 
 a rule infringed only by this one exception, never 
 mounted their steeds ; they used them solely in light 
 draught. Equitation was indeed known of as a 
 branch in which special skill might be acquired ; but 
 for the ignoble purpose of popular, perhaps venal, 
 display. Thus the performance of leaping from one to 
 the other of four galloping horses, brought in to illus- 
 Irate the agility with which Ajax strode from deck to 
 deck of the menaced Thessalian ships, 3 excites indeed 
 astonishment, but astonishment of the inferior kind 
 raised by the feats of a clown or a circus-rider. The 
 passage has found a curious commentary in a faded 
 
 1 Rhesos, 797. 
 
 2 Eyssenhardt, Jahrbuchfiir Philologie, Bd. cix. p. 598 ; Arneis's 
 Iliad, Heft iv. p. 38. 
 
 3 Iliad, xv. 679. 
 
 h 2 
 
100 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 painting on a wall of the ancient palace at Tiryns, re- 
 presenting an acrobat springing on the back of a 
 rushing bull. 1 He is unmistakably a specimen of the 
 class of performer to which the nimble equestrian of 
 the Iliad belonged. 
 
 The animated story of the Doloneia, however, ori- 
 ginated most likely in a primitive nature-parable, 
 symbolising, in one of its innumerable forms, the ever- 
 renewed struggle of darkness with light. The prize 
 carried off by Diomed and Odysseus was, this being 
 so, nothing less than the equipage of the sun ; yet the 
 solar horses are, mythologically, scarcely separable 
 from the vehicle attached to them. Our bard, it is 
 true, being wholly intent upon the concrete aspect of 
 the tale he had to tell, felt no incongruity in the dis- 
 junction ; and he certainly took no pains to perpe- 
 tuate the traditional shape of his materials. Uncon- 
 sciously, however, he has allowed some vestiges of 
 solar relationships to survive among the less fortu- 
 nate actors in his little drama. They can be traced 
 in the wrath of Apollo at the exploit achieved, while 
 he was off his guard, through the assistance of the 
 predatory Athene ; 2 and perhaps in the costume of 
 Dolon, who clothed himself, we are told, for his dis- 
 astrous expedition in ' the skin of a grey wolf.' Now 
 the wolf became early entangled, in Aryan folk-lore, 
 
 1 Schuchhardt and Sellers, Schliemanri' s Excavations, p. 119. 
 
 2 It is worth notice that in the Euripidean tragedy Rhesos, 
 1 Phcebos ' is the watchword for that night, 
 
HOMEEIC HORSES." " ' 101 ' 
 
 with luminous associations. At first, possibly through 
 contrast and antagonism, exemplified in the hostile 
 pursuit, by the Scandinavian animal, of the sun and 
 moon ; later, through capricious identification. The 
 lupine connexions of the Hellenic Apollo may be thus 
 explained. They were, at any rate, strongly accentu- 
 ated ; and Dolon wore, in some sense, albeit ignobly, 
 * the livery of the burnished sun.' 
 
 Manifestly solar, on the other hand, are the 
 snowy horses from across the Hellespont. Nestor, 
 who, characteristically enough, first caught the sound 
 of their galloping approach to the. Greek outposts, 
 demanded of their captors in amazement : 
 
 How have you made this horse your prize ? Pierced you the 
 
 dangerous host, 
 Where such gems stand ? Or did some god your high attempts 
 
 accost, 
 And honoured you with this reward ? Why, they be like the 
 
 rays 
 The sun effuseth. 1 
 
 The Thracian pair, moreover, are the only ichite 
 horses mentioned in the Iliad. All the rest were 
 chestnut, bay, or brown. One of those reft from 
 yEneas by Diomed, was sorrel, with a white crescent 
 on the forehead ; 2 Achilles, or Patroclus for him, 
 drove a chestnut and a piebald ; a pair of rufous bays 
 drew the chariot of Asius. No black horse appears 
 
 1 Iliad, x. 545-47 (Chapman's trans.). 
 - lb. xxiii. 454. 
 
102 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMEK. 
 
 on the scene ; nor can we be sure that the ' dark- 
 maned,' mythical Areion was really understood to be 
 of sable tint. Admiration for white horses was not 
 spontaneous among the Greeks. It sprang up in the 
 East as a consequence of their figurative association 
 with the sun. The Iranian fable of the solar chariot 
 drawn by spotless coursers, carried everywhere with 
 it, in its diffusion west, south, and north, an imagina- 
 tive impression of the sacredness of such animals. 1 
 They were chosen out for the Magian sacrifices ; 2 they 
 were tended in Scandinavian temple-enclosures, and 
 their neighings oracularly interpreted ; 3 a white 
 horse was dubiously reported by Strabo to be periodi- 
 cally immolated by the Veneti in commemoration of 
 Diomed's fabulous sovereignty over the Adriatic ; 4 
 and it became a recognised mythological principle 
 that superhuman beings should be, like the Wild 
 Huntsman of the Black Forest, Schimmelreiter. 
 ' White as snow ' were the steeds of the Great Twin 
 Brethren ; white as snow the ' horse with the terrible 
 rider ' in Kaphael ? s presentation of the Vision that 
 vindicated the sanctity of the Jewish Temple ; Odin 
 thundered over the mountain-tops on a pallid courser ; 
 and it was deemed scandalous presumption in Ca- 
 millus to have his triumphal chariot drawn to the 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, Wanderings of Plants and Animals, pp. 
 53-54. 
 
 2 Herodotus, vii. 114. 
 
 3 Weinhold, Altnordisches Leben, p. 49. 
 * Geography, lib. v. cap. i. sect. 9. 
 
HOMEEIC HOKSES. 103 
 
 Capitol after the fall of Veii by a milk-white team, fit 
 only for the transport of an immortal god. 
 
 Such, too, were the horses of Khesus ; and their 
 evanescent appearance in Homeric narrative tallies 
 with their unsubstantial nature. They sink into 
 complete oblivion after the scene of their nocturnal 
 abduction. Their quondam master could lay claim 
 to scarcely a more solid core of existence. Euripides' 
 account of his parentage is that he was the son of the 
 Kiver Strymon and of the muse Terpsichore ; which, 
 being interpreted, means that he personified a local 
 stream. 1 He obtained, however, posthumous reputa- 
 tion and honours, as a prophet at Amphipolis, as a 
 rider and hunter at Ehodope. 
 
 The relations of men and horses are, in every 
 part of the Iliad, systematically regulated and consis- 
 tently maintained. There is nothing casual about 
 them. Thus, Paris's lack of a conveyance serves to 
 emphasise his inferiority in the field. He was a 
 craven at close quarters, though formidable as a bow- 
 man, despatching his arrows from the safe shelter of 
 the ranks. For the adventurous sallies rendered pos- 
 sible only by the aid of fleet steeds, he had neither 
 taste nor aptitude. 
 
 Hector, on the contrary, was distinguished above 
 
 all other Homeric warriors by driving four horses 
 
 abreast — above all Homeric gods and goddesses 
 
 even, since Poseidon himself, Ares, Here, and Eos, 
 
 1 Preller, Griech. Myth. Bd. ii. p. 428. 
 
104 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 were content each with a pair. In their case, how- 
 ever, the seeming deficiency was a point of real supe- 
 riority. For no more than two horses can have been 
 in effective employment in drawing Hector's chariot, 
 the remaining two being held in reserve against acci- 
 dents. But Olympian coursers were presumably 
 exempt from mortal casualties, and there was hence 
 no need to provide for the emergency of their disable- 
 ment. Critics, nevertheless, of the ultra-strict school, 
 taking offence at the unexpected introduction of a 
 four-in-hand, have proclaimed the entire enshrining 
 passage spurious. Perhaps on insufficient grounds ; 
 yet as to this there may be two opinions ; there can 
 be only one as to its being stirring and splendid. 
 
 The formal introduction of the only horses on the 
 Trojan side dignified with proper names, makes an 
 impressive exordium to the lay of Trojan victory after 
 Diomed's audacious resistance had been turned to 
 flight by the thunderbolt of Zeus. Hector's fiery incite- 
 ments were addressed no less earnestly to his equine 
 servants than to his Lycian and Dardanian allies. 
 
 Then cherished he his famous horse : Xanthus now, said he, 
 And thou Podargus, ^Ethon, too, and Lampus, dear to me, 
 Make me some worthy recompense for so much choice of meat 
 Given you by fair Andromache ; bread of the purest wheat, 
 And with it for your drink mixed wine, to make ye wished 
 
 cheer, 
 Still serving you before myself, her husband young and dear. 1 
 
 1 Iliad, viii. 184-190 (Chapman's trans.). 
 
HOMEKIC HOESES. 105 
 
 He went on to represent to them the glorious fruits 
 and triumphs of victory, but gave no hint of a penalty 
 . for defeat. The absence of any such savage threat 
 as Antilochus hurled at his slow-paced steeds in the 
 chariot-race marks his innate gentleness of soul. He 
 urged only the nobler motives for exertion appropriate 
 to conscious intelligence. Trust in equine sympathy 
 is, indeed, widespread in legend and romance. Even 
 the cruel Mezentius, wounded and doomed, made a 
 final appeal to the pride and valour of his faithful 
 Khoebus; to say nothing of ' Auld Maitland's ' son's 
 call upon his ' Gray,' of the stirrup-rhetoric of Rey- 
 naud de Montauban, of Marko, the Cid of Servia, of 
 the Eddie Skirnir starting for Jotunheim, or other 
 imperilled owners of renowned steeds. 
 
 These, now and then, are enabled to respond ; but 
 speaking horses should be reserved for emergencies. 
 They occur, for instance, with undue profusion in 
 modern Greek folk-songs. Not every notorious klepht 
 lurking in the thickets of Pindus, but only some hero 
 towering to the clouds of fancy, should, rightly con- 
 sidered, possess an animal so exceptionally endowed. 
 The lesson is patent in the Iliad. Homer's instinc- 
 tive self-restraint and supreme mastery over the 
 secrets of artistic effect are nowhere more conspicuous 
 than in his treatment of the horses of Achilles. 
 
 ' Thessalian steeds and Lacedaemonian women ' 
 were declared by an oracle to be the best Greek repre- 
 sentatives of their respective kinds. In Thessaly was 
 
106 FAMILIAE STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 the legendary birthplace of the horse ; there lived 
 the Lapiths — if Virgil is to be believed — the first 
 horse-breakers : 
 
 Fraena Pelethronii Lapithae, gyrosque dedere 
 Impositi dorso, atque equitem docuere sub armis 
 Insultare solo, et gressus glomerare superbos. 1 
 
 There, too, the Centaurs were at home ; the Thessa- 
 
 lian cavalry became historically famous ; the Thessa- 
 
 lian marriage ceremony long included the presentation 
 
 to the bride by the bridegroom, of a fully caparisoned 
 
 horse ; 2 and the noble equine type of the Parthenon 
 
 marbles is still reproduced along the fertile banks of 
 
 the Peneus. 3 Thence, too, of old to Troy 
 
 Fair Pheretiades 
 The bravest mares did bring by much ; Eumelus managed 
 
 these, 
 Swift of their feet as birds of wings, both of one hair did shine, 
 Both of an age, both of a height, as measured by a line, 
 Whom silver-bowed Apollo bred in the Pierian mead, 
 Both slick and dainty, yet were both in war of wondrous dread. 4 
 
 Only, indeed, a fraud on the part of Athene pre- 
 vented the mares of Eumelus from winning the 
 chariot-race against the heaven-descended ' Trojan ' 
 horses of Diomed ; and the Muse, solemnly invoked 
 as arbitress of equine excellence, declared them the 
 goodliest of all ' the steeds that followed the sons of 
 
 1 Georg. iii. 115-17. 
 
 2 Geddes, Problem of the Homeric Poems, p. 247. 
 
 3 Dodwell, Tour in Greece, vol. i. p. 339. 
 
 4 Iliad, ii. 764-67 (Chapman's trans.) . 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 107 
 
 Atreus to war,' save, of course, the incomparable 
 Pelidean pair. 
 
 Xanthus and Balius were the wedding-gift of Po- 
 seidon to Peleus. The sea-god himself had been a 
 suitor for the hand of the bride, the silver-footed 
 Thetis ; but, on its becoming known that the son to 
 be born of her marriage was destined to surpass the 
 strength of his father, something of an Olympian 
 panic prevailed, and a mortal bridegroom was, by the 
 common determination of the alarmed Immortals, 
 forced upon the reluctant goddess. Of this unequal 
 and unhappy marriage, the far-famed Achilles was 
 the ill-starred offspring. 
 
 So intense is the Homeric realisation of the hero's 
 superhuman powers, that they scarcely excite sur- 
 prise. And his belongings are on the scale of his 
 qualities. None but himself could wield his spear; 
 his armour was forged in Olympus ; his shield was a 
 panorama of human life ; his horses would obey only 
 his guidance, or that of his delegates. Not for com- 
 mon handling, indeed, were the ' wind-swift ' coursers 
 born of Zephyr and the Harpy on the verge of the 
 dim Ocean-stream. Themselves deathless and in- 
 vulnerable, they were destined, nevertheless, to share 
 the pangs of ' brief mortality.' 
 
 Sunt lachrymae rerum, et mentem mortalia tangunt. 
 
 For they had a yoke-fellow of a different strain from 
 their own, captured by Achilles at the sack of the 
 
108 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Cilician Thebes, and killed by Sarpedon in the course 
 of his duel with Patroclus. And they had to endure 
 worse than the loss of Pedasus. Patroclus, whose 
 gentle touch and voice they had long ago learned to 
 love, fell in the same fight, and they stood paralysed 
 with grief, and unheeding alike the blows and the 
 blandishments of their authorised driver, Automedon. 
 
 They neither to the Hellespont would bear him, nor the fight, 
 But still as any tombstone lays his never- stirred weight 
 On some good man or woman's grave, for rites of funeral, 
 So unremoved stood these steeds, their heads to earth let fall, 
 And warm tears gushin'g from their eyes with passionate desire 
 Of their kind manager ; their manes, that flourished with the 
 
 fire 
 Of endless youth allotted them, fell through the yoky sphere, 
 Euthfully ruffled and defiled. 1 
 
 A northern companion-picture is furnished by 
 Grani mourning the death of Sigurd, whom he had 
 borne to the lair of Fafnir, and through the flames 
 to w T oo Brynhild, and now survived only to be immo- 
 lated on his pyre. The tears, however, of the weep- 
 ing horses in the Eamayana and Mahabharata flow 
 rather through fear than through sorrow. 
 
 The final appearance of the Pelidean steeds upon 
 the scene of the Iliad reaches a tragic height, pro- 
 bably unequalled in the whole cycle of poetical de- 
 lineations from the lower animal-world. Achilles, 
 roused at last to battle, and gleaming in his new- 
 
 1 Iliad, xvii. 432-40 (Chapman's trans.). 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 109 
 
 wrought armour, cried with a terrible voice as he 
 leaped into his car — 
 
 Xanthus and Balius, far-famed brood of Podarge's strain, 
 
 Take heed that in other sort to the Danaean host again, 
 
 Ye bring your chariot-lord, when ourselves from the battle 
 
 refrain, 
 And not, as ye left Patroclus, leave us yonder slain. 1 
 
 The sting of the reproach, and the favour of Here, 
 together effected a prodigy, and Xanthus spoke thus 
 to his angry lord : 
 
 Yea, mighty Achilles, safe this day will we bear back thee ; 
 Yet nigh is the day of thy doom. Not guilty .thereof be we, 
 But a mighty God, and the overmastering Doom shall be cause. 
 For not by our slowness of foot, neither slackness of will it 
 
 was 
 That the Trojans availed from Patroclus' shoulders thine armour 
 
 to tear ; 
 Nay, but a God most mighty, whom fair-tressed Leto bare, 
 Slew him in forefront of fight, giving Hector the glory meed. 
 But for us, we twain as the blast of the West-wind fleetly could 
 
 speed, 
 Which they name for the lightest-winged of the winds ; but for 
 
 thee indeed, 
 Even thee, is it doomed that by might of a God and a man 
 
 shalt thou fall. 2 
 
 But here the Erinyes, guardians of the natural 
 order, interposed, and Xanthus's brief burst of elo- 
 quence was brought to a close. The arrested pro- 
 phecy, however, was only too intelligible ; it could 
 
 1 Iliad, xix. 400-403 (Way's trans.). 
 
 2 lb. xix. 408-17 (Way's trans.). 
 
110 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 not deter, but it exasperated; and provoked the en- 
 suing fiery rejoinder — a ' passionate outcry of a sou] 
 in pain/ if ever there was one — 
 
 Xanthus, why bodest thou death unto me ? Thou needest 
 
 not so. 
 Myself well know my weird, in death to be here laid low, 
 Far-off from my dear loved sire, from the mother that bare me 
 
 afar ; 
 Yet cease will I not till I give to the Trojans surfeit of war. 
 He spake, and with shouts sped onward the thunder-foot steeds 
 
 of his car. 1 
 
 The aged Peleus was, indeed, destined to leave 
 unredeemed his vow of flinging to the stream of the 
 Spercheus the yellow locks of his safely-returned son ; 
 they were laid instead on the pyre of Patroclus. Nor 
 was their wearer ever to revisit the forest fastnesses 
 of Pelion, where he had learned from Chiron to draw 
 the bow and cull healing herbs ; yet of the short 
 time allotted to him for vengeance not a moment 
 should be lost. 
 
 Although Homer tells us nothing as to the eventual 
 fate of Xanthus and Balius, supplementary legends 
 fill up the blank left by his silence. It appears hence 
 that they were divinely restrained from carrying out 
 their purpose of retiring, after the death of Achilles, 
 to their birthplace by the Ocean- stream, and awaited 
 instead the arrival of Neoptolemus at Troy. 2 For 
 he was their appointed charioteer on the Elysian 
 
 1 Iliad, xix. 420-24 (Way's trans.). 
 
 2 Quintus Smyrnaeus, iii, 743, 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. Ill 
 
 plains, which they may scour to this day, for anything 
 
 that is known to the contrary, in friendly emulation 
 
 with Pegasus, the hippogriff, and 
 
 rutilse manifestus Arion 
 Igne jubse : 
 
 with the last above all, whose ' insatiate ardour ' 
 of speed saved Adrastus from Theban pursuit, and 
 brought him in the original mythical winner in the 
 Nemsean games ; whose sympathy, moreover, with 
 human miseries broke down, as in their own case, the 
 barriers of nature, and accomplished the portent of 
 speech and tears. Their quasi-immortality is shared 
 by Bayard, heard to neigh, it is said, every Mid- 
 summer-night, along the leafy aisles of the Forest 
 of Ardennes ; l and by Sharats, who still crops the 
 moss of the cavern where sleeps his long-accustomed 
 rider, Marko, waiting, like other hibernating heroes, 
 for the dawn of better days. 
 
 Prophetic horses of the Xanthus type have been 
 heard of in many lands. They are a commonplace 
 of Esthonian folk-lore; Dulcefal, the charger of 
 Hreggvid, king of Gardariki in Old Eussia, could 
 infallibly forecast the issue of a campaign; the 
 coursers of the Indian Bavana had a just presenti- 
 ment of his fate ; 2 and Caesar's indomitable horse 
 was reported — credibly or otherwise — to have wept 
 during three days before the stroke of Brutus fell. 
 
 1 Grimm and Stallybrass, Teutonic Mythology, p. 666. 
 
 2 Gubernatis, Zoological Mythology, vol. i. p. 349. 
 
112 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Even the remains of the dead animals were of high 
 importance in Teutonic divination. Their flesh was 
 pre-eminently witches' food ; horses' hoofs made 
 witches' drinking-cups ; the pipers at witches' revels 
 played on horses' heads, which were besides an in- 
 dispensable adjunct to many diabolical ceremonies. 1 
 
 Homer describes the Trojans as flinging live 
 horses into the Seaman der ; 2 and the Persians in 
 the time of Herodotus occasionally resorted to the 
 same barbarous means of propitiating rivers. In 
 honour of the sun — perhaps the legitimate claimant 
 to such honours — horses were immolated on the 
 summit of Taygetus, and a team of four, with chariot 
 attached, was yearly sunk by the Khodians into the 
 sea. The Argives worshipped Poseidon with similar 
 rites, 3 certainly not learned from the Phoenicians, to 
 whom they were unknown. They were unknown as 
 well to the Homeric Greeks ; for the slaughter on the 
 funeral- pyre of Patroclus belonged to a different order 
 of ideas. Here the prompting motive was that in- 
 grained desire to supply the needs, moral and physi- 
 cal, of the dead, which led to so many blood-stained 
 obsequies. Horses and dogs fell, in an especial manner, 
 victims to its prevalence ; and have consequently a 
 prominent place on early Greek tomb-reliefs repre- 
 senting the future state. 4 
 
 1 Grimm and Stallybrass, op. cit. pp. 47, 659, 1050. 
 
 2 Iliad, xxi. 132. 3 Pausanias, lib. iii. cap. 20, viii. 7. 
 4 Gardner, Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. v. p. 130. 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 113 
 
 Homer's description of the Troad as 'rich in 
 horses ' has been very scantily justified by the results 
 of underground exploration. Few of the animal's 
 bones were found at Hissarlik, none at the neighbour- 
 ing Hanai-Tepe. 1 Yet every Trojan at the present 
 day is a born rider. 2 Locomotion on horseback is 
 universal, at all ages, and for both sexes. Priam 
 himself could scarcely now be accommodated with a 
 mule-cart. He should leave the Pergamus, if at all, 
 mounted in some fashion on the back of a steed. 
 
 The author of the Iliad, however, was no equestrian. 
 His knowledge of horses was otherwise acquired. But 
 how intimate and accurate that knowledge was, one 
 example may suffice to show. A thunderstorm, sent 
 by Zeus in tardy fulfilment of his promise to Thetis, 
 caused a panic among the Greeks ; the bravest yielded 
 to the contagion of fear ; there was a sauve qui pent to 
 the ships. In the wild roufc, 
 
 Gerenian Nestor, aged prop of Greece, 
 Alone remained, and he against his will, 
 His horse sore wounded by an arrow shot 
 By godlike Paris, fair-hair'd Helen's lord : 
 Just on the crown, where close behind the head 
 First springs the mane, the deadliest spot of all, 
 The arrow struck him ; madden'd with the pain 
 He rear'd, then plunging forward, with the shaft 
 Fix'd in his brain, and rolling in the dust, 
 The other steeds in dire confusion threw. 3 
 
 1 Calvert, in Schliemann's Ilios, p. 711. 
 
 - Virchow, Abhandlungen Berlin. Acad. 1879, p. 62. 
 
 a Iliad, viii. 80-86 (Lord Derby's trans.). 
 
 I 
 
114 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 The most vulnerable point is here pointed out 
 with anatomical correctness. 1 Exactly where the 
 mane begins, the bony shield of the skull comes to an 
 end, and the route to the brain, especially to a dart 
 coming, like that of Paris, from behind, lies compara- 
 tively open. The sudden upspringing of the death- 
 smitten creature, followed by his struggle on the 
 ground, is also perfectly true to nature, and suggests 
 personal observation of the occurrence described. 
 
 Observation, both close and sympathetic, assuredly 
 dictated the brilliant lines in which Paris, issuing 
 from the Scsean gate, is compared to a courser break- 
 ing loose from confinement to disport himself in the 
 
 open. 
 
 As some proud steed, at well-fill' d manger fed, 
 His halter broken, neighing, scours the plain, 
 And revels in the widely-flowing stream 
 To bathe his sides ; then tossing high his head, 
 While o'er his shoulders streams his ample mane, 
 Light borne on active limbs, in conscious pride, 
 To the wide pastures of the mares he flies. 2 
 
 The simile, less happily appropriated to Hector, is 
 repeated in a subsequent part of the poem ; 3 and it 
 was by Virgil transferred bodily to the Eleventh 
 iEneid, where it serves to adorn Turnus, the wearer 
 of many borrowed Iliadic plumes. They, however, iti 
 must be admitted, make a splendid show in their new 
 setting. 
 
 1 Buchholz, Homer. Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 175. 
 
 2 Iliad, vi. 506-11 (Lord Derby's trans.). 
 :( lb. xv. 263. 
 
HOMERIC HORSES. 115 
 
 The makers of the Iliad, whether few or many, 
 were at least unanimous in their fervid admiration 
 for the horse. The verses glow with a kind of rapture 
 of enjoyment that describe his strength, beauty, and 
 swiftness, his eager spirit and fine nervous organisa- 
 tion, his docility to trusted guidance, his intelligent 
 participation in human contentions and pursuits. 
 No animal has elsewhere achieved true epic person- 
 ality ; l no animal has been raised to so high a dignity 
 in art. The whole Iliad might be called an ' Aristeia ' 
 or eulogistic celebration of the species. 
 
 1 Cf. Milchhofer, Die Anftinge der Kiinst, p. 57. 
 
 I 2 
 
 
116 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 
 
 The establishment of a clear distinction between men 
 and beasts might seem a slight effort of defining in- 
 tellect, yet it has not been quite easily made. In 
 children the instinct of assimilation long survives the 
 experience of difference. A little boy of six, asked by 
 the present writer what profession he thought of 
 adopting, replied with alacrity that he ' would like to 
 be a bird,' and it was only on being reminded of the 
 diet of grubs associated with that state of life, that he 
 began to waver as to its desirability. The same in- 
 capacity for drawing a boundary-line between the 
 realm of their own imperfect consciousness and the 
 mysterious encompassing region of animal life, is 
 visible in the grown-up children of the wilds. Hence 
 the zoological speculations of primitive man inevit- 
 ably take the form of a sort of projection of human 
 faculties into animal natures. Now human faculties, 
 released from the control of actuality, spontaneously 
 expand. In a vague and vaporous way, they trans- 
 
HOMEKIC ZOOLOGY. 117 
 
 cend the low level of hard fact, and become pleasantly 
 diffused in the ' ampler ether ' of the unknown. 
 Beasts thus transfigured are incapable, it may be 
 said, of simple rationality. The powers transferred 
 to them grow like Jack's Beanstalk, beyond the range 
 of sight. 
 
 Universal folk-lore, in all its tangled ramifica- 
 tions, bears witness to the truth of this remark. 
 Tutelary animals, of the Puss in Boots type, abound 
 and expatiate there. They are all-contriving and in- 
 fallible. Their favour leads to fortune and power. 
 They hold the clue to the labyrinth^ of human desti- 
 nies. Through their protection . the oppressed are 
 rescued, the ragged are clothed in golden raiments, 
 the outwardly despicable win princely honours, and 
 have their names inscribed in the ' Almanach de Gotha ' 
 of fairy-land. No wonder that such beneficent poten- 
 tates, albeit feathered or furry, should have been 
 claimed as ancestors and hereditary protectors by 
 human beings full of untutored yearnings for the un- 
 attainable. To our ideas, indeed, there seems little 
 comfort or credit to be got out of counting kinship 
 with a beaver, a bear, or an opossum ; but things 
 looked differently when the world was young ; nor 
 has it yet everywhere grown old. In Australia, black 
 bipeds still own themselves the cousins and clients of 
 kangaroos. American Indians pay homage to ' niani- 
 tous ' personally, as well as to ' totems ' tribally 
 associated with them ; and twilight tales are perhaps 
 
118 FAMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 to this hour whispered in Ireland, about a certain 
 * Master of the Eats,' whose hostility it is eminently 
 undesirable though lamentably easy to incur. 
 
 Even among Greeks and Eomans of the classical 
 age, to say nothing of Aztecs and Alemanni, belief 
 lurked in the preternatural wisdom of certain animals. 
 Their formal worship, most fully elaborated in Egypt, 
 but diffused over * Tellus' orbed ground,' sprang from 
 the same stock of ideas. To a remarkable extent, the 
 Greeks were exempt from its degrading associations. 
 Their partial survival on Greek soil, as in the venera- 
 tion at Phigaleia, of the horse-headed Demeter, repre- 
 sented, without doubt, an under-current of aboriginal 
 tradition, reaching back to the Pelasgic fore-time. 
 
 Now it might have been anticipated that the 
 earliest literature would have been the most deeply 
 permeated by these primitive reminiscences. But 
 this is very far from being the case. Their influence 
 is scarcely perceptible in the two great epics of Troy 
 and Ithaca ; and indeed the modes of thought from 
 which they originated were completely alien to the 
 ethical sentiments pervading those marvellous first- 
 fruits of Greek genius. Neither poem includes the 
 smallest remnant of zoolatry. The Homeric divini- 
 ties are absolutely anthropomorphic. They are men 
 and women, exempt from the limitations, unscathed 
 by the ills of humanity, and radiant with the infinite 
 sunshine of immortal happiness. Of infra-human re- 
 lationships they exhibit no trace. They are far less 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 119 
 
 concerned with the animal kingdom than they grew 
 to be in classical times. Typical beasts or birds have 
 not yet become attached to them. The eagle, though 
 once in the Iliad called the ' swift messenger ' of Zeus, 
 is altogether detached from his throne and his thun- 
 der-bolt ; Here has not developed her preference for 
 the peacock — a bird introduced much later from the 
 East; Athene is without the companionship of her 
 owl ; no doves flutter about the fair head of the 
 ' golden Aphrodite ' ; Artemis needs no dogs to bring 
 down her game. The Olympian menagerie, in short, 
 has not been constituted. On the ' many- folded ' 
 mountain of the gods, no beasts are maintained save 
 the half-dozen horses strictly necessary for the pur- 
 poses of divine locomotion. 
 
 Very significant, too, is Homer's ignorance of the 
 semi-bestial, semi-divine beings who figure in subse- 
 quent Greek mythology. ' Great Pan ' has no place 
 in his verse; Satyrs and Tritons are equally un- 
 recognised by him ; his Nereids are * silver-footed 
 sea-nymphs,' with no fishy tendencies. 
 
 Mixed natures of any kind seem, in truth, to have 
 been little to his taste. Even if he ceuld have appre- 
 hended the symbolical meanings underlying them in 
 dim Oriental imaginations, he could scarcely have 
 reconciled himself to the sacrifice of beauty which 
 they involved. Men, horses, bulls, lions, were all 
 separately admirable in his eyes ; but to blend, he felt 
 instinctively, was not to heighten their perfections. 
 
120 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Thus, the hybrid nature of the Centaurs, if present 
 to his mind, was left undefined as something 'abomin- 
 able, inutterable.' The Harpies, realised by Hesiod 
 as half-human fowls, remained with him barely per- 
 sonified tornadoes. Neither Pegasus nor the Mino- 
 taur, neither the bird-women of Stymphalis, nor the 
 Griffons of the Ehipaean mountains, found mention in 
 his song, and he admitted — and that in a family- 
 legend — but one true specimen of the dragon-kind 
 in the ' Chimsera dire ' slain by Bellerophon. The 
 monstrosity of Scylla is left purposely vague. She 
 is a fancy-compound defying classification. She 
 lived, too, in the outer world of the Odyssey, where 
 ' things strange and rare ' flourished in quiet dis- 
 regard of laws binding elsewhere. 
 
 In the same region of wonderland occur the 
 oxen of the Sun— the only sacred animals recognised 
 by our poet. They had their pasturing-ground in the 
 island of Thrinakie, whither Helios retired to divert 
 himself with their frolics after each hard day of 
 steady Mediterranean shining ; and so keen was his 
 indignation at their slaughter by the famished com- 
 rades of Odysseus, that a cosmical strike would have 
 ensued but for the promise of Zeus to inflict condign 
 punishment upon the delinquents. From the ship- 
 wreck by which this promise was fulfilled, Odysseus, 
 alone exempt from guilt in the matter, was the soli- 
 tary survivor. 
 
 The Homeric treatment of animals, compared with 
 
HOMEHTC ZOOLOGY. 121 
 
 the extravagances prevalent in other primitive litera- 
 ture, is eminently sane and rational. Not through 
 indifference to their perfections. A peculiar intensity 
 of sympathy with brute-nature is, on the contrary, 
 one of the distinguishing characteristics of the 
 Homeric poems. But that sympathy is based upon 
 the appreciation of real, not upon the transference of 
 imaginary qualities. Beasts are, on the whole, kept 
 strictly in their proper places. The only genuine 
 example of their sublimation into higher ones is 
 afforded by the horses of Achilles, and this during 
 a transport of epic excitement. - Otherwise, the 
 fabulous element admitted concerning animals — and 
 it is just in their regard that fable commonly runs 
 riot — is surprisingly small. 
 
 In its room, we find such a wealth of acute and 
 accurate observation, as no poet, before or since, has 
 had the capacity to accumulate, or the power to em- 
 ploy for purposes of illustration. It is unmistakably 
 private property. Details appropriated at second- 
 hand could never have fitted in so aptly with the 
 needs of imaginative creation. Moreover, the con- 
 ventional types of animal character were of later 
 establishment. There was at that early time no 
 recognised common stock of popular or proverbial 
 wisdom on the subject to draw upon. The lion had 
 not yet been raised to regal dignity ; the fox was un- 
 distinguished for craft, as the goose for folly. Beasts 
 and birds had their careers in literature before them. 
 
122 FAMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Their reputations were still to make. They carried 
 about with them no formal certificates of character. 
 The poet was accordingly unfettered in his dealings 
 with them by preconceived notions; whence the 
 delightful freshness of Homer's zoological vignettes. 
 The dew of morning, so to speak, is upon them. They 
 are limned direct from his own vivid impressions of 
 pastoral, maritime, and hunting scenes. 
 
 As to the locality of those scenes, some hints, but 
 scarcely more than hints, can be derived. For in the 
 course of nearly three thousand years, the circum- 
 stances of animal distribution have been affected by 
 changes too considerable and too indeterminate to 
 admit of confident argument from the state of things 
 now to the state of things then ; while the notices of 
 the poet, incidental by their very nature, are of the 
 utmost value for what they tell, but warrant only very 
 hesitating inferences from what they leave untold. 
 Thus, it does not follow that because Homer nowhere 
 mentions the cuckoo, he was therefore unfamiliar with 
 its note, which, from Hesiod's time until now, has not 
 failed to proclaim the advent of spring among the 
 olive-groves of Bceotia, and must have been heard 
 no less by Paris or Anchises than by the modern 
 archaeological traveller, along the oak-clad and willow- 
 fringed valley of Scamander. Nor is the faintest 
 presumption of a divided authorship supplied by the 
 fact that the nightingale sings in the Odyssey, but 
 not in the Iliad. Nevertheless, analogous considera- 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 123 
 
 tions should not be altogether neglected in Homeric 
 
 criticism. They may possibly help towards the 
 
 answering of questions both of time and place : of 
 
 time, through allusions to domesticated animals ; 
 
 of place, by a comparison of the known range of 
 
 wild species with the fauna of the two great epics. 
 
 And, first, as regards domesticated animals. 
 
 The list of these is a short one. The Greeks and 
 
 Trojans of the Iliad commanded the services of the 
 
 horse in battle, of oxen and mules for draught ; dogs 
 
 were their faithful allies in hunting and cattle driving, 
 
 and they kept flocks of sheep and- goats. The ass 
 
 appears only once, and then indirectly, on the scene, 
 
 when the lethargic obstinacy of his behaviour serves 
 
 to heighten the effect of Ajax's stubbornness in fight. 
 
 Thus: 
 
 And as when a lazy ass going past a field hath the better of the 
 boys with him, an ass that hath had many a cudgel broken about 
 his sides, and he fareth into the deep crop, and wasteth it, while 
 the boys smite him with their cudgels, and feeble is the force of 
 them, but yet with might and main they drive him forth when he 
 hath had his fill of fodder ; even so did the high-hearted Trojans 
 and allies, called from many lands, smite great Aias, son of Tela- 
 mon, with darts on the centre of his shield, and ever followed 
 after him. 1 
 
 The creature's ' little ways ' were then already 
 notorious, although all mention of him or them is 
 omitted from the Odyssey, as well as from the Hesiodic 
 poems. His existence is indeed implied by the 
 
 1 Iliad, xi. 557-64. 
 
124 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 parentage of the mule. But mules were brought 
 to the Troad ready-made from Paphlagonia. 1 It was 
 not until later that they were systematically bred by 
 the Greeks. 
 
 The Semitic origin of the word ' ass ' rightly 
 indicates the introduction of the species into Europe 
 from Semitic Western Asia. As to the date of its 
 arrival, all that can be told is that it was subsequent 
 to the beginning of the bronze epoch. The pile- 
 dwellers of Switzerland and North Italy were un- 
 acquainted with an animal fundamentally Oriental in 
 its habitudes. Its reluctance, for instance, to cross the 
 smallest streamlet attests the physical tradition of 
 a desert home ; and the white ass of Bagdad represents 
 to this day, the fullest capabilities of the race. 2 Yet 
 neither the ass nor the camel was included in the 
 primitive Aryan fauna. For they could not have been 
 known, still less domesticated, without being named, 
 and the only widespread appellations borne by them 
 are derived from Semitic sources. Evidently the loan 
 of the words accompanied the transmission of the 
 species. It is very difficult, in the face of this circum- 
 stance — as Dr. Schrader has pertinently observed 3 — 
 to locate the Aryan cradle-land anywhere to the east 
 of the Bosphorus. 
 
 1 Helm and Stallybrass, Wanderings of Plants and Animals, pp. 
 110, 460. 
 
 2 Houghton, Trans. Society of Biblical Archceology, vol. v. p. 49. 
 
 3 Thier- und Pflanzen- Geographic, p. 17. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 125 
 
 Dr. Yirchow was struck, on his visit to the Troad, 
 in 1879, with the similarity of the actual condition of 
 the country to that described in the Iliad. 1 The in- 
 habitants seem, in fact, during the long interval, to 
 have halted in a transition- stage between pastoral 
 and agricultural life, by far the larger proportion of 
 the land supplying pasturage for ubiquitous multi- 
 tudes of sheep, oxen, goats, horses, and asses. The 
 sheep, however, belong to a variety assuredly of post- 
 Homeric introduction, since the massive tails ham- 
 pering their movements could not well have escaped 
 characterisation in some emphatic Homeric epithet. 
 
 Both short and long-horned cattle, all of a dark 
 brown colour, may now be seen grazing over the 
 plain round Hissarlik, the latter probably resembling 
 more closely than the former those with which 
 Homer was acquainted. The oxen alike of the Iliad 
 and Odyssey are ' wine-coloured,' ' straight-horned,' 
 ' broad-browed,' and ' sinuous-footed ' ; it was above 
 all through the shuffle of their gait, indicated by the 
 last adjective, and due to the peculiar structure of 
 the hip-joint in the whole species, that the poet 
 distinctively visualised them. ' Lowing kine,' and 
 ' bellowing bulls ' are occasionally heard of, chiefly — 
 it is curious to remark — in later, or suspected 
 portions of the Iliad. Sheep and goats, on the other 
 hand, are often described as ' bleating,' and the cries 
 
 1 Bcitrage zur Landeskimde der Troas ; Berlin. Abhandlungen, 
 1879, p. 59. 
 
126 FAMTLIAE STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 of birds are called up at opportune moments ; but 
 Homer's horses neither whinny nor neigh ; his pigs 
 refrain from grunting ; his jackals do not howl ; the 
 tremendous roar of the lion nowhere resounds through 
 his forests. Homeric wild beasts are, indeed, save 
 in the vaguely-indicated case of one indeterminate 
 specimen, 1 wholly dumb. 
 
 Singularly enough, a peculiar sensitiveness to 
 sound is displayed in the description of the Shield of 
 Achilles. Yet plastic art is essentially silent. Even 
 the perpetuated cry of the Laocoon detracts somewhat 
 from the inherent serenity of marble. The metal- 
 wrought creations of Hephaestus, however, not only 
 live and move, but make themselves audible to a de- 
 gree uncommon elsewhere in the poems. Thus, in 
 one scene, or compartment, a lowing herd issues to 
 the pasturing-grounds, where two lions seize from 
 their midst, and devour, a loudly-belloiving bull, while 
 nine barking, though frightened dogs are, by the herds- 
 men, vainly urged to a rescue. In the vintage-episode 
 of the same series, delight in melodious beauty is 
 almost as apparent as in the so-called ' Homeric ' 
 hymn to Hermes. The ' Linus-song,' ' sweet even as 
 desire,' sung to the youthful grape-gatherers, sounds 
 through the ages scarcely less sweet than 
 
 The liquid voice 
 Of pipes, that filled the clear air thrillingly, 
 
 1 Iliad, x. 184. 
 
HOMEEIC ZOOLOGY. 127 
 
 when the Muses gathered round Apollo long ago in 
 the ethereal halls of Olympus. 
 
 Among the animals now variously serviceable to 
 man by the shores of the Hellespont, are the camel, 
 the buffalo, and the cat, none of them known, even 
 by name, to the primitive Achaeans. The house- 
 hold cat, as is well known, remained, during a mil- 
 lennium or two, exclusively Egyptian ; then all at 
 once, perhaps owing to the exigency created by the 
 migration westward of the rat, spread with great 
 rapidity in the first centuries of the Christian era, 
 over the civilised world. Saint Gregory Nazianzen 
 set the first recorded European example of attach- 
 ment to a cat. His pet was kept at Constantinople 
 about the year 360 a.d. 1 No archaeological vestiges 
 of the species, accordingly, have been found in Asia 
 Minor. Cats haunt the ruins of Hissarlik, but in no 
 case lie buried beneath them. 
 
 The bones mixed up among the pre-historic debris 
 belong chiefly, as might have been expected, to sheep, 
 goats, and oxen, those of swine, dogs, and horses 
 being relatively scarce. 2 Hares and deer are also 
 represented, and of birds, mainly the goose, with 
 scanty traces of the swan and of a small falcon. 
 These remains are of different epochs, yet all with- 
 out exception belong to animals mentioned in the 
 Iliad, whether as wild or tame. The Homeric con- 
 
 1 Houghton, Trans. Society Biblical Archceology, vol. v. p. 63. 
 - Yirchow, loc. cit. p. 63. 
 
128 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 dition of the pig and goose respectively presents some 
 points of interest. 
 
 The pig was not one of the animals primitively 
 domesticated in the East. The absence of Vedic or 
 Avestan mention of swine-culture makes it practi- 
 cally certain that the species was known only in a 
 wild state to the early Aryan colonists of Iran and 
 India. Nor had any more intimate acquaintance 
 with it been developed in Babylonia ; although the 
 Swiss pile-dwellers, at first similarly behindhand, 
 advanced, before the stone age had terminated, to 
 pig-keeping. 1 Dr. Schrader, indeed, bases upon the 
 occurrence only in European languages of the word 
 porcus, the conjecture that the subjugation of the * full- 
 acorned boar ' was first accomplished in Europe ; 2 
 and if this were so, the operations of swine-herding 
 would naturally come in for a larger share of notice 
 in the Odyssey, as the more European of the two 
 poems, than in the Iliad. And in fact, the swineherd 
 of Odysseus is an important personage, and plays a 
 leading part in the drama of his return — pigs, more- 
 over, figuring extensively among the agricultural 
 riches of Ithaca, while there is no sign that any were 
 possessed by Priam or Anchises. Alone among the 
 Greeks of the Iliad, Achilles is stated to have placed 
 before his guests a ' chine of well-fed hog ' ; and the 
 very few Iliadic allusions to fatted swine are all in 
 
 1 Rutimeyer, Die Fauna der Pfahlbauten, pp. 120-21. 
 
 2 Prehistoric Antiquities of the Aryans, p. 261. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 129 
 
 immediate connexion with the same hero. If this be 
 a result of chance, it is a somewhat grotesque one. 
 
 The porcine proclivities of modern Greeks are 
 especially strong. Christian and Mahometan habi- 
 tations were, in the days of Turkish domination, 
 easily distinguished by the sty-accommodation at- 
 tached to the former ; while in certain villages of the 
 Morea and the Cyclades, the pigs no longer occupied 
 a merely subordinate position, and odours not Sa- 
 bsean, wafted far on the breeze, announced to the still 
 distant traveller the nature of the harbourage in 
 store for him. 1 
 
 The most antique of domesticated birds is the 
 goose, and Homer was acquainted with no other. 
 Penelope kept a flock of twenty, 2 mainly, it would 
 seem, for purposes of diversion, since the loss of them 
 through the devastations of an eagle is treated from a 
 purely sentimental point of view. They were fed on 
 wheat, the ' height of good living,' in Homeric back- 
 premises. The court-yard, too, of the palace of 
 Menelaus sheltered a cackling flock, 3 the progenitors 
 of which Helen might have brought with her from 
 Egypt, where geese were prehistorically reared for 
 the table. That the bird occurs only tame in the 
 Odyssey, and only wild in the Iliad, constitutes a dis- 
 tinction between the poems which can scarcely be 
 without real significance. The species employed, in 
 
 1 Gell, A Journey in the Morea, p. 63. 
 
 2 Odyssey, xix. 5'6(i. 3 lb. xv. 161. 
 
130 FAMILIAB STUDIES IN HOMER, 
 
 the Second Iliad, to illustrate, by the tumult of their 
 alighting on the marshy banks of the Cayster, the 
 clangorous march-past of the Achaean forces, has been 
 identified as Anser cinereiis, numerous specimens of 
 which fly south, in severe winters, from the valley of 
 the Danube to Greece and Asia Minor. 
 
 The familiar cocks and hens of our poultry-yards 
 are, in the West, post-Homeric. Their native home 
 is in India ; but through human agency they were 
 early transported to Iran, where the cock, as the 
 bird that first greets the light, acquired in the eyes 
 of Zoroastrian devotees, a pre-eminently sacred 
 character. His introduction into Greece was a result 
 of the expansion westward of the Persian empire. 
 No cocks are met with on Egyptian monuments ; the 
 Old Testament leaves them unnoticed ; and the 
 earliest mention of them in Greek literature is by 
 Theognis of Megara, in the middle of the sixth cen- 
 tury B.C. 1 Pigeons, on the other hand, are quite at 
 home in Homeric verse. They are of two kinds. One 
 is the rock-pigeon, called from its slate-coloured 
 plumage peleia (rrsXos — dusky), and described as 
 finding shelter in rocky clefts, and evading pursuit 
 by a rapid, undulating flight. 2 Its frequent recur- 
 rence in similes can surprise no traveller who has 
 observed the extreme abundance of Columba livia all 
 round the coasts of the iEgean. 3 The second Homeric 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, Wanderings of Plants and Animals, 
 pp. 241-43. 2 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 120. 
 
 3 Lindermayer, Die Vogel Gricchcnlands, p. 120. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 131 
 
 species of Columba is the ring-dove, once referred to 
 as the habitual victim of the hawk. Tame pigeons 
 are ignored, and were, indeed, first seen in Greece 
 after the wreck of the Persian fleet at Mount Athos 
 in 492 b.c. 1 Yet dove-culture was practised as far 
 back as the oldest records lead us in Egypt and Persia. 
 The dove was marked out as a ' death-bird ' by our 
 earliest Aryan ancestors, and figures in the Vedas as 
 a messenger of Yama. But Homer, unconcerned, as 
 usual, with animal symbolism, makes no account, if 
 he had ever heard, of its sinister associations. 
 
 Among Homeric wild animals, the first place in- 
 contestably belongs to the lion, and the Iliad, in 
 especial, gives extraordinary prominence to the king of 
 beasts. In savage grandeur he stalks, as it w r ere, 
 through the varied scenery of its similitudes, indomit- 
 able, fiercely-despoiling, contemptuous of lesser brute- 
 forces. His impressive qualities receive no gratuitous 
 enhancement; he rouses no myth-making fancies; 
 there is no fabulous f quality of mercy ' about him, 
 nor of magnanimity, nor of forbearance ; he is simply 
 a 'gaunt and sanguine beast,' a vivid embodiment of 
 the energy of untamed and unsparing nature. 
 
 He is not brought immediately upon the scene 
 of action; the Homeric poems nowhere provide for 
 him a local habitation ; it is only in the compara- 
 tively late Hymn to Aphrodite that a place is speci- 
 fically assigned to him among the feral products of 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, op. cit. p. 257. 
 
 k 2 
 
132 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Mount Ida. His portraiture, nevertheless, in the 
 similes of the Iliad is too minute and faithful to 
 leave any shadow ol doubt of its being based upon 
 intimate personal acquaintance. The poet must have 
 witnessed with his own eyes the change from majestic 
 indifference to bellicose frenzy described in the follow- 
 ing passage ; he must have caught the greenish glare 
 of the oblique feline eyes, noted the preparatory tail- 
 lashings, and mentally photographed the crouching 
 attitude, and the yawn of deadly significance, that 
 preceded the fierce beast's spring. 
 
 And on the other side, the son of Peleus rushed to meet him, 
 like a lion, a ravaging lion whom men desire to slay, a whole 
 tribe assembled ; and first he goeth his way unheeding, but 
 when some warrior-youth hath smitten him with a spear, then 
 he gathereth himself open-mouthed, and foam cometh forth 
 about his teeth, and his stout spirit groaneth in his heart, and 
 with his tail he scourgeth either side his ribs and flanks and 
 goadeth himself on to fight, and glaring is borne straight on 
 them by his passion to try whether he shall slay some man of 
 them, or whether himself shall perish in the forefront of the 
 throng. 1 
 
 Take, again, the picture of the lioness defending 
 her young, while 
 
 Within her the storm of her might doth rise, 
 
 And the down-drawn skin of her brows over-gloometh the fire 
 
 of her eyes. 2 
 
 : 
 
 1 Iliad, xx. 164-73. 
 
 2 Way's Iliad, xvii. 135-36. The feminine pronouns are here in 
 troduced to avoid incongruity. The Homeric vocabulary did not 
 include a word equivalent to 'lioness.' 
 
HOMEKIC ZOOLOGY. 133 
 
 Or this other, exemplifying, like the ' hungry people ' 
 simile in 'Locksley Hall,' the 'imperious' beast's 
 dread of fire : 
 
 And as when hounds and countryfolk drive a tawny lion from 
 the mid-fold of the kine, and suffer him not to carry away the 
 fattest of the herd, all night they watch, and he in great desire 
 for the flesh maketh his onset ; but takes nothing thereby, for 
 thick the darts fly from strong hands against him, and the 
 burning brands, and these he dreads for all his fury, and in the 
 dawn he departeth with vexed heart. 1 
 
 Scenes of leonine ravage among cattle are fre- 
 quently presented. As here : 
 
 And as when in the pride of his strength a lion mountain-reared 
 Hath snatched from the pasturing kine a heifer, the best of the 
 
 herd, 
 And, gripping her neck with his strong teeth, bone from bone 
 
 hath he snapped, 
 And he rendeth her inwards and gorgeth her blood by his red 
 
 tongue lapped, 
 And around him gather the dogs and the shepherd-folk, and still 
 Cry long and loud from afar, howbeit they have no will 
 To face him in fight, for that pale dismay doth the hearts of 
 
 them fill. 2 
 
 We seem, in reading these lines — and there are 
 many more like them — to be confronted with a vivified 
 Assyrian or Lycian bas-relief. In the antique sculp- 
 tures of the valley of the Xanthus, above all, the 
 incident of the slaying of an ox by a lion is of such 
 constant recurrence 3 as almost to suggest, in con- 
 
 Iliad, xx. 164-75. 2 Way's Iliad, xvii. 61-G7. 
 
 3 Fellows' Travels in Asia Minor, p. 348, ed. 1852. 
 
 I 
 
134 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 firmation of a conjecture by Mr. Gladstone, 1 a simi- 
 larity of origin between them and the corresponding 
 passages of the Iliad. The lion, indeed, occupies 
 throughout the epic a position which can now with 
 difficulty be conceived as having been assigned to him 
 on the strength of European experience alone. Still, 
 it must not be forgotten that the facts of the matter 
 have radically changed within the last three thousand 
 years. 
 
 In prehistoric times, the lion ranged all over 
 Europe, from the Severn to the Hellespont ; for the 
 Fells spelceus of Britain 2 was specifically identical 
 with the grateful clients of Androclus and Sir Iwain, 
 no less than with the more savage than sagacious 
 beasts now haunting the Upper Nile valley, and the 
 marshes of Guzerat and Mesopotamia. 
 
 Already, however, at the early epoch of the pile- 
 built villages by the lake of Constance, he had dis- 
 appeared from Western Europe ; yet he lingered long 
 in Greece. Of his presence in the Peloponnesus only 
 legendary traces remain, although he figures largely 
 in Mycenaean art ; but in Thrace he can lay claim to 
 an historically attested existence. Herodotus 3 recounts 
 with wonder how the baggage-camels of Xerxes' 
 army were attacked by lions on the march from Acan- 
 thus to Therma ; and he defines the region haunted 
 
 1 Studies in Homer, vol. i. p. 183. 
 
 2 Boyd Dawkins and Sanford, Pleistocene Mammalia, p. 171. 
 
 3 Lib. vii. caps. 125, 126. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 135 
 
 by them as bounded towards the east by the Kiver 
 Nestus, on the west by the Achelous. Some Chalcidi- 
 cean coins, too, are stamped with the favourite oriental 
 device of a lion killing an ox ; and Xenophon possibly — 
 for his expressions are dubious — includes the lion 
 among the wild fauna of Thrace. The statements, 
 on the other hand, of Polybius and Dio Chrysostom 
 leave no doubt that he had finally retreated from our 
 continent before the beginning of the Christian era. 1 
 
 A Thessalian Homer might, then, quite conceiv- 
 ably, have beheld an occasional predatory lion de- 
 scending the arbutus-clad slopes of Pelion or Olympus ; 
 yet the continual allusions to leonine manners and 
 customs pervading the Iliad show an habitual ac- 
 quaintance with the animal which is certainly some- 
 what surprising. It corresponds, nevertheless, quite 
 closely with the perpetual recurrence of his form in 
 the plastic representations of My cense. 
 
 The comparatively few Odyssean references to this 
 animal can scarcely be said to bear the stamp of visual 
 directness unmistakably belonging to those dispersed 
 broadcast through the earlier epic. Yet it would pro- 
 bably be a mistake to suppose them derived at second- 
 hand. Without, then, denying that the author of the 
 Odyssey had actually * met the ravin lion when he 
 roared,' we may express some wonder that he, like his 
 predecessor of the Iliad, left unrecorded the auditory 
 part of the resulting brain-impression. For the voice 
 
 1 Sir G. C. Lewis, Notes and Queries, vol. viii. ser. ii. p. 242. 
 
136 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 of the lion is assuredly the most imposing sound of 
 which animated nature seems capable. Casual allu- 
 sions to it in the Hymn to Aphrodite and in the 
 (nominally) Hesiodic ' Shield of Hercules/ are, never- 
 theless, perhaps the earliest extant in Greek literature. 
 The bear figures in the Iliad and Odyssey solely 
 as a constellation, except that a couple of verses in- 
 terpolated into the latter accord him a place among 
 the embossed decorations of the belt of Hercules. 
 The living animal, however, is still reported to lurk 
 in the 'clov'n ravines' of 'many-fountain'd Ida,' and, 
 according to a local tradition, was only banished from 
 the Thessalian Olympus through the agency of Saint 
 Dionysius. 1 The panther or leopard, ou the contrary, 
 although contemporaneously with the cave-lion an 
 inmate of Britain, disappeared from Europe at a dim 
 and remote epoch, while plentifully met with in Caria 
 and Pamphylia during Cicero's governorship of Cili- 
 cia. Even in the present century, indeed, leopard- 
 skins formed part of the recognised tribute of the 
 Pasha of the Dardanelles. The life-like scene, then, 
 in which the animal emerges to view in the Iliad, 
 bears a decidedly Asiatic character. Mr. Conington's 
 version of the lines runs as follows : 
 
 As panther springs from a deep thicket's shade 
 
 To meet the hunter, and her heart no fear 
 
 Nor terror knows, though barking loud she hear, 
 
 1 Tozer, Researches in the Highlands of Turkey, vol. ii. p. G4. 
 
HOMEEIC ZOOLOGY. 137 
 
 For though with weapon's thrust or javelin's throw 
 He wound her first, yet e'en about the spear 
 Writhing, her valour doth she not forego, 
 Till for offence she close, or in the shock lie low. 1 
 
 Thoroughly Oriental, too, is the vision conjured up 
 in the Third Iliad of Paris challenging 
 
 To mortal combat all the chiefs of Greece, 2 
 
 armed with a bow and sword, poising 'two brass- 
 tipped javelins,' a panther skin flung round his mag- 
 nificent form. Elate with the consciousness of 
 strength and beauty, unsuspicious of the betrayal in 
 store for him by his own weak and volatile spirit, the 
 gaietta pelle of the fierce beast might have encouraged, 
 as it did in Dante, a cheerful forecast of the issue ; 
 yet illusorily in each case. In the Odyssey, the 
 panther is only mentioned as one of the forms as- 
 sumed by Proteus. 
 
 The Homeric wild boar is of quite Erymanthian 
 powers and proportions ; with more valour than dis- 
 cretion, he does not shrink from encountering the 
 lion himself — 
 
 Being ireful, on the lion he will venture ; 
 
 and the laying-low of a single specimen is reckoned 
 no inadequate result of a forest -campaign by dogs 
 and men. Such an heroic brute, worthy to have 
 been the emissary of enraged Artemis, succumbed, no 
 longer ago than in 1850, to the joint efforts, during 
 
 1 Iliad, xxi. 573-78. 2 Iliad, iii. 20 (Lord Derby's trans.). 
 
138 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 several toilsome days, of a band of thirty hunters. 1 
 The ' chafed boar ' in the Iliad either carries every- 
 thing before him, as Ajax scattered the Trojans fight- 
 ing round the body of Patroclus ; or he dies, tracked 
 to his lair, if die he must, fearlessly facing his foes, 
 incarnating rage with bristles erected, blazing eyes, 
 and gnashing tusks. Nor was the upshot for him 
 inevitably fatal. Idomeneus of Crete, we are told, 
 awaiting the onset (which proved but partially effec- 
 tive) of iEneas and Deiphobus, 
 
 Stood at bay, like a boar on the hills that trusteth to his 
 strength, and abides the great assailing throng of men, in a 
 lonely place, and he bristles up his back, and his eyes shine with 
 fire, while he whets his tusks, and is right eager to keep at bay 
 both men and hounds. 2 
 
 The boar is a solitary animal. Like Hal o' the 
 Wynd, he fights for his ow T n right hand ; and he was 
 accordingly appropriated by Homer to image the 
 valour of individual chiefs, while the rank and file 
 figure as wolves and jackals, hunting in packs, 
 pinched with hunger, bloodthirsty and desperately 
 eager, but formidable only collectively. Jackals still 
 abound in the Troad and throughout the Cyclades, 
 and their hideous wails and barkings enhance the 
 desolation of the Nauplian and Negropontine swamps. 3 
 Neither have wolves disappeared from those regions ; 
 
 1 Erhard, Fauna der Cydadcn, p. 26. 
 
 2 Iliad, xiii. 471-75. 
 
 3 Von der Miihle, Beitrage zur Omithologie Griecherilands , p. 
 123 ; Buchholz, Homerisclie Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 202. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 139 
 
 and the old dread of the animal which was at once 
 the symbol of darkness and of light, survives ob- 
 scurely to this day in the vampire-superstitions of 
 Eastern Europe. The closeness of the connexion 
 between vampires and were-wolves is shown by a 
 comparison of the modern Greek word vrykolaka, 
 vampire, with the Zend and Sanskrit vehrka, a wolf. 1 
 Nor were the Greeks of classical times exempt from 
 the persuasion that men and wolves might tempo- 
 rarily, or even permanently, exchange semblances. 
 Many stories of the kind were related in Arcadia in 
 connexion with the worship of the LycaGan Zeus ; and 
 Pausanias, while critically sceptical as regards some 
 of these, was not too advanced a thinker to accept, as 
 fully credible, the penal transformation of Lycaon, 
 son of Pelasgus. 2 Such notions belonged, however, to 
 a rustic mythology of which Homer took small cogni- 
 sance. His thoughts travelled of themselves out 
 from the sylvan gloom of primeval haunts into the 
 open sunshine of unadulterated nature. 
 
 In wood or wilderness, forest or den, 
 
 he met with no bogey-animals. For him neither 
 beast nor bird had any mysterious significance. He 
 attributed to encounters with particular species no 
 influence, malefic or beneficial, upon human destiny. 
 Of themselves, they had, in his view, no concern with 
 
 1 Tozer, ResearcJies, vol. ii. p. 82. 
 
 2 Descriptio Grcscice, lib. vi. cap. 8 ; viii. cap. ii. 
 
140 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 it, although ordinary animal instincts might, under 
 certain conditions, be so directed as to be expressive 
 to man of the will of the gods. In the Homeric 
 scheme, birds and serpents exclusively are so employed, 
 without, . however, any departure from the order of 
 nature. Thus, by night near the sedgy Simoeis, a 
 heron, Ardea nycticorax, disturbed by the approach 
 of Odysseus and Diomed, assured them, by casually 
 flapping its way eastward, that their expedition had 
 the sanction of their guardian-goddess. 1 The choice 
 of the bird was plainly dictated by zoological consi- 
 derations alone ; it had certainly no such recondite 
 motive as that suggested by iElian, 2 who, with almost 
 grotesque ingenuity, argued that the owl, as the fowl 
 of Athene's special predilection, could only have been 
 deprived of the privilege of acting as her instrument 
 on the occasion through Homer's consciousness of its 
 reputation as a bird of sinister augury — 
 
 Ignavns bubo, dirum mortalibus omen — 
 
 the truth being that both kinds of association — the 
 mythological and the superstitious — were equally 
 remote from the poet's mind. 
 Similarly, the portent of 
 
 An eagle and a serpent wreathed in fight 
 
 appeared such only by virtue of the critical nature of 
 the conjuncture at which it was displayed. Hector, 
 relying upon what he took to be a promise of divine 
 
 1 Iliad, x. 274. 2 De Naturd Animalium, lib. x. fr. 37. 
 
 
HOMEEIC ZOOLOGY. 141 
 
 help, aimed at nothing less than the capture, in the 
 rout of battle, of the Greek camp, and the conflagra- 
 tion of the Greek ships. But every step in advance 
 brought him nearer to the tent where the irate epical 
 hero lay inert, but ready to spring into action at the 
 last extremity ; and it was fully recognised that the 
 arming of Achilles meant far more than the mere loss 
 of the fruits of victory. The balance of events, then, 
 if the proposed coup cle main were persevered with, 
 hung upon a knife-edge of destiny; and pale fear 
 might well invade the eager, yet hesitating Trojan 
 host when, just as the foremost warriors were about 
 to breach the Greek rampart, an eagle flying west- 
 ward — that is, towards the side of darkness and 
 death — let fall among their ranks a coiling and 
 blood-stained snake. 1 
 
 And adown the blasts of the wind he darted with one wild 
 
 scream ; 
 Then shuddered the Trojans, beholding the serpent's writhing 
 
 gleam 
 In the midst of them lying, the portent of Zens the zEgis-lord, 
 And to Hector the valiant Polydamas spoke with a bodeful 
 
 word. 2 
 
 His vaticinations were defied. The Trojan leader 
 
 met them with the memorable protest : 
 
 But thou, thou wouldst have us obey the long- winged fowl of 
 
 the air ! 
 Go to, unto these have I not respect, and nought do I care 
 
 1 Shelley has adopted and developed the incident in the opening 
 stanzas of the Revolt of Islam. 
 
 ■ Iliad, xii. 207-10 (Way's trans.). 
 
142 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Whether to rightward they go to the sun and the dayspring sky, 
 Or whether to leftward away to the shadow-gloomed west they 
 
 %• 
 
 But for us, let us hearken the counsel of Zeus most high, and 
 
 obey, 
 Who over the deathling race and the deathless beareth sway. 
 One omen of all is best, that we fight for our fatherland ! 
 
 Magnificent, but, in the actual case, mistaken. 
 The shabby counsel of Polydamas really carried with 
 it the safety of Troy. 
 
 The eagle is virtually the Homeric king of birds. 
 He is in the Iliad ' the most perfect,' as well as ' the 
 strongest and swiftest of flying things ' ; his appear- 
 ances in both poems, often expressly ordained by 
 Zeus, are always momentous, and are, accordingly, 
 eagerly watched and solicitously interpreted ; more- 
 over, they never deceive; to disregard the warning 
 they convey is to rush spontaneously to destruction. 
 It is only, however, in the Twenty-fourth Iliad, usually 
 regarded as subsequent, in point of composition, to 
 the cantos embodying the primitive legend of the 
 ' Wrath of Achilles,' that the eagle begins to be 
 marked out as the special envoy of Zeus. Later, the 
 companionship became so close as to justify iEschylus 
 in implying that the bird was in lieu of a dog to the 
 * father of gods and men.' The position, on the other 
 hand, assigned, in one passage of the Odyssey, to the 
 hawk as the ' swift messenger ' of Apollo, was not 
 maintained. The Hellenic Phoebus eventually dis- 
 claimed all relationship with the hawk-headed Horus 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 143 
 
 of the Nile Valley. The rapidity, however, of the 
 hawk's flight, and his agility in the pursuit of his 
 prey, furnish our poet, again and again, with terms of 
 comparison. Here is an example, taken from the de- 
 scription of the deadly duel outside the Scaean gate. 
 
 As when a falcon, bird of swiftest flight, 
 From some high mountain top on tim'rous dove 
 Swoops fiercely down ; she, from beneath, in fear, . 
 Evades the stroke ; he, dashing through the brake, 
 Shrill- shrieking, pounces on his destin'd prey ; 
 So, wing'd with desp'rate hate, Achilles flew, 
 So Hector, flying from his keen pursuit, 
 Beneath the walls his active sinews plied. 1 
 
 In popular Eussian parlance, too, ' the hurricane 
 in the field, and the luminous hawk in the sky,' are 
 the favourite metaphors of swiftness. 2 Only that 
 Homer's falcon has no direct relations with light ; 
 and of those indirectly traceable in the one phrase 
 connecting him with Apollo, the poet himself was 
 certainly not cognisant. 
 
 Vultures always lurk behind the scenes, as it w r ere, 
 of the Homeric battle-stage. The abandonment to 
 their abhorrent offices of the bodies of the slain formed 
 one of the chief terrors of death in the field, and pre- 
 sented a much-dreaded means of enhancing the penal- 
 ties of defeat. The carrion-feeding birds perpetually 
 on the watch to descend from the clouds upon the 
 blood-stained plain of Ilium, are clearly ' griffon-vul- 
 
 1 Iliad, xxii. 139-44 (Lord Derby's trans.). 
 
 3 Gubernatis, Zoological Mythology, vol. ii. p. 193. 
 
144 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 tures/ Vultur fidvus ; but the ' bearded vulture,' Gyp- 
 aetus barbatus, the Lammergeier of the Germans, 
 which, like the eagle, pursues live prey, occasionally 
 lends, in a figure, the swoop and impetus of its flight 
 to vivify some incident of extermination. 1 Both species 
 occur in modern Greece. 2 
 
 • One of the few bits of primitive folk-lore enshrined 
 in the Iliad relates to the wars of the cranes and 
 pygmies. The passage is curious in many ways. It 
 contains the first notice of bird-migrations, implies 
 the constancy with which the ' annual voyage ' of the 
 ' prudent crane • was steered during three thousand 
 years, 3 and records the dim wonder early excited by 
 the sight and sound of that 
 
 Aery caravan, high over seas 
 Flying, and over lands with mutual wing 
 Easing their flight. 
 
 In the Iliadic lines, the clamour of the Trojan ad- 
 vance, in contrast to the determined silence of their 
 opponents, is somewhat disdainfully accentuated : 
 
 When afar through the heaven cometh pealing before them the 
 cry of the cranes, 
 
 As they flee from the wintertide storms and the measureless 
 deluging rains. 
 
 Onward with screaming they fly to the streams of the ocean- 
 flood, 
 
 Bringing down on the folk of the Pigmies battle and murder 
 and blood. 4 
 
 1 Odyssey, xxii. 302 ; Iliad, xvi. 428, xvii. 460. 
 
 2 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 134. 
 
 3 Koerner, Die Homerischc Thicrwelt, pp. 62-65. 
 * Way's Iliad, iii. 3-7. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 145 
 
 The simile is felicitously plagiarised by Virgil 
 
 in his 
 
 Quale s sub nubibus atris 
 Strymonise dant signa grues, atque aethera tranant 
 Cum sonitu, fugiuntque Notos clamore secundo, 1 
 
 but with the omission of the pygmy-element, pro- 
 bably as too childish for the mature taste of his Eoman 
 audience. Its origin may perhaps be sought in 
 obscure rumours concerning the stunted races en- 
 countered by modern travellers in Central Africa. 
 The association of ideas, however, by which they were 
 connected in a hostile sense with ' fowls o' the air ' is 
 of trackless antiquity. It partially survives in the 
 notion, current in Finland, that birds of passage 
 spend their winters in dwarf-land, ' a dweller among 
 birds ' meaning, in polite Finnish phrase, a dwarf ; 
 and bird-footed mannikins have a well-marked place in 
 German folk- stories ; 2 but the root from which these 
 withered leaves of fable once derived vitality has long- 
 ago perished. Aristotle described the ' small infantry 
 warr'd on by cranes ' as cave-dwellers near the sources 
 of the Nile ; 3 Pliny turned them into a kind of panto- 
 mime-cavalry, mounted on rams and goats, locating 
 them among the Himalayas, and conjuring up a 
 fantastic vision of their periodical descents to the sea- 
 coast, to destroy the eggs and young of their winged 
 enemies, against whom they could no otherwise hope 
 
 1 uEneid, x. 264-66. 
 
 2 Grimm and Stally brass, Teutonic Mythology, pp. 1420, 1450. 
 
 3 De Animal, Hist, lib, vii. cap. ii. ; lib. iii. cap. xii. 
 
 L 
 
146 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 to make head. 1 For such disinterested ravage as 
 was committed on their behalf by Herzog Ernst, a 
 mediaeval knight-errant smitten with compassion for 
 the miserable straits to which they were reduced by 
 the secular feud imposed upon them, could scarcely 
 be of more than millennial recurrence. 2 
 
 The Homeric wild swan is Cycnus musicus, great 
 numbers of which yearly exchange the frozen marshes 
 of the North for the ' silver lakes and rivers ' of 
 Greece and Asia Minor. But the swan of the 
 Epics sings no ' sad dirge of her certain ending.' 
 Unmelodiously exultant, she flutters with the rest 
 of the fluttering denizens of the Lydian water- 
 meadows, in a scene full of animation. 
 
 And as the many tribes of feathered birds, wild geese or 
 cranes or long-necked swans, on the Asian mead by Kaystros' 
 stream, fly hither and thither joying in their plumage, and with 
 loud cries settle ever onwards, and the mead resounds ; even so 
 poured forth the many tribes of warriors from ships and huts 
 into the Skamandrian plain. 3 
 
 Nor do the 
 
 Smaller birds with song 
 Solace the woods 
 
 of Homeric landscapes ; once only, the ' solemn 
 nightingale ' is permitted, in the story of the wait- 
 ing of Penelope, 'to pour her soft lays.' 'Even as 
 when the daughter of Pandareus,' the Ithacan queen 
 
 1 Hist. Nat. lib. vii. cap. 2. 
 
 2 Zeitschrift fiir Deatsches Altcrthiim, Bd. vii. p. 232, 
 
 3 Iliad, ii. 450-G3. 
 
HOMERIC ZOOLOGY. 147 
 
 tells the disguised Odysseus, ' the brown bright night- 
 ingale, sings sweet in the first season of the spring, 
 from her place in the thick leafage of the trees ; and 
 with many a turn and thrill she pours forth her full- 
 voiced music bewailing her child, dear Itylus, whom 
 on a time she slew with the sword unwitting, Itylus 
 the son of Zethus the prince ; even as her song, my 
 troubled soul sways to and fro.' * 
 
 Intense appreciation of the sentiment of sound is 
 here unmistakable ; yet elsewhere in the Homeric 
 poems we hear of the sharp cry of the swallow, of the 
 screams of contending vultures, the, piercing shriek of 
 the eagle, the wild paean of the hawk, the clamorous 
 vociferations of his terrified victims, but nothing of 
 the tender notes of thrush, lark, or linnet, though 
 deliciously audible throughout Greece 
 
 In spring time, when the sun with Taurus rides. 
 
 Even in the island of Calypso, where delights are 
 imaginable at will, the poplars and cypresses house 
 only such harsh-voiced birds as owls, hawks, and 
 cormorants — perhaps in order to leave the uncon- 
 tested palm for sweet singing to the nymph herself. 
 The power of song does not, indeed, appear to be, in 
 Homer's view, ' an excellent thing in woman.' It is 
 not included among the gifts of Athene, or even 
 among the graces of Aphrodite. None of his noble or 
 admirable heroines possess it. It is reserved, as part 
 
 1 Odyssey, xix, 518-24. 
 
 t 2 , 
 
148 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 of a baleful dower of fascination, for enchantresses 
 who lure men to oblivion or ruin — for Calypso, Circe, 
 and the Sirens. 
 
 The Odyssey being essentially a sea-story, the 
 prevalence in its fauna of marine species is not sur- 
 prising. Seals frequently present themselves ; coots 
 and cormorants, laughing gulls and sea-mews, dive 
 and play amid the surges that beat upon its magic 
 shores ; ospreys call and cry ; a cuttle-fish is limned 
 to the life ; Scylla has been supposed to represent a 
 magnified and monstrous cephalopod. Dolphins are 
 common to the Iliad and Odyssey, and frequent the 
 iEgean nowadays as of old. 1 Their mythical asso- 
 ciations in post-Homeric literature are, indeed, for- 
 gotten ; but the direction in which they travel, col 
 lected into shoals, helps the fishermen of Syra and 
 Melos to a rude forecast of the set of impending 
 winds. 
 
 The only significant zoological novelty, then, in 
 the Odyssey may be said to lie in its recognition of 
 the goose as a domesticated bird. The prominence 
 given by it to swine-keeping, only incidentally men- 
 tioned in the Iliad, is also noteworthy. A dissimi- 
 larity, on the other hand, in the ethical sentiment 
 towards animals displayed in the two poems — above 
 all, as regards the horse and dog — cannot fail to 
 strike a dispassionate reader ; but this has been 
 sufficiently dwelt upon in a separate chapter. The 
 
 1 Erhard, Fauna der Cycladen, p. 27. 
 
HOMEKIC ZOOLOGY. 149 
 
 remark need only here be added that the conception 
 of the dog Argos seems no less thoroughly European 
 than that of the horses of Ehesus is Asiatic. Both, 
 it is true, may have had a local origin on the same 
 side of the Hellespont, but, from the point of view of 
 moral geography, they undoubtedly belong to different 
 continents. 
 
150 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTER VI. 
 
 TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 
 
 If we can accept as tolerably complete the view of 
 early Achaean beliefs presented to us in the Iliad and 
 Odyssey, they included but few legendary associa- 
 tions with vegetable growths. The treatment of the 
 Homeric flora, like that of the Homeric fauna, is 
 essentially simple and direct. One magic herb has a 
 place in it, and the ' enchanted stem ' of the lotus 
 bears fruit of inexplicable potency over the subtly 
 compounded human organism ; but tree-worship is as 
 remote from the poet's thoughts as animal-worship, 
 and flower-myths seem equally beyond his ken. He 
 knew of no ' love-lies-bleeding ' stories interpreting 
 the passionate glow of scarlet petals ; nor of ' forget- 
 me-not ' stories fitted to the more tender sentiment of 
 azure blooms ; nor of delicate calyxes nurtured by 
 goddesses' tears; nor of any other of the wistful 
 human fancies endlessly interwined with the beautiful 
 starry apparitions of spring-tide on the blossoming 
 earth. The simplicity of his admiration for them 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 151 
 
 might, indeed, almost have incurred the disapproba- 
 tion of ultra- Wordsworthians. With the ' yellow 
 primrose ' he never had an opportunity of making 
 acquaintance, by ' the river's brim ' or elsewhere ; 
 but crocuses or hyacinths, violets or poppies, drew 
 him into no reveries ; no mystical meanings clung 
 about the images of them in his mind ; he looked at 
 them with open eyes of delight, and went his way. 
 
 The oak has been called the king of the forest, as 
 the lion the king of beasts. But its supremacy is 
 largely a thing of the past. To the early undivided 
 Aryans, it was the tree of trees. Their common name 
 for it, which survived with its original special mean- 
 ing in Celtic and Greek, came, in other languages, to 
 denote the generalised conception of a tree, showing 
 the oak to have been pre-eminent in their common 
 ancestral home. Traces of this shifting of the lin- 
 guistic standpoint are preserved in some Homeric 
 phrases. Thus, driis — etymologically identical with 
 the English tree — means, not only an oak, but, most 
 probably, the particular kind of oak familiar to us 
 in England — Quercus robur, ' the unwedgeable and 
 gnarled oak ' of Shakespeare. But the generic sig- 
 nificance gradually infused into the specific term 
 comes to the front in several of its compounds. A 
 wood-cutter, for instance, is, in the Iliad, literally an 
 ' oak-cutter,' and the ' solemn shade ' round Circe's 
 dwelling was afforded, etymologically, by an oaken 
 grove, although the meaning really conveyed by the 
 
152 FAMILIAE STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 word driuna was that of a collection of forest-trees of 
 undetermined and various kinds. In later Greek, too, 
 we find a woodpecker styled an ' oakpecker ' ; and 
 the Dryades, while in name * oak-nymphs,' were, in 
 point of fact, unrestricted in their choice of an arbo- 
 real dwelling-place. By a curious survival of associa- 
 tions, the name in modern Greek of this antique 
 forest-constituent is dendron, a tree ; yet it is now by 
 no means common in Greece. Homer's oaks were 
 mountain-reared, sturdy, proof against most contin- 
 gencies of climate. Of similar nature were Leonteus 
 and Polypoetes, of the rugged Lapith race, who indo- 
 mitably held the way into the Greek camp against 
 the mighty Asius. ' These twain,' we are told, ' stood 
 in front of the lofty gates, like high-crested oak-trees 
 in the hills, that for ever abide the wind and rain, 
 firm fixed with roots great and long.' l 
 
 The species of oak at present dominant both in 
 Greece and the Troad is the ' oak of Bashan,' Quercus 
 cegilops. Its fruit, the valonia in commercial demand 
 for tanning purposes, was made serviceable, within 
 Homer's experience, under the almost identical name 
 of balanoi, only as food for pigs. Homer's name for 
 this fine tree — extended, perhaps, to the closely allied 
 Quercus escidus — is phegos, signifying ' edible,' and 
 denoting, in other European languages, the beech. 
 How, then, did it come to be transferred, south of the 
 Ceraunian mountains, to a totally different kind of 
 
 1 Iliad, xii. 131-3-1. 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER, 153 
 
 tree ? The explanation is simple. No beeches grew 
 in the Hellenic peninsula when the first Aryan settlers 
 entered it. A word was hence left derelict, and was 
 naturally claimed by a conspicuous forest-tree, until 
 then anonymous, because unknown further north, 
 which shared with the beech its characteristic quality 
 — so the necessities of hunger caused it to be esteemed 
 — of producing fruit capable, after a fashion, of sup- 
 porting life. 1 So, in the United States, the English 
 names ' robin/ ' hemlock,' ' maple,' and probably many 
 others, were unceremoniously handed on to strange 
 species, on the strength of some casual or superficial 
 resemblances. 2 The tradition of acorn-eating con- 
 nected with the rustic Arcadians applied evidently to 
 the fruit of the valonia-oak, or one of its nearest 
 congeners; 3 and the oracular oak of Dodona, to 
 which Odysseus pretended to have hied for counsel, 
 appears to have been of the same description ; as was 
 certainly the tree of Zeus before the Scaean gate, 
 whence Apollo and Athene watched the single combat 
 between Hector and Ajax, and beneath which the 
 spear of Tlepolemus was wrenched from the flesh of 
 the fainting Sarpedon. These two are the only trees 
 divinely appropriated in Homeric verse, and they com- 
 mand but a small share of the reverence paid by Celts 
 and Teutons to their sacred oaks. 
 
 1 Schrader and Jevons, Prehistoric Antiquities of the Aryans 
 p. 273. 
 
 2 Taylor, Origin of the Aryans, p. 27. 
 
 3 Kruse, Hellas, Th. i. p. o50 ; Fraas, Synopsis, p. 252. 
 
154 FAMILIAE STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 The beech is an encroaching tree. Wherever it is 
 capable of thriving, it tends to replace the oak, which 
 has lost, apparently, a great part of its old propaga- 
 tive energy. Possibly its exposure to the attacks of 
 countless insect-enemies, from which the beech enjoys 
 immunity, may account for its comparative helpless- 
 ness in the battle for life. The beech is, at any rate, 
 now the typical tree of central Europe ; it has aided 
 in the extirpation of the ancient oak-forests of Jutland, 
 and has established itself, within the historic period, 
 in Scotland and Ireland. 1 Its habitat is, however, 
 bounded to the east by a line drawn from Konigsberg 
 on the Baltic to the Caucasus ; it is not found in the 
 Troad, or in Greece south of a track crossing the 
 peninsula from the Gulf of Arta to the Gulf of Volo. 
 It grows freely, however, on the slopes of the Mysian 
 Olympus, as well as on Mount Pelion in Thessaly. 
 At the beginning of the Macedonian era, too, Dicae- 
 archus s described the thick foliage of Pelion as pre- 
 valently beechen, though cypresses, silver firs, junipers, 
 and maples, also abounded, the last three kinds of tree 
 having since disappeared, while the beech seems to have 
 only just held its ground. 3 Its relative importance, 
 then, five hundred years earlier, is not likely to have 
 been very different ; yet Homer, who certainly knew \ 
 good deal about Pelion, whether by report, or fror 
 
 1 Selby, History of British Forest Trees, pp. 309, 319. 
 
 2 Miiller, Geographi Grceci minores, t. i. p. 106. 
 
 3 Tozer, Researches in the Highlands of Turkey, vol. ii. pp 
 122-23. 
 
TEEES AND FLO WEES IN HOMER 155 
 
 observation, never mentions the beech. It is true 
 that we cannot argue with any confidence from omis- 
 sion to ignorance. An epic is not an encyclopaedia. 
 The illustrations employed in it are not necessarily 
 exhaustive of all that the poet's world contains. We 
 can, then, be certain of nothing more than that 
 Homer's idea of a typical forest did not include the 
 beech. Its appearance, then, in the following spirited 
 lines from Mr. Way's excellent translation of the Iliad, 
 has no warrant in the original, where the third kind 
 of tree mentioned is the phegos, or valonia-oak. 
 
 And as when the East -wind and South- wind in stormy conten- 
 tion strive 
 
 In the glens of a mountain, a deep dark forest to rend and rive, 
 
 Scourging the smooth -stemmed cornel-tree, and the beech and 
 the ash, 
 
 While against each other their far-spreading branches swing and 
 dash 
 
 With unearthly din, and ever the shattering limbs of them crash. 1 
 
 The ash, on the other hand, though abundant on 
 
 many Greek mountains, no longer waves along the 
 
 ridgy heights of Pelion. Yet it was here that the 
 
 ashen shaft of the great Pelidean spear was cut by the 
 
 Centaur Chiron. For in the Homeric account of the 
 
 arming of Patroclus, after we have been told of his 
 
 equipment with the shield, cuirass, and formidably 
 
 nodding helmet of Achilles, it is recounted : 
 
 Then seized he two strong lances that fitted his grasp, only 
 he took not the spear of the noble son of Aiakos, heavy, and 
 
 1 Way's Iliad, xvi. 765-69. 
 
156 FAMILIAE STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 huge, and stalwart, that none other of the Achaians could wield, 
 but Achilles alone availed to wield it : even the ashen Pelian 
 spear that Chiron gave to his father dear, from the crown of 
 Pelion, to be the bane of heroes. 1 
 
 The shaft in question could certainly have been hewn 
 nowhere else ; the fact of the Centaur's residence 
 being attested, to this day, by the visibility of the 
 cavern inhabited by him, dilapidated, it is true, 
 but undeniable. 2 Here, surely, is evidence to convince 
 the most sceptical. Its conclusive force is scarcely 
 inferior to that of the testimony borne by the graves 
 of Hamlet and Ophelia at Elsinore to the reality of 
 the tragic endings of those distraught personages. 
 
 The Homeric epithet, ' quivering with leaves/ is 
 fully justified, Mr. Tozer informs us, 3 by the dense 
 clothing of all the heights and hollows of Chiron's 
 mountain with beech and oak, chestnut and plane- 
 trees, besides evergreen under -garments of myrtle, 
 arbutus, and laurel-bushes. Yet the ash, as we have 
 said, is missing, nor have the pines felled to build the 
 good ship ' Argo - 4 left, it would seem, any repre- 
 sentatives. 
 
 In the Iliad and Odyssey, too, pine-wood is the 
 approved material for nautical constructions. It was 
 probably derived from the mountain-loving silver-fir, 
 some grand specimens of which grew nevertheless con- 
 veniently near the sea-shore in remote Ogygia, and 
 
 1 Iliad, xvi. 139-44. 2 Tozer, Researches, vol. ii. p. 126. 
 
 3 lb. p. 122. ■ Medea, 3. 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 157 
 
 provided ' old Laertes' son ' with material for his 
 rapidly and skilfully built raft. Homer distinguishes, 
 in a loose way, at least two species of pine, but their 
 identification in particular cases is to a great extent 
 arbitrary. The trees, for instance, employed in con- 
 junction with ' high-crested ' oaks, to fence round the 
 court-yard of Polyphemus, may have been the pic- 
 turesque stonepines of South Italy, but they may just 
 as well, or better, have been maritime pines, such as 
 spring up everywhere along the sandy flats of modern 
 Greece. 1 The stone-pine was sacred to Cybele. 2 Her 
 husband, Atys, was transformed into one, with the 
 result of bringing her as near the verge of madness 
 as might be consistent with her venerable dignity ; 
 for actually bereft of reason a goddess presumably 
 cannot be. This, however, was a post-Homeric legend, 
 and a post-Homeric association. 
 
 What might be called the ornamental part of the 
 Ogygian groves consisted of black poplars, aromatic 
 cypresses, and alders. Indigenous there, likewise, 
 although heard of only as supplying perfumed fire- 
 wood, were the ' cedar ' and ' thuon,' split logs of 
 which blazed within the fragrant cavern where 
 Calypso was found by Hermes tunefully singing while 
 she plied the shuttle. The cedar here mentioned, 
 however, was no ' cedar of Lebanon,' but a description 
 of juniper which attains the full dimensions of a tree 
 
 1 Daubeny, Trees of the Ancients, p. 19. 
 - Pierbach, Flora Mythologica, p. 42. 
 
158 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 in the lands bordering on the Levant. 1 The resinous 
 wood yielded by it was highly valued by the Homeric 
 Greeks for its ' grateful smell ' ; store-rooms for 
 precious commodities, and the ' perfumed apartments 
 of noble ladies were constructed of it. This, at least, 
 is expressly stated of Hecuba's chamber, and can be 
 inferred of Helen's and Penelope's. The thuon, or 
 ' wood of sacrifice,' burnt with cedar-wood on Calypso's 
 hearth, was identified by Pliny with the African 
 citrus, extravagantly prized for decorative furniture 
 in Imperial Kome, and thought to be represented by 
 a coniferous tree called Thuya articidata, now met 
 w T ith in Algeria. 2 
 
 The trees shadowing, in the Odyssey, the entrance 
 by the ' deep-flowing Ocean ' to the barren realm of 
 death, 3 appear to have been selected for that position 
 owing to a supposed incapacity for ripening fruit. 
 The grove in question was composed of ' lofty poplars ' 
 and ' seed-shedding willows ' ; and poplars and wil- 
 lows were alike deemed sterile and, because sterile, 
 of evil omen. 4 Even among ourselves, the willow 
 retains a dismal significance, and it is prominent in 
 Chinese funeral rites. 5 The black poplar continued 
 to the end sacred to Persephone ; but its connexion 
 with Hades, in the traditions of historic Greece, was 
 
 1 Buehholz, Realien, Bel. i. Abth. ii. p. 232. 
 
 2 Daubeny, op. cit. pp. 40-42. 3 Odyssey, x. 510. 
 
 4 Hayman's ed. of the Odyssey, vol. ii. p. 174 ; Pliny, Hist. Nat. 
 xvi. 46. 
 
 5 Gubernatis, Mythologic des Plantes, t. ii. p. 337. 
 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 159 
 
 less explicit than that of the white poplar (Papains 
 alba). This last tree, called by Homer achero'is, had 
 its especial habitat on the shores of the Acheron in 
 Thesprotia, whence, as Pausanias relates, 1 it was 
 brought to the Peloponnesus by Hercules ; and the 
 same hero, in a variant of the story, returned crowned 
 with poplar from his successful expedition to Hades. 
 In the Odyssey the white poplar does not occur, and 
 in the Iliad only in a simile employed to render more 
 impressive, first the collapse of Asius under the stroke 
 of Idomeneus, and again the overthrow of Sarpedon 
 by Patroclus. 'And he fell, as an oak falls, or a 
 poplar, or tall pine tree, that craftsmen have felled on 
 the hills, with new- whetted axes.' 2 
 
 The author of the Iliad ascribes no under-world 
 relationships either to the white or to the black 
 poplar. His sole funereal tree is the elm. Kelating 
 the misfortunes of her family, Andromache says : 
 
 Fell Achilles' hand 
 My sire Aetion slew, what time his arms 
 The populous city of Cilicia raz'd, 
 The lofty-gated Thebes ; he slew indeed, 
 But stripp'd him not ; he reverenc'd the dead ; 
 And o'er his body, with his armour burnt, 
 A mound erected, and the mountain-nymphs, . 
 The progeny of aegis-bearing Jove, 
 Planted around his tomb a grove of elms. 8 
 
 Now the elm, like the poplar and willow, had, from 
 
 1 Descriptio GrcecicB, v. 14. * Iliad, xiii. 389 ; xvi. 482-84. 
 
 3 Lord Derby's Iliad, vi. 414-20. 
 
160 FAMTLIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 of old, the not -unfounded reputation of partial 
 sterility, and was for this reason made the legendary 
 abode of dreams 1 — things without progeny or pur- 
 pose, that passing ' leave not a rack behind.' Virgil's 
 giant elm in the vestibule of Orcus, 
 
 Quam sedem Somnia vulgo 
 Vana tenere ferunt, foliisque sub omnibus hserent, 
 
 is the literary embodiment of this popular idea. Evi- 
 dently, then, the trees of mourning in the Iliad and 
 Odyssey were singled out owing to their possession of 
 a common, though by no means obvious peculiarity ; 
 yet their selection in each poem is different. This is 
 the more remarkable because associations of the sort, 
 once established, are almost ineradicable from what 
 we may call tribal consciousness. Cypresses have 
 no share in them, so far as Homer is concerned. 
 Their appointment to the office of mourning the dead 
 would seem to have been subsequently resolved upon. 
 The connexion was, at any rate, well established 
 before the close of the classic age, when funeral- 
 pyres were made by preference of cypress wood, the 
 tree itself being consecrated to the hated Dis. 2 And 
 Pausanias met with groves of cypresses surrounding 
 the tomb of Lais near Corinth, and of Alcmseon, 
 son of the ill-fated seer Amphiaraus, at Psophis in 
 Arcadia. 3 The tradition survives, nowadays in the 
 East, in the planting of Turkish cemeteries. 
 
 1 Dierbach, Flora Mythologica, p. 34. - lb. p. 49. 
 
 3 Dcscriptio Gycbcicp, ii. 2, viii. 24. 
 
 
TEEES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 161 
 
 The vegetation along the shores of the Scamander 
 
 (now the Mendereh) has undergone, so far as can be 
 
 judged, singularly little alteration during nearly three 
 
 thousand years. Homer sings of 
 
 the willows, elms, and tamarisk shrubs, 
 The lotus, and the reeds, and galingal, 
 Which by the lovely river grew profuse. 1 
 
 And there they have continued' to grow. The 
 swampy district below Hissarlik bristles with reeds 
 and bulrushes ; the whole plain is thick with trefoil 
 (the ' lotus ' of the Iliad) ; while the banks of the 
 famous stream, once choked with Trojan dead, are 
 fringed — Dr. Virchow relates — with double rows of 
 willows intermixed with tamarisks and young elms. 
 If no such robust trunk is now to be seen as that of 
 the elm-tree, by the help of which Achilles struggled 
 out of the raging torrent, the deficiency is accidental, 
 not inherent. Potential trees are kept perpetually in 
 the twig stage by the unsparing ravages of camels and 
 browsing goats. To judge of the former sylvan state 
 of the Troad, one must ascend the valley of the 
 Thymbrius — the modern Kimar Su. 2 There the 
 valonia oak, the ilex, the plane, and the hornbeam, 
 attain a fine stature ; pine-groves clothe the declivi- 
 ties ; hazel-bushes and arbutus, hops and wild vines, 
 trail over the rocks, and cluster in the hollows. Along 
 the Asmak, dense growths of asphodel send up flower- 
 stalks reaching a horse's withers ; the elm-bushes are 
 
 1 Lord Derby's Iliad, xxi. 350-52. 
 - Berlin. Abhandlungen, 1879, p. 71. 
 
162 FAMILIAE STUDIES IK HOMER. 
 
 entangled with roses and arums ; the turf is sprinkled 
 with coronilla, dandelion, starry trefoil, red silene ; 
 fields are sheeted white with the blossoms of the 
 water-ranunculus ; the ' flowery Scamandrian plain ' 
 that gladdened the eyes of the ancient bard is still 
 visibly spread out before the traveller of to-day. 
 Homer, indeed, as Dr. Virchow remarks, knew a good 
 deal more about the Troad than most of his critics, 
 even if he did, on occasions, subordinate topographical 
 accuracy to poetical exigency. 
 
 The plane-tree nowhere shows to more splendid 
 advantage than in Greece and Asia Minor ; but the 
 only specimen commemorated in the Greek epics 
 grew at Aulis, and sheltered the altar upon which the 
 hecatombs of the expeditionary force were offered 
 during the time of waiting terminated by the sacrifice 
 of Iphigenia. It was the scene, too, of a portent ; 
 for one day, in full view of the astonished Achaeans, a 
 serpent crept up its trunk to devour the nine callow 
 inmates of a sparrow's nest among its branches, and 
 on the completion of a sufficiently ample meal by the 
 deglutition of the mother-bird, was then and there 
 turned into stone. 1 The decade of consumed sparrows 
 — mother and chicks — signified, according to the ii 
 terpretation of Calchas, the ten years of the siege 
 Troy ; and the reality of the event was attested to later 
 generations by the display, in the temple of Artemis 
 at Aulis, of some wood from the identical tree within 
 
 1 Iliad, ii. 305-29. 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 163 
 
 the living compass of whose branches it had occurred. 1 
 Had the petrified snake been producible as well, the 
 evidence would have been complete. 
 
 The legendary plane-tree had, however, when 
 Pausanias visited Aulis, been replaced by a group of 
 palms imported from Syria, the nearest home of the 
 species, whence the Phoenicians had not failed to 
 transport it westward. It accordingly, as being de- 
 rived from the same prolific source of novelties, shared 
 the name * Phoenix ' with the brilliant colour produced 
 by the Tyrian dye. But its introduction seems to 
 belong to the later Achaean age. For the palm is un- 
 known in the Iliad, and emerges only once in the 
 Odyssey, 2 although then with particular emphasis. 
 The individual tree seen by Homer was probably the 
 first planted on Greek soil. It spread its crown of 
 leaves above the shrine of Apollo, at Delos. And when 
 the storm-tossed Odysseus set his wits to work to win 
 the protection of Nausicaa — a matter of life or death 
 to him at the moment — he could think of no more 
 Battering comparison for the youthful stateliness of 
 her aspect, than to the vivid upspringing grace of the 
 tall, arboreal exotic. A tradition, not reported by 
 Homer, who nowhere localises the birth of a god, 
 asserted Apollo to have come into the world beneath 
 that very tree, or one of its predecessors in the same 
 spot ; and it still had successors in the xiugusfcan age. 3 
 
 1 Pausanias, ix. 20. 2 Odyssey, vi. 162. 
 
 3 Hayman's Odyssey, vol. i. p. 22G. 
 
 m 2 
 
164 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER, 
 
 The laurel, although exceedingly common in 
 Greece, is found only in one of the semi-fabulous 
 regions of the Homeric world. The entrance to the 
 cavern of Polyphemus was shaded by its foliage, not 
 as yet sacred to the sun-god. Equally detached from 
 relationship to Athene is the olive, with which, how- 
 ever, acquaintance is implied both in its wild and 
 cultivated varieties. The latter Pindar asserts to 
 have been introduced into his native country, from 
 the 'dark sources of the Ister,' by Hercules, 1 who 
 showed unexpected skill in the difficult art of accli- 
 matisation ; and the value in which it was held can 
 readily be gathered from the following beautiful 
 simile : 
 
 As when a man reareth some lusty sapling of an olive in a 
 clear space where water springeth plenteously, a goodly shoot 
 fair-growing ; and blasts of all winds shake it, yet it bursteth 
 into white blossom ; then suddenly cometh the wind of a great 
 hurricane and wresteth it out of its abiding-place and stretcheth 
 it out upon the earth ; even so lay Panthoos' son, Euphorbos of 
 the good ashen spear, when Menelaos, Atreus' son, had slain 
 him, and despoiled him of his arms.- 
 
 ,. 
 
 Olive-wood was the favourite material for axe 
 handles and clubs ; and the bed of Odysseus was 
 carved by himself out of an olive-tree still rooted 
 within a chamber of his palace. 3 In the modern 
 Ithaca, the olive alone of all the trees that once 
 flourished there has resisted extirpation, and every- 
 
 Olymp. iii. 25-32. - Iliad, xvii. 53-60. 
 
 3 Odyssey, xxiii. 190. 
 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 165 
 
 where in the Ionian Islands attains a size entitling 
 its assemblages to rank as forests, rather than as 
 mere groves. 1 Thus, the olive planted at the head of 
 the bay where Odysseus landed after his long wander- 
 ings, was ' wide-spreading ' in point of simple fact, 
 needing no poetical licence to make it so. Olive-oil 
 does not appear to have been then in culinary employ- 
 ment ; its chief use was for anointing the body after 
 bathing. This indispensable luxury w r as provided 
 for, in opulent establishments, by laying up a goodly 
 stock of oil among such household treasures as were 
 entrusted by Penelope to the care of^Eurycleia. 2 
 
 The Homeric poems contain no allusion to the 
 perfume of either flowers or fruit. This is the more 
 surprising from the extreme sensitiveness betrayed 
 in them to olfactory impressions of other kinds. We 
 hear of ' scented apartments,' ' sweet-smelling gar- 
 ments,' of the aromatic quality of the cypress, of the 
 spicy air wafted through Calypso's island from the 
 juniper and citron-logs serving her for fuel, even of 
 the barely appreciable fragrance of olive-oil. Offensive 
 odours excite corresponding horror. Menelaus and 
 his comrades were utterly unable to endure, without 
 the solace of an ambrosial antidote, the ' ancient and 
 fish-like smell ' of the sealskins disguised in which 
 they lay in wait for Proteus, under the tutelary 
 guidance of the sea-nymph Eidothea, his scarcely 
 
 1 Schliemann, quoted in Hayman's Odyssey, vol. iii. p. 15. 
 
 2 Odyssey, ii. 339 
 
16f) R-YMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 dutiful daughter. The Spartan king, relating the 
 
 incident to Telemachus, was confident of meeting 
 
 with fellow-feeling when he said : 
 
 There would our ambush have been most terrible, for the 
 deadly stench of the sea-bred seals distressed us sore ; nay, who 
 would lay him down by a beast of the sea ? But herself she 
 wrought deliverance, and devised a great comfort. She took 
 ambrosia of a very sweet savour, and set it beneath each man's 
 nostril, and did away with the stench of the beast. 1 
 
 As we read, the tradition that Homer's last days 
 were prolonged by the perfume of an apple, grows 
 intelligible. And yet the balmy breath of Pierian 
 violets and Cilician crocuses drew no comment from 
 him ! 
 
 The flowers distinctively noticed by him are : 
 poppies, hyacinths, crocuses, violets, and, by implica- 
 tion, roses and white lilies. And it is somewhat re- 
 markable that, while all the items of this not very 
 long list can be collected from the Iliad, only two of 
 them recur in any shape in the Odyssey. The former 
 poem recognises the artificial cultivation of the poppy, 
 probably, as we shall see, for gastronomic purposes, 
 since there could be no question at that epoch, in 
 Greece or Asia Minor, of the preparation of opium. 
 The death, by an arrow-shot from the bow of Teucrus, 
 of the youthful Gorgythion, son of Priam and Cas- 
 tianeira, is thus described. 
 
 Even as in a garden a poppy droopeth its head aside, being 
 
 1 Odyssey, iv. 441-46, and Hayman's notes. 
 
 il 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 167 
 
 heavy with fruit and the showers of spring, so bowed he aside 
 his head laden with his helm. 1 
 
 Crimson poppies now bloom freely along the 
 Mendereh valley ; they were symbolical, in classical 
 Greece, of fruitfulness, love, and death, and were 
 associated with the cult of Demeter. 2 Their fabled 
 origin from the tears of Aphrodite for the death of 
 Adonis, was shared with anemones. 
 
 Mount Gargarus, the loftiest peak of Ida, blos- 
 somed, according to the Iliad, with hyacinths, crocuses, 
 and lotus. This last term designates, however, not 
 the lily of the Nile, but a kind of clover, much 
 relished by the steeds, not only of heroic, but 01 
 immortal owners. The fragrant yellow flowers borne 
 by it are not expressly adverted to ; the function of 
 the Homeric lotus-grass was rather to supply herbage 
 than to evoke delight. 
 
 The identification of the hyacinth of Mount Ida 
 has employed much learning and ingenuity, and the 
 result of learned discussions is not always unanimity 
 of opinion. The case in point is indeed very nearly 
 one of quot homines, tot sententice. The gladiolus, 
 larkspur, iris, the Martagon lily, the common hyacinth, 
 have all had advocates, each of whom considers his 
 case to be of convincing, not to say, of irresistible 
 strength. The last-mentioned and most obvious so- 
 lution of the problem is that favoured by Buchholz, 3 
 
 1 Iliad, viii. 306-308. 2 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 250. 
 3 Loc. cit.v. 219. 
 
lf)8 1WMILTAK STUDIES IN BOMEfc. 
 
 and he supports it with the reasonable surmise that 
 the epithet * hyacin thine,' applied to the locks of Odys- 
 seus, referred, not to colour, but to form, their 
 closely-set curls recalling forcibly enough the ring- 
 leted effect of the congregated flowerets. The dry 
 soil of Greece is particularly suitable to the hyacinth, 
 sundry kinds of which — one of them so deeply blue 
 as to be nearly black — are found all over the Pe- 
 loponnesus, in the Ionian islands, and high up on 
 the outlying bulwarks of Olympus. 1 The 'flower of 
 Ajax,' legibly inscribed with an interjection of woe, 
 sprang up for the first time in Salamis, it was said, 
 just after the hero it commemorated had met his 
 tragic fate. 2 Another story connected it similarly with 
 the death of Hyacinthus ; and it was probably iden- 
 tical with the scarlet gladiolus (Gladiolus byzantinus), 
 almost certainly with the suave rubens hyacinthus of 
 the Third Eclogue, but not with the Homeric hya- 
 cinth, which is undistinguished in folklore. 
 
 The * violet-crowned ' Athenians of old, could they 
 recross the Styx to wander by the Ilissus, would be 
 struck with at least one unwelcome change. For 
 violets no longer grow in Attica. They are neverthe- 
 less found, although sparingly, in most other parts 
 of Greece, and up to an elevation of two thousand 
 feet on the slopes of Parnassus. Homer often men- 
 tions them allusively, but introduces them directly 
 only once, and then, as Fraas has remarked, in 
 
 1 Kruse, Hellas, Th. i. p. 359. ■ Pausanias, i. 35. 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMEK. 100 
 
 the incongruous company of the marsh-loving wild 
 parsley (Apium palustre). 1 Unjustifiable from a bo- 
 tanical point of view, the conjunction may have had 
 an aesthetic motive. In the festal garlands of classic 
 Greece, violets and parsley were commonly associated, 
 and their association was perhaps dictated by a sur- 
 vival of the taste displayed in the embellishment of 
 Calypso's well-watered meadow. 
 
 Homeric violets, at any rate, flourished nowhere 
 else ostensibly; but from their modest retirement 
 within the poet's mind supplied him with a colour- 
 epithet, which he employed, one might make bold to 
 say, without over-nice discrimination. The sea might 
 indeed, under certain aspects, be fitly so described ; 
 but iron makes a very distant approach to the hue 
 indicated ; and Nature must have been in her most 
 sportive mood when she clothed the flock of Poly- 
 phemus in violet fleeces. Polyphemus, to be sure, 
 lived in a semi-fabulous world, where it has been sug- 
 gested 2 that wool might conceivably grow dyed, as in 
 the restored Saturnian kingdom imagined by Virgil ; 3 
 and the dark-blue material attached to Helen's golden 
 distaff 4 was evidently a far-travelled rarity, such as 
 might be produced by the use of a foreign dye. But 
 there is no evidence of primitive acquaintance with a 
 blue dye ; indeed, if one had been known, it is practi- 
 
 1 Synopsis Plantarum, p. 114 ; Hayman's Odyssey, vol. i. p. 175. 
 
 2 Hayman's Odyssey, vol. ii. p. 116. 3 Eel. iv. 42. 
 
 4 Odyssey, iv. 135. 
 
170 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 cally certain that the colour due to it would have 
 been named, either, like indigo, from the substance 
 affording it, or, like ' Tyrian ' purple, from its place of 
 origin. The hue of the violet, however, as it appeared 
 to Homer, does not bear to be more distinctly denned 
 than as dusky, while with Virgil it was frankly black. 
 
 Et nigrae violae sunt, et vaccinia nigra. 
 Not preternaturally blue, but naturally black sheep, 
 may then be concluded to have been tended by the 
 Cyclops. 
 
 The crocus of Mount Ida — the crocus that ' brake 
 like fire ' at the feet of the three Olympian competi- 
 tors for the palm of beauty — was the splendid golden 
 flower (Crocus sativus) yielding, through its orange- 
 coloured stigmas, a dye once deemed magnificent, a 
 perfume ranked amongst the choicest luxuries of Borne, 
 and a medicine in high ancient and mediaeval repute. 
 But its vogue has passed. Saffron slippers are no 
 longer an appanage of supreme dignity ; the ' saffron 
 wings ' of Iris are folded ; the ' saffron robes ' of the 
 Dawn retain the glamour only of what they signify ; 
 to the chymist and the cook, the antique floral ingre- 
 dient, so long and so extravagantly prized, is of very 
 subordinate importance. 
 
 Both the word ' crocus ' and its later equivalent 
 1 saffron,' are of Semitic origin. Witness the Hebrew 
 form karkom of the first, 1 the Arabic sahafaran of the 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, op. cit. p. 199 ; De Candolle, however, 
 inclines to believe that carthamine, not saffron, is indicated by the 
 Hebrew karkom {Origin of Cultivated Plants, p. 166), 
 
 
TREES AND FLOWEKR IN HOMER 171 
 
 second, developed out of assfar, yellow, and repre- 
 sented by the Spanish azafran, whence our ' saffron.' 
 The plant was widely and profitably cultivated under 
 Moorish rule in Spain, and was probably introduced 
 by the Phoenicians into Greece, though the common 
 vernal crocus is certainly indigenous there, its white 
 and purple cups begemming all the declivities of 
 ' Hellas and Argos.' The saffron-crocus, too, now 
 grows wild in such dry and chalky soil as Sunium 
 and Hymettus afford ; ] yet its name betrays its 
 foreign affinities. Saffron-tinted garments had per- 
 haps never, down to Homer's time, been seen in 
 Greece itself; he was beyond doubt unacquainted 
 with the actual use of the dye, and distributed with 
 the utmost parsimony the splendour conferred by it. 
 Not only were mere mortals excluded from a share in 
 it, neither Hecuba nor Helen owning a crocus-bor- 
 dered peplos, but none such set off the formidable 
 charms of the goddess-hostesses of Odysseus, in the 
 fairy isles where he lingered, home-sick amid strange 
 luxury. Saffron robes are, in fact, assigned by the 
 poet of the Iliad, exclusively to Eos, the Dawn, while 
 in the Odyssey, the crocus is never referred to, directly 
 or indirectly. 
 
 Some centuries after the material part of Homer 
 
 had been reduced to 
 
 A drift of white 
 Dust in a cruse of gold, 
 
 1 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 220, 
 
172 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 crocus-coloured tresses came poetically into fashion. 
 The daughters of Celeus, in the Hymn to Demeter, 
 were endowed with them ; Ariadne at Naxos, too, 
 besides other mythical maidens. And Eoman ladies 
 realised the idea of employing saffron as a hair-dye, the 
 stern disapproval of Tertullian and Saint Jerome not- 
 withstanding. 1 The scent of the crocus was made 
 part of the pleasures of the amphitheatre by the diffu- 
 sion among the audience of saffron-wine in the finest 
 possible spray, and Heliogabalus habitually bathed in 
 saffron-water. The flower, too, was noted by Pliny 
 with the rose, lily, and violet, for its delicious fra- 
 grance, 2 Homer's apparent insensibility to which may 
 well suggest a doubt whether, after all, he knew the 
 late-blooming, golden crocus otherwise than by repu- 
 tation. 
 
 As regards the rose and the lily, the doubt becomes 
 wellnigh certainty. Both gave rise to Homeric epi- 
 thets ; neither takes in the Homeric poems a concrete 
 form. The Iranic derivation of their Greek names, 
 rhodon and leirion, shows the native home of each of 
 these matchless blossoms to have been in Persia. 3 
 Thence, according to M. Hehn, they travelled through 
 Armenia and Phrygia into Thrace, and eventually, by 
 that circuitous route, reached Greece proper. Com- 
 memorative myths strewed the track of their progres- 
 sive transmissions. Thus, the mountain Ehodope in 
 
 1 Syme, English Botany, vol. ix. p. 151. 2 Hist. Nat. xxi. 17. 
 3 Hehn, op. cit. p. 189. 
 
TEEES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 173 
 
 Thrace took its name from a 'rosy-footed ' attendant 
 upon Persephone, in the ' crocus-purple hour ' of her 
 capture by ' gloomy Dis ; ' and in the same vicinity 
 were located the Nyssean Fields — the scene of the 
 disaster — then, for a snare of enticement to the 
 damsel, ablaze with roses and lilies, ' a marvel to 
 behold,' with narcissus, -crocuses, violets, and hya- 
 cinths. 1 Moreover, roses, each with sixty leaves, and 
 highly perfumed, were said to blossom spontaneously 
 in the Emathian gardens of King Midas ; 2 Theo- 
 phrastus places near Philippi the original habitat of 
 the hundred-leaved rose ; and roses were profusely 
 employed in the rites of Phrygian nature-worship. 
 
 Dim rumours of their loveliness spread among 
 the Homeric Greeks. The standing Odyssean de- 
 signation of Eos as ' rosy-fingered,' alternating, in 
 the Iliad, with ' saffron-robed,' heralded, it might be 
 said, the European advent of the flower itself. For 
 rose-gardens can have lain only just below the Ho- 
 meric horizon. Their ambrosial products did not 
 indeed come within mortal reach, but were at the dis- 
 posal of the gods. By the application of oil of roses, 
 Aphrodite kept the body of Hector fresh and fair 
 during the twelve days of its savage maltreatment by 
 Achilles ; and oil of roses was later an accredited 
 antiseptic. Archilochus seems to have been the first 
 Greek poet to make living acquaintance with the 
 blushing flower of Dionysus and Aphrodite, which 
 
 1 Hymn to Demeter. ~ Herodotus, viii. 138. 
 
174 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 became known likewise only to the writers of the later 
 books of Scripture. The ' Eose of Sharon ' is accord- 
 ingly believed to have been a narcissus. 
 
 Allusions to the lily do not occur in the Odyssey, 
 and are vague and ill-defined in the Iliad. The flesh 
 of Ajax might intelligibly, if not appropriately, be 
 designated ' lily-like ' ; but the same term applied to 
 sounds conveys little or no meaning to our minds. 
 Even if we admit a far-fetched analogy between the 
 song of the Muses, as something uncommon and 
 tenderly beautiful, and a fragile white flower, we have 
 to confess ourselves bewildered by the extension of 
 the comparison to the shrill voices of cicadas, rasping 
 out their garrulous contentment amidst summer 
 foliage. 
 
 The slenderness, then, of Homer's acquaintance 
 with the finer kinds of bloom introduced gradually 
 from the East, is apparent from his seeming ignorance 
 of their ravishing perfumes, no less than from the 
 inadequacy of his hints as to their beauty of form and 
 colour. His love of flowers was in the instinctive 
 stage ; it had not come to the maturity of self-con 
 sciousness. They obtained recognition from hi: 
 neither as symbols of feeling, nor as accessories t< 
 enjoyment. Nausicaa wove no garlands; the culti 
 vation of flowers in the gardens of Alcinous is left 
 doubtful; Laertes pruned his pear-trees, and dug 
 round his vines, but reared for his solace not so much 
 as a poppy. No display of living jewellery aided the 
 
 
 
TREES AND FLOWERS IN HOMER. 175 
 
 seductions of Circe's island ; Calypso was content to 
 plant the unpretending violet ; Aphrodite herself was 
 without a floral badge; floral decorations of every 
 kind were equally unthought of. Flowers, in fact, 
 had not yet been brought within the sphere of human 
 sentiment ; they had not yet acquired significance as 
 emblems of human passion ; they had not yet been 
 made partners with humanity in the sorrows of death, 
 and the transient pleasures of a troubled and ephe- 
 meral existence. 
 
176 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 CHAPTEE VII. 
 
 HOMERIC MEALS. 
 
 Heroic appetites were strong and simple. They 
 craved 'much meat,' and could be completely ap- 
 peased with nothing else ; but they demanded little 
 more. They needed no savoury caresses or spicy 
 blandishments. Occasion indeed to stimulate them 
 there was none, though much difficulty might arise 
 about satisfying them. For they disdained paltry 
 subterfuges. Fish, game, and vegetables they ac- 
 cepted in lieu of more substantial prey; but under 
 protest. Hunger, in consenting to receive such trifles, 
 merely compounded for a partial settlement of her 
 claim. 
 
 The Homeric bill of fare was concise, and admitted 
 of slight diversification. Day after day, and at meal 
 after meal, roast meat, bread, and wine were set 
 before perennially eager guests, in whose esteem any 
 fundamental change in the materials of the banquet 
 would certainly have been for the worse. Variety, in 
 fact, was in the inverse ratio of abundance. Want 
 
 . 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 177 
 
 alone counselled departures from the beaten track 
 of opulent feasting, and compelled the reluctant 
 adoption of inadequate expedients for silencing the 
 imperative outcries of famine. Nevertheless it can- 
 not be supposed that the epical setting forth of 
 Achaean culinary resources was as exhaustive as the 
 menu of a Guildhall dinner. For where would be 
 the ' swiftness ' of a narrative which could not leave 
 so much as a dish of beans to the imagination ? 
 Homeric criticism is indeed everywhere complicated 
 by the necessity of admitting wide gaps of silence ; 
 and in this particular department, so much evidently 
 remains in those gaps, that our list of comestibles 
 must be to a great extent inferential. 
 
 'Butcher's meat' (as we call it) was the staple 
 food of Greek heroes. Oxen, however, were not reck- 
 lessly slaughtered. < Great meals of beef ' usually 
 honoured solemn occasions. The fat beasts, reckoned 
 to be in their prime at five years old, met their fate 
 for the most part in connexion with some expiatory 
 ceremony, as that employed to stay the pestilence in 
 the First Iliad, or as the sacrifice for victory offered 
 by Agamemnon in the Second Iliad. The gods were 
 then served first with tit-bits wrapped in fat, and 
 reduced by fire to ashes and steamy odours, pecu- 
 liarly grateful to immortal nostrils. Portions of the 
 haunches were often chosen for this purpose; the 
 tongue might be added ; while at other times, 
 samples of the whole carcass at large seemed pre- 
 
 U 
 
178 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 ferable. What remained was cut up into small pieces 
 after a fashion still prevailing in Albania, 1 and these, 
 having been filed upon spits, were rapidly grilled. 
 Thickly strewn with barley-meal, they were then 
 distributed by a steward, and eaten with utensils of 
 nature's providing. Specially honoured guests had 
 pieces from the chine — ' perpetuitergo bovis' — allotted 
 to them ; and they might, if they chose, share their 
 1 booty ' (so it was designated) with any other to 
 whom they desired to pass on the compliment, as 
 Odysseus did to Demodocus at the Phaeacian feast. 
 The glad recipients of these greasy favours were 
 obviously exempt from modern fastidiousness. 
 
 Sheep and goats were prepared for table precisely 
 in the same way with oxen, and so likewise were 
 pigs, save that they were not divested of their skins. 
 i Cracklings ' were already appreciated. Eoast pork 
 appears, in the Iliad, only on the hospitable board 
 of Achilles; but is less exclusively apportioned 
 in the Odyssey. A brace of sucking-pigs were in- 
 stantly killed and cooked by Eumaeus, the swine- 
 herd of Odysseus, on the arrival of his disguised 
 master. Yet he was very far from estimating at 
 their true value the tender merits of the dish 
 celebrated by Elia as perfectly ' satisfactory to the 
 criticalness of the censorious palate,' actually apolo- 
 gising for it as ' servants' fare,' wholly unacceptable 
 to the haughty Suitors, for whose profuse entertain- 
 
 ' E. F. Knight, Albania, p. 225, 1880, 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 179 
 
 ment a full-grown porker had to be daily sacrificed. 
 Each man, however, despatched his pig, and was 
 shortly ready for more. And so captivated was 
 Eumseus, by the time his four underlings returned 
 from the fields for supper, with his outwardly sorry 
 guest, that, enlarging the bounds of his liberality, he 
 ordered the slaughter of a noble hog, whose adipose 
 perfections had been ripening during full five years of 
 life. His cooking was promptly executed, and one 
 share having been set aside for the local nymphs, the 
 six men fell to, and left only such scraps as served 
 for an early breakfast next morning. The perfor- 
 mance w r ould have been creditable in modern Somali- 
 land. 
 
 Every Homeric hero was an accomplished butcher, 
 and no despicable cook. Both offices were, indeed, too 
 closely connected with religious ritual to have any 
 note of degradation attached to them. Thus, animals 
 were habitually understood to be * sacrificed,' not 
 killed in the purely carnal sense, and the preparation 
 of their flesh for table was formalised as part of the 
 ceremony of worship. The Suitors were marked out 
 as a reckless and impious crew by discarding all 
 sacerdotal functions from their meal-time operations; 
 yet they reserved to themselves, as if it belonged to 
 their superior station, the pleasing duty of cutting 
 the throats of the beasts they were about to devour, 
 passing with the least possible delay from the shambles 
 to the banqueting-hall, 
 
 N 2 
 
180 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 .. Homeric culinary art perhaps really covered a 
 wider range than is attributed to it in the Poems, 
 where it is designedly represented under a quasi- 
 ritualistic aspect. Although meat, for instance, so 
 far as can be learned from direct statement, was 
 invariably roast or grilled, it by no means follows 
 that it was never eaten boiled or stewed. The con- 
 trary inference is indeed fairly warranted by the 
 frequent conjunction of pots, water, and fire ; and was 
 thought by Athenaeus to derive support from the use 
 as a missile, aimed at Odysseus in unprovoked sava- 
 gery by Ctesippus, one of the Suitors, of an ox's foot, 
 which happened to be lying conveniently at hand in a 
 bread-basket. 1 For who, asked the gastronomical 
 sophist, ever thought of roasting an ox's foot ? 2 The 
 casual display, too, in a simile of the Iliad, of a 
 caldron of boiling lard, 3 assures us that some kind of 
 frying process w r as familiar to the poet. 
 
 Among the few secondary articles of diet specified 
 by him was a sausage-like composition, of so irre- 
 deemably coarse a character, that * ears polite ' can- 
 not fail to be offended at its literal description. It 
 consisted, to speak plainly, of the stomach or intes- 
 tines of a goat, stuffed with blood and fat, and kept 
 revolving before a hot fire until thoroughly done. 
 The Suitors, of noble lineage though they were, 
 occasionally supped off this seductive viand, which 
 
 1 Odyssey, xx. 299. 
 2 Potter, Archceologia Grceca, vol. ii. p. 360. 3 Iliad, xxi. 3G2.- 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 181 
 
 may, nevertheless, be concluded to have engaged 
 chiefly plebeian patronage. 
 
 No quality of game is known to have been rejected 
 through prejudice or superstition by the Homeric 
 Greeks. But even venison ranked in the second line 
 after beef, mutton, and pork. It was sheer hunger 
 that made the ' sequestered stag ' brought down by 
 Odysseus in iEsea a real godsend to his disconsolate 
 crew ; and hunger again reduced them, in the island 
 of Thrinakie, to the necessity of supporting life with 
 fish and birds, both kinds of prey equally being taken 
 by means of baited hooks. 1 But they set about their 
 capture only when the exhaustion of the ship's store 
 of flour and wine warned them to bestir themselves ; 
 and the regimen their ingenuity provided was so dis- 
 tasteful, and fell so little short, in their opinion and 
 sensations, of absolute starvation, that the fatal 
 temptation to seek criminal relief at the expense of 
 the oxen of the Sun, proved irresistible. They 
 succumbed to it, and perished. 
 
 Small birds were, however, beyond doubt habitu- 
 ally eaten by the poor. The snaring of pigeons and 
 fieldfares is alluded to in the Odyssey, 2 and was 
 practised, we may be sure, in the interests of the 
 appetite. Nor can we suppose that Penelope and the 
 * divine Helen ' entirely abstained from tasting the 
 geese reared by them, although curiosity and amuse- 
 ment may have been the chief motives for the care 
 
 1 Odyssey, xii. 332 2 Odyssey, xxii. 468. 
 
L82 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 
 bestowed upon them. Poultry of other kinds, as we 
 have seen in another chapter, there was none. But 
 hares must have been used for food, since, like roe- 
 bucks and wild goats, they were hunted with dogs, 1 
 certainly not for the mere sake of sport. As regards 
 boars, the case stands somewhat differently. For 
 their destructiveness imposed their slaughter as a 
 necessity. The subsequent consumption of their flesh 
 is left to conjecture. The remains of the Calydonian 
 brute seem to have been contended for rather 
 through arrogance than through appetite, Meleager 
 and the sons of Thestius standing forth as the cham- 
 pions of antagonistic claims to the trophies of the 
 chace. That the boar sacrificed in attestation of the 
 oath of Agamemnon in the Nineteenth Iliad was after- 
 wards flung by Talthybius far into the sea to be ' foo 
 for fishes/ is without significance on the point of edi- 
 bility. Victims thus immolated never furnished the 
 material for feasts ; they belonged to the subterranea 
 powers, and fell under the sha'dow of their inauspicious 
 influence. 
 
 The fish-eating tastes of the Greeks were of cor 
 paratively late development. Homeric preposses- 
 sions were decidedly against ' fins and shining scales ' 
 of every variety. Eels were ranked apart. Etymo- 
 logical evidence shows them to have been primitively 
 classified with serpents, 2 and they appeared, from this 
 
 1 Odyssey, xvii. 295. 
 
 2 Skeat, Etymological Dictionary. v E7xeAus, an eel, is equivalen 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 183 
 
 point of view, not merely unacceptable, but absolutely 
 inadmissible, as food. The resemblance was thus pro- 
 tective, not by the design of nature, but through the 
 misapprehension of man, and the ingenuity of hunger 
 was diverted from seeming watersnakes to less repul- 
 sive prey. This was found in the silvery shoals and 
 1 fry innumerable ' inhabiting the same element, but 
 differentiated from their congeners by the more ob- 
 vious possession, and more active use of fins. The 
 Homeric fishermen, however, were not enthusiastic in 
 their vocation. Its meditative pleasures made no 
 appeal to them, and they were very sensible of the 
 unsatisfied gastronomic cravings which survived the 
 utmost success in its pursuit. Nets or hooks were 
 employed as occasion required. A heavy haul from 
 the deep is recalled by the gruesome spectacle of the 
 piled-up corpses in the banqueting-hall at Ithaca. 
 
 But he found all the sort of them fallen in their blood in the 
 dust, like fishes that the fishermen have drawn forth in the 
 meshes of the net into a hollow of the beach from out the grey 
 sea, and all the fish, sore longing for the salt sea- waves, are 
 heaped upon the sand, and the sun shines forth and takes their 
 life away ; so now the wooers lay heaped upon each other. 1 
 
 We do not elsewhere hear of net-fishing ; 2 but rod- 
 and-line similes occur twice in the Iliad, and once in 
 the Odyssey. So Patroclus, after the manner of an 
 angler, hooked Thestor, son of Enops. 
 to anguilla, diminutive of angais, a snake ; cf. Buchholz, Realien, 
 Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 107. > Odyssey, xxii. 383-89. 
 
 2 Either birds or fishes might be understood to be taken in 
 the net mentioned in Iliad, v. 487. 
 
184 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 And Patroclus caught hold of the spear and dragged him 
 over the rim of the car, as when a man sits on a jutting rock, 
 and drags a sacred fish forth from the sea, with line and glitter- 
 ing hook of bronze ; so on the bright spear dragged he Thestor 
 gaping from the chariot, and cast him down on his face, and life 
 left him as he fell. 1 
 
 So too, Scylla exercised her craft : 
 
 As when a fisher on a jutting rock, 
 
 With long and taper rod, to lesser fish 
 
 Casts down the treacherous bait, and in the sea 
 
 Plunges his tackle with its oxhorn guard ; 
 
 Then tosses out on land a gasping prey ; 
 
 So gasping to the cliff my men were raised.' 
 
 Spearing, not rod-fishing, is thought by some 
 
 commentators to be here indicated ; but a weighted 
 
 line is plainly described where the ' storm-swift Iris ' 
 
 plunges into the ' black sea ' on the errand of Zeus to 
 
 Thetis. 
 
 Like to a plummet, which the fisherman 
 Lets fall, encas'd in wild bull's horn, to bear 
 Destruction to the sea's voracious tribes."' 
 
 Biver-fishing is passed over in silence. Yet it 
 was doubtless practised, since the finny denizens of 
 Scamander are remembered with pity for the discom- 
 fort ensuing to them from the fight between Achilles 
 and the Eiver ; and the admixture of perch with 
 tunny and hake-bones in the prehistoric waste-heaps 
 
 1 Iliad, xwL 406-410. 
 
 2 Odyssey, xii. 251-55 (W. C. Green's translation in Similes of 
 the Iliad, p. 259). 
 
 3 Iliad, xxiv. 80-82. (Lord Derby.) . 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 185" 
 
 at Hissarlik 1 makes it clear that fresh-water fish were 
 not neglected by the early inhabitants of the TroacL 
 
 Homeric seafarers did not resort to fishing as a 
 means of diversifying the monotony, either of their 
 occupations or of their commissariat. They got out 
 their hooks and lines when famine was at hand, and 
 never otherwise. Menelaus accordingly, recounting 
 the story of his detention at Pharos, vivified the im- 
 pression of his own distress, and the hunger of his 
 men, by the mention of the piscatorial pursuits they 
 were reduced to. 2 And Odysseus, in his narrative to 
 Alcinous, similarly emphasised a similar experience. 
 Fishermen by profession, it can hence be inferred, 
 belonged to the poorest and rudest of the community. 
 Among them were to be found divers for oysters. 
 Patroclus, mocking the fall of Cebriones, exclaims : 
 
 Out on it, how nimble a man, how lightly he diveth ! Yea, 
 if perchance he were on the teeming deep, this man would 
 satisfy many by seeking for oysters, leaping from the ship, even 
 if it were stormy weather ; so lightly now he diveth from the 
 chariot into the plain. Verily among the Trojans too there be 
 diving men. 3 
 
 The trade was then well known, and the molluscs 
 it dealt in constituted, it is equally plain to be seen, 
 a familiar article of diet. Their provision for the 
 dead, in the graves of Mycenae, 4 emphasises this in- 
 ference all the more strongly from the absence of any 
 other evidence of Mycenaean fish-eating. 
 
 1 Virchow, Berlin. Abh. 1879, p. 63. - Odyssey, iv. 368. 
 
 3 Iliad, xvi. 745-50. 4 Schliemann. Mycins, p. 332. 
 
 ^ > 0* THE x s<- 
 
 [UNIVERSIT' 
 
186 FAMILIAH STUDIES IN HOMES. 
 
 Neither fish nor flesh was, in the Homeric world, 
 preserved by means of salt or otherwise as a resource 
 against future need. The distribution of superfluity 
 was not better understood in time than in space. 
 Meat, as we have seen, was killed and eaten on the 
 spot ; and the husbanding of fish-supplies was still 
 less likely to be thought of. Salt was, how T ever, re- 
 gularly used as a condiment ; it was sprinkled over 
 roast meat, 1 and a pinch of salt was a proverbial 
 expression for the indivisible atom, so to speak, of 
 charity. 2 Only the marine stores of the commodity 
 were drawn upon ; those concealed by the earth re- 
 mained unexplored — a circumstance in itself marking 
 the great antiquity of the poems ; and it was accord- 
 ingly regarded as characteristic of an inland people to 
 eat no salt with their food. 3 Its efficacy for ritual 
 purification was fully recognised ; and the ceremonial 
 of sacrifice probably involved some use of it ; but this 
 is not fully ascertained. 4 
 
 The farinaceous part of Homeric diet was fur- 
 nished, according to circumstances, either by barley- 
 meal, or by wheaten flour. The former was lauded 
 as the 'marrow of men' : ship-stores consisted mainly 
 of it ; and it was probably eaten boiled with water 
 into a kind of porridge, corresponding perhaps by its 
 prominence in Achsean rustic economy, to the polenta 
 
 1 Iliad, ix. 214. 
 
 2 Odyssey, xvii. 455. 
 
 * Odyssey, xi. 123, with Hayman's note. 
 4 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 294. 
 
HOMEKIC MEALS. 187 
 
 of the Lombard peasantry. Barley is called by Pliny 
 1 the most antique form of food,' and its antiquity 
 lent it sacredness. Hence the preliminary sprinkling 
 with barley-groats, alike of the victim, and of the 
 altar upon which it was about to be sacrificed. So 
 essential to the validity of the offering was this part 
 of the ceremony, that the guilty comrades of Odys- 
 seus, in default of barley, had recourse to shred oak- 
 leaves, in their futile attempt at bribing the immortal 
 gods with a share of the spoil, to condone their trans- 
 gression against the solar herds. 
 
 The favourite Homeric epithet for barley was 
 'white,' and the quality of whiteness is also conveyed 
 by the name, alphiton, of barley -meal. 1 But our word 
 1 wheat ' has the same meaning, while the Homeric 
 j)uros was a yellow grain. 2 Nor can there be much 
 doubt that it was a different variety, identical, pre- 
 sumably, with the small, otherwise unknown kind 
 unearthed at Hissarlik. As the finest cereal then 
 extant, its repute nevertheless stood high; its taste 
 was called ' honey-sweet ' ; its consumption was 
 plainly a privilege of the well-to-do classes. Our 
 poet is not likely to have ' spoken by the card ' when 
 he included wheat among the spontaneous products 
 of the island of the Cyclops ; yet the assertion of its 
 indigenous growth there was repeated by Diodorus 
 Siculus, 3 who had better opportunities for knowing 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, pp. cit. p. 431. 
 
 2 Odyssey, vii. 104 ; Buchholz, op. cit. p. 118. 
 
 3 De Candolle', Origin of Cultivated Plants, p. 357. 
 
188 EAMILIAK STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 the truth, and had taken out no official licence for its 
 embellishment. Nevertheless there is much difficulty 
 in believing that wheat had its native home elsewhere 
 than in Mesopotamia and Western India. 
 
 Bakers were as little known as butchers to 
 Homeric folk, whose bread-making was of the ele- 
 mentary description practised by the pile-dwellers of 
 Kobenhausen and Mooseedorf. The corn was first 
 ground in hand-mills l w r orked by female slaves, of 
 whom fifty were thus exclusively employed in the 
 palace of Alcinous. 2 The loaves or cakes, for which 
 the material was thus laboriously provided, were 
 probably baked on stones, like those fragmentarily 
 preserved during millenniums beneath Swiss lacustrine 
 deposits of peat and mud. 3 Only wheaten flour was so 
 employed in Achgean households ; but wheaten bread 
 was indispensable to every well-furnished table, and 
 was neatly served round in baskets placed at frequent 
 intervals. Barley-bread was the invention of a later 
 age ; the word maza, by which it is signified, does not 
 occur in the Epics. 
 
 They include, however, the mention of two addi- 
 tional kinds of grain, varieties, it is supposed, of spelt. 
 And of these one, olura, is limited to the Iliad, the 
 other, zeia, belongs properly to the Odyssey, occurring 
 
 1 Bliimner, Technologie und Terminologie bei Griechen und 
 Eomern, Bd. i. p. 24. 
 
 2 Odyssey, vii. 104. 
 
 3 Heer> Die Vflanzen der Pfahlbauten, p. 9. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 189 
 
 in the Iliad only in the traditional phrase ' zeia-giving 
 soil.' The expression doubtless enshrined the memory 
 of spelt-eating days, as did, among the Eomans, 4;he 
 appropriation of this species of corn for the mola of 
 sacrifices. 1 But neither zeia nor olura served within 
 Homer's experience for human food ; both were left 
 to horses, whose fodder was moreover enriched by the 
 addition of ' white barley ' and clover, nay, in excep- 
 tional cases, of wheat and wine. With these restoring 
 dainties the steeds of Hector were pampered by 
 Andromache on their return from battle ; while the 
 snowy team of Ehesus shared with the \ Trojan ' 
 horses of iEneas, the generous wheaten diet provided 
 for them in the opulent stables of their new master, 
 the intrepid king of Argos. 
 
 One of the unaccountable Egyptian perversities 
 enumerated by Herodotus 2 was that of rejecting 
 wheat and barley as bread-stuffs, and adopting spelt 
 {olura) . The grain indicated, however, must have been 
 either rice or millet, since spelt does not thrive in hot 
 countries. 3 Millet, too, which was unknown in primi- 
 tive Greece, w T as specially favoured by Celts, Iberians, 
 and other tribes. 4 It w 7 as also cultivated with barley 
 and several kinds of wheat, by the amphibious vil- 
 lagers of Kobenhausen. And the discovery of caraway 
 and poppy seeds mingled in the debris of their food 5 
 
 1 Potter, Archceologia Grceca, vol. i. p. 215. - Lib. ii. cap. 36. 
 
 3 De Candolle, Cultivated Plants, p. 363. 
 
 4 Helm, op. tit. pp. 439-40. 
 
 5 Dawkins, Early Man in Britain, pp. 293, 301. 
 
190 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 rwin 
 
 suggests that varied flavourings were in prehistoric 
 request. It suggests further a non- aesthetic, hence a 
 probable, motive for the cultivation of the poppy by 
 the early Achseans. 1 The flower was in fact actually 
 grown in classical times for the sake of its seeds, 
 which were roasted and strewn on slices of bread, to 
 be eaten with honey after meals as a sort of dessert. 2 
 Vegetables figured very scantily, if at all, at 
 Achaean feasts. One species only is expressly appor- 
 tioned for heroic consumption. Nestor and Machaon 
 were avowedly guilty of eating onions as a relish with 
 wine. 3 Some degree of refinement has indeed been 
 vindicated for their tastes on the plea that the Oriental 
 onion is of infinitely superior delicacy to our objec- 
 tionable bulb ; but we scarcely wrong the Pylian sage 
 by admitting the likelihood of his preference for the 
 stronger flavour ; nor can we raise high the gustatory 
 standard according to which wine compounded with 
 goats' cheese and honey was esteemed the most re- 
 freshing and delightful of drinks. The same root, 
 moreover, in its crudest form, seems to have recom- 
 mended itself to refined Phseacian palates. There is 
 persuasive, if indirect evidence, that ' the rank and 
 guilty garlic ' was privileged to flourish in the sunny 
 gardens of Alcinous. 4 Socrates, indeed, eulogised the 
 onion, whereas Plutarch contemned it as vulgar, and 
 
 1 Iliad, viii. 306 ; cf. ante, p. 166. 
 
 - Dierbach, Flora Mythologica, p. 117. 3 Iliad, xi. 629. 
 
 4 Buchholz, Realien, Bd. i. Abth. ii. p. 216. 
 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 191 
 
 Horace did not willingly permit onion-eaters to come 
 1 between the wind and his nobility.' The company 
 of Nestor would not, then, have been agreeable to 
 him. 
 
 Peas and beans keep out of sight in the Odyssey, 
 but are just glanced at in the Iliad. The following 
 simile explains itself : 
 
 As from the spreading fan leap out the peas 
 Or swarthy beans o'er all the spacious floor, 
 Urged by the whistling wind and winnower's force ; 
 So then from noble Menelaus' mail, 
 Bounding aside far flew the biting shaft. 1 
 
 Here there is evidently no thought of green vege- 
 tables. The elastic and agile pellets cleansed by 
 winnowing were fully ripe. They can be identified as 
 chick-peas and broad- beans — species, both of them, 
 abundantly produced in modern Greece. The former 
 even retain in Crete their Homeric name of erebinthoi, 
 ground down, however, by phonetic decay to rebithi. 2 
 They afforded, under the designation 'frictum cicer,' 
 a staple article of food to the poorer inhabitants of 
 Latium; and, as the Spanish garbanzo, they derive 
 culinary importance from the part assigned to them 
 in every properly constituted olla podrida. 3 Beans 
 were the first pod-fruit cultivated. They are men- 
 tioned in the Bible, and have been excavated at 
 
 1 Iliad, xiii. 588-92 (trans, by W. C. Green). 
 
 2 Buchholz, loc. cit. p. 269. 
 
 3 Bhind, Hist, of the Vegetable Kingdom, p. 315. 
 
192 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. .. 
 
 Hissarlik. Some pea-like grains, however, found in 
 the same spot, proved on examination to be lentils. 1 
 These, too, were presumably in common use when 
 Homer lived, as they certainly were some centuries 
 later, yet he makes no allusion to them. More signi- 
 ficant, possibly, is his silence on the subject of chest- 
 nuts. Although the tree covers wide tracts of modern 
 Greece, it is held by some eminent authorities to have 
 been introduced there from Pontic Asia Minor at a 
 comparatively late period. 2 And the fact that the 
 rural wisdom of Hesiod completely ignores the chest- 
 nut certainly inclines the balance towards the opinion 
 of its arrival subsequent to the composition of the 
 * Works and Days.' 
 
 Grapes and olives are the only fruits of which the 
 cultivation is recorded in the Iliad ; but the list is 
 greatly extended in the Odyssey. Alcinous had at 
 perennial command, besides apples and pears, figs and 
 pomegranates. Within the precincts of his palace, 
 Odysseus cast his exploratory glances round ' a great 
 garden of four plough-gates,' hedged round on eith 
 side.' 
 
 - 
 
 And there grow tall trees blossoming, pear-trees and pome- 
 granates, and apple-trees with bright frnit, and sweet figs and 
 olives in their bloom. The fruit of these trees never perisheth 
 neither faileth, winter nor summer, enduring through all the 
 year. Evermore the west wind blowing brings some fruits to 
 birth and ripens others. Pear upon pear waxes old, and apple 
 on apple, yea, and cluster ripens upon cluster of the grape, and 
 
 1 Virchow, -Berlin. Abh. 1879, p. 09. * Helm, op. cit. p. 294. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 193 
 
 fig upon fig. There too hath he a fruitful vineyard planted, 
 whereof the one part is being dried by the heat, a sunny spot 
 on level ground, while other grapes men are gathering, and yet 
 others they are treading in the wine -press. In the foremost 
 row are unripe grapes that east the blossom, and others there 
 be that are growing black to vintaging. There, too, skirting the 
 furthest line, are all manner of garden beds, planted trimly, 
 and that are perpetually fresh, and therein are two fountains of 
 water.' l 
 
 The same fruits, the grape excepted, as being too 
 low-growing to fulfil the required conditions, hung 
 suspended above the head of Tantalus in his dusky 
 abode, where alone the olive seems to be classed as 
 food. They claimed, moreover, all but the pome- 
 granate, the care of Laertes, occupying his chagrined 
 leisure during the absence of his son from Ithaca. 
 
 Apples and pears are alike indigenous in Greece, 
 and their discovery, dried and split longitudinally, 
 among the winter-stores of the Swiss and Italian 
 lake-dwellers, suggests that they may have been 
 similarly treated, with a similar end in view, by 
 Achaean housewives. The apple evidently excited 
 Homer's particular admiration ; he, in fact, made it 
 his representative fruit. That it should have been so 
 considered in the North, where competition for the 
 place of honour was small, is less surprising ; and 
 apples, accordingly, of an etherealised and paradisa- 
 ical kind, served to restore youth to the aging god3 of 
 Asaheim. 2 
 
 1 Odyssey, vii. 112-29. 
 2 Grimm and Stallybrass, Teutonic Mythology, p. 319. 
 
 
 
194 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 The pomegranate is believed to have been the 
 ' apple ' of Paris. Known to the Greeks by the Semi- 
 tic name roia, it may hence be safely classed among 
 Phoenician gifts to the West. And its associations 
 were besides characteristically Oriental. The fruit, 
 called from the Sun-god Kimmon, had a prominent 
 place in Syrian religious rites ; Aphrodite introduced 
 it into Cyprus, and eventually transferred to Demeter 
 her claims to the symbolical ownership of it. 1 But 
 with its mythological history, the poet of the Odyssey 
 did not concern himself. 
 
 The wild fig-tree is native in Greece, and is men- 
 tioned both in the Iliad and Odyssey. But the cul- 
 tured fig occurs only in the latter poem, the author 
 doubtless having made its acquaintance somewhere 
 on the Anatolian seaboard, whither it would naturally 
 have been conveyed from Phrygia. For Phrygia was 
 in those days more renowned for its figs than Attica 
 became later. Those of Paros were celebrated by 
 Archilochus about 700 B.C. ; 2 but none, it would seem, 
 were produced on the mainland of Greece when 
 Hesiod's homely experiences took metrical form at 
 Orchomenus. The ripe figs contributed by his garde 
 to the frugal repasts of Laertes were then an an; 
 chronism to the full as glaring as turkeys in Englan 
 when Falstaff and Poins took purses ' as in a castle, 
 cock-sure,' on Gadshill. The very idea, indeed, of 
 archaeological accuracy was foreign to the mind of 
 
 1 Hehn and Stallybrass, op. cit. p. 180. 2 lb. p. 86. 
 
 at 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 195 
 
 either poet ; nor could it, without detriment to the 
 vigour and freedom of their conceptions, have been 
 introduced. 
 
 The pastoral section of the Achaean people drew 
 their subsistence immediately, and almost exclusively 
 from their flocks and herds. The commodities directly 
 at hand were supplemented to a very slight extent, if 
 at all, through the secondary channels of sale or 
 barter. Milk and cheese hence formed the staple of 
 their food, and were mainly the produce of sheep and 
 goats. Cow's milk never found favour in Greece ; 
 Homer ignored the possibility of its use ; Aristotle 
 depreciated its quality ; and it is now no more thought 
 of as an article of consumption than ewe's milk in 
 Great Britain or Ireland. 1 Those early herdsmen 
 differed from us, too, in liking their simple beverage 
 well watered. The part played occasionally by the 
 pump in our London milk-supply would have met 
 with their full approbation — unless, indeed, they 
 might have preferred to add the qualifying ingredient 
 at their own discretion. But the native strength of 
 milk was, at any rate, too much for them. Only 
 Polyphemus, a giant and a glutton, was voracious 
 enough to swallow the undiluted contents of his pails. 
 To him, as to his curious visitors from over the sea, 
 butter-making was an unknown art, cheese being the 
 sole modified product of Homeric dairies. That the 
 first step towards its preparation consisted in the 
 
 1 Kruse, Hellas, Bd. i. p. 368. 
 
 o 2 
 
196 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 curdling of fresh milk with the sap of the fig-tree, we 
 learn from the following allusion : 
 
 Soon as liquid milk 
 Is curdled by the fig-tree's juice, and turns 
 In whirling flakes, so soon was heal'd the wound. 1 
 
 The patient on this occasion was Ares himself, 
 and the rapid closing of the gash inflicted by the 
 audacious Diomed was brought about by the applica- 
 tion of Pseonian simples, unavailable, it can readily 
 be imagined, outside of Olympus. 
 
 Although the keeping of bees was strange to 
 Homer's experience, the product of their industry was 
 pleasantly familiar to him. The ideal of deliciousness 
 was furnished by honey, and Homeric palates reached 
 their acme of gratification with things ' honey-sweet.' 
 But Homeric bees were still in a state of nature, their 
 ' roofs of gold ' getting built in hollow trees or rocky 
 clefts. Artificial dwellings were provided for them, 
 by interested human agency, considerably later. The 
 use of bee-hives in Greece is first attested in the 
 Hesiodic Theogony; and in Russia and Lithuania, 
 wild honey was still gathered in the woods little more 
 than a century and a half ago. 2 Alike in the Iliad 
 and Odyssey, honey figures in a manner totally incon- 
 sistent with our notions of gastronomic harmony. 
 We, in our unregenerate condition, should seek to be 
 excused from partaking of the semi- ambrosial diet of 
 
 1 Iliad, v. 902-904. (Lord Derby.) 
 - Hehn and StaHybrass, op. cit. p. 4G3. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 197 
 
 cheese, honey, and sweet wine supplied by Aphrodite 
 to the divinely brought-up daughters of Pandareus ; ! 
 nor do we envy to ' Gerenian Nestor ' and his wounded 
 companion the posset brewed for them on their return 
 from the battle-field by the skilful Hecamede. The 
 palates indeed must have been hardy, and the consti- 
 tutions robust, of those upon whom it acted as an 
 agreeable restorative. The process of its preparation 
 was as follows. In a bowl of such noble capacity that 
 an ordinary man's strength scarcely availed to raise 
 it brimming to his lips, 
 
 Their goddess-like attendant first 
 A gen'rous measure mixed of Pramnian wine ; 
 Then with a brazen grater shredded o'er 
 The goatsmilk cheese, and whitest barley -meal, 
 And of the draught compounded bade them drink. 2 
 
 Nothing loath, they obeyed, nor did they shrink 
 from adding piquancy to the liquid concoction by 
 simultaneously devouring a dozen or so of raw onions ! 
 A precisely similar drink, designed as a vehicle for 
 the ' evil drugs ! mingled with it, was treacherously 
 served round by Circe to her guests, and imbibed with 
 the debasing and transforming results one has heard 
 of. 3 Only the onions were absent, and with good 
 reason, the crafty sorceress being fully aware of their 
 antidotal power against malign influences. The prac- 
 tice of sweetening and thickening wine was handed on 
 from heroic to classic times. Old Thasian especially 
 
 1 Odyssey, xx. C>9. 2 Iliad, xi. 637-40. (Lord Derby.) 
 
 3 Odyssey, x. 234. 
 
198 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 was considered, when tempered with honey and meal, 
 to be of most refreshing quality in the heats of 
 summer ; and Athenaeus relates, without surprise or 
 disapproval, that the islanders of Thera preferred, for 
 the purpose of making porridge of their wine, ground 
 pease or lentils to barley. 1 The tolerant motto, De 
 gustibus, needs now and then, as we study the past of 
 gastronomy, to be recalled to mind. 
 
 Honey is now, to a great extent, a superannuated 
 article of food. The sugar-cane has usurped its place 
 and its importance. But to the ancients, its value, 
 as the chief saccharine ingredient at their disposal, 
 was enormous. It could not then be expected that 
 the myth-making faculty should remain idle in regard 
 to it. The nectar of the earth was accordingly be- 
 lieved to drop down from heaven into the calyxes of 
 half-opened flowers ; it fell from the rising stars, or, 
 at any rate, near the places, so Aristotle averred, 2 
 whence they rose, and was distilled from rainbows upon 
 the blossoming plains they seemed to touch. Nature's 
 winged agents, too, for the collection of what must 
 have seemed to the first rude experimenters in diet, an 
 almost supersensual dainty, had a niche assigned to 
 them in the edifice of fancy. Bees were connected 
 with poetry, music, and eloquence ; as Mnsarum tolu- 
 enes, they brought the gift of song to the sleeping 
 Pindar ; they were themselves nymphs and priestesses, 
 intertwined more especially with the worship of Deme- 
 1 Athenaeus, x. 40. - De Animal, lib. v. cap. 22. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 199 
 
 ter and Cybele. 1 The germ of some of these imagina- 
 tive shoots and sprays seems to be laid bare in the 
 simple Homeric metaphor by which the discourse of 
 Nestor was said to flow with more than the sweetness 
 of honey from his lips. 2 The same idea — a very 
 obvious one — is embodied in the English word melli- 
 fluous. But a figure, in older times, was often only 
 the beginning of a fable ; and hence the hovering of 
 bees about the lips of the infant Plato, and round the 
 head of Krishna, when he expounded the nature of the 
 divinity. A genuine Homeric trace, moreover, of 
 the legendary associations of bees is supplied by their 
 installation in the Nymphs' Grotto at Ithaca, 3 where 
 they gathered honey for the local divinities, minister- 
 ing to them as Melissa, the Nymph-bee par excellence, 
 ministered to the young Zeus on Ida. 
 
 Homer w T as fully acquainted with the virtue of 
 honey for propitiating the dead. A vase of honey 
 was placed by Achilles on the pyre of Patroclus, 4 and 
 Odysseus poured a due libation of milk and honey as 
 part of his apparatus of enticement to the shade ol 
 Tiresias. Subsequent experience showed this beverage 
 to be acceptable even to the Erinyes ; nor was Cer- 
 berus proof against a lure of honey-cakes. Luckily 
 for himself, however, Odysseus escaped an encounter 
 with the Dog of Hades, for whom he brought no 
 pacifying recipe. 
 
 1 Preller, Griechische Mythologie, Bd. i. p. 105, 3te Auflage. 
 
 2 Iliad, i. 249. 3 Odyssey, xiii. 106. 4 Iliad, xxiii. 170. 
 
200 FAMILIAB STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 The earliest European intoxicant was made from 
 honey, but was in Greece quickly and completely dis- 
 carded on the introduction of vine-culture. Floating 
 reminiscences of its primitive use, however, were pre- 
 served by Plutarch and Aristotle, 1 and survived un- 
 consciously in the tolerably frequent substitution, by 
 Homer, of the word ' mead,' under the form fjusOv, for 
 * wine.' The survival was indeed linguistic only. No 
 mental association with honey clung to the term 
 1 mead.' The fermented juice of the grape is the sole 
 Homeric stimulant, and excites a fully corresponding 
 amount of Homeric enthusiasm. From the old epics, 
 accordingly, Pindaric praises of water are wholly 
 absent. The crystal spring occupies in them a strictly 
 subordinate place. The merits allowed to it are 
 purely relative. That is to say, it exercises, like the 
 nitrogen of our atmosphere, a qualifying function. 
 The exuberant energy of a more fiery element is 
 modified by its innocuous presence, and it helps to 
 neutralise some of the heady virtue inherent in the 
 1 subtle blood of the grape.' 
 
 A draught of clear water was a luxury unappre- 
 ciated by the early Greeks. On the other hand, they 
 freely watered their wine, counting its full strength 
 scarcely less redoubtable than that of raw spirits 
 appears to ordinary Englishmen. Polyphemus alone 
 drank — in post-Homeric phraseology — 'like a Scy- 
 thian ' — that is, swallowed his liquor ' neat ' ; and he 
 
 1 Lippmann, Gescliiclitc cles Zuckcrs, p. 6. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 201 
 
 plunged thereby into disastrous drunkenness. The 
 wine provided for him, it is true, was of unusual and 
 overweening potency. Of Thracian growth, it was 
 supplied to Odysseus by Maron, a priest of Apollo at 
 Ismarus, in grateful acknowledgment of protection 
 afforded during the Odyssean sack of the Ciconian 
 metropolis. The secret of its manufacture was jea- 
 lously guarded in the Maronian family ; l its bouquet 
 was irresistible ; its power against sobriety formidable. 
 Even if the statement that it required, or at least 
 tolerated, a twenty-fold admixture of water, be taxed 
 as hyperbolical, we can still fall back upon Pliny's 
 assurance that the Maronian wine of his epoch was 
 commonly diluted with eight measures of water ; 2 and 
 the proportion of twenty-five to one of Thasian wine 
 from the same neighbourhood was recommended by 
 Hippocrates for invalids. 3 
 
 Ked wines only were quaffed by Homeric heroes. 
 ' Golden,' or ' white ' kinds were unknown to them ; 
 and it may be suspected that the pleasure of sharing 
 their potations would have been qualified, to modern 
 connoisseurs, by strong gustatory disapproval. We 
 do not know that the practice of using turpentine in 
 the preparation of wine prevailed so early, but it was 
 in full force when Plutarch wrote, and it subsisted too 
 long for the comfort of Mr. Dodwell, who warmly 
 protested his preference of sour English beer to the 
 
 1 Odyssey, ix. 205. * Hist. Nat. xiv. 6. 
 
 3 Hayman's Odyssey, vol. ii. p. 96. 
 
 
202 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 resinous wines of Patra and Libadia. 1 Some of 
 their worst qualities were probably shared by the 
 famous * Pramnian,' described by Galen as ' black 
 and austere.' 2 This was the leading component of 
 the draught administered by Hecamede and Circe ; 
 but traditions as to its local origin are obscure and 
 contradictory. The credit of its production was now 
 assigned to a mountain in Caria, now to the Icarian 
 Isle, or to some fav oured section of Lesbian territory. 
 Others again held that its distinction resided, not in 
 the place of its growth, but in the method of its 
 manufacture. A particular variety of grape perhaps 
 yielded it ; at any rate, Dioscorides says that it was a 
 prototropiim — that is, a product of the first running of 
 self- expressed juice, making it, among wines, what a 
 proof before letters is among engravings. It took 
 rank, however this might have been, as a choice 
 vintage, meet for the refreshment of heroes, and 
 strictly reserved for exceptional use ; while the ordi- 
 nary demand of the army before Troy was met by the 
 importation of Lemnian and Thracian wines of com- 
 monplace quality, brought in ships to the shores of the 
 Hellespont, and purchased with the spoils of war- 
 copper and iron, cattle and slaves. 3 A night's carouse 
 might sometimes ensue upon the arrival of a wine 
 fleet ; but temperance was the rule of old Achrear 
 life. Excess was reprobated, and often figured as the 
 
 1 Classical Tour, vol. i. p. 212. 2 Leaf's Iliad, xi. 639. 
 
 3 Iliad, vii. 467 ; ix. 72. 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 203 
 
 cause of misfortune. Thus, the 'Drunken Assembly,' 
 held immediately after the sack of Troy, was the first 
 link in the long chain of disasters incurred by the 
 returning Achseans ; l Elpenor, one of the crew of 
 Odysseus, preceded him to Hades 'on foot,' as it is 
 quaintly said, having broken his neck by a fall from 
 a roof-top when overcome with wine in the house of 
 Circe ; the ungovernable rage of Achilles could find 
 no more opprobrious epithet than * wine-laden ' to be 
 hurled, in lieu of a javelin, at Agamemnon ; and in 
 Polyphemus, vinous excess assuredly took on its least 
 inviting aspect. The Homeric ideal- of life was indeed 
 a festive one, but the conviviality it included was 
 kept within the bounds of moderation and decorum. 
 Moreover, the pleasures of the table, however keenly 
 appreciated, were redeemed from grossness by the 
 finer touches of social sympathy and aesthetic enjoy- 
 ment. Minstrelsy formed a regular part of a well 
 ordered entertainment, and the rhythmical movements 
 of the dance accompanied, on occasions, or alternated 
 with chanted narratives of adventure. 
 
 In the palace of Ithaca, guests were served at 
 separate small tables ; but this may not have been 
 the case everywhere. An erect posture was maintained 
 by them. The Bom an fashion of reclining at meals 
 came in much later. An opening formality of ablution 
 was designed for ceremonial purification ; in the in- 
 
 1 Cf. Hayman's Odyssey, vol. ii. p. 73 ; Gladstone's Studies in 
 Homer, vol. ii. p. 447. 
 
204 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 terests of corporeal cleanliness, a repetition of the 
 process after the meal was concluded would have been 
 desirable, but appears to have been neglected. As 
 regards the food-supply, a stewardess, or house- 
 keeper, brought round bread in a basket ; a carver 
 sliced and distributed the grilled meat ; a herald filled 
 the goblets in orderly succession ; and good appetites 
 did the rest. Women habitually ate apart. So Pene- 
 lope sat by, spinning and silent, though feverish with 
 eagerness for news of her absent lord, until Telemachus 
 and Theoclymenus had concluded their repast; and 
 Nausicaa supped in retirement while her father feasted 
 with the Phaeacian elders. But the rule of seclusion 
 appears to have had no application to nymphs and 
 goddesses. Wine, however, was freely allowed to 
 women and children. Arete, the mother of Nausicaa, 
 supplied a goat's skin full for her pic-nic by the sea- 
 shore ; and it was with wine that the tunic of Phoenix 
 was wont to be soiled as he fed the infant Achilles 
 upon his knee. 
 
 Three meals a day made the full Homeric comple- 
 ment, reduced, nevertheless, to two under frequently 
 recurring circumstances. Breakfast —anston — was 
 not always insisted upon, and we hear only twice of 
 its formal preparation. It consisted ordinarily, there 
 is reason to believe, of nothing more than bread 
 soaked in wine ; but Eumaeus, who, for all his vigilant 
 husbandry, loved talk and good cheer, offered better 
 fare to his wily, unknown guest. A fire was lit in his 
 
 
HOMERIC MEALS. 205 
 
 hut at dawn ; some cold pork, left from supper the 
 night before, got re-broiled, and was barely hot when 
 Telemachus made an appearance more welcome than 
 looked for, having run the gauntlet of the Suitors' 
 sea-ambuscade on his return from Pylos. Hence a 
 considerable amount of weeping for joy was indispen- 
 sable before they could all three — seeming beggar, 
 prince, and swineherd — sit down comfortably to break- 
 fast together. 
 
 But when life ran out of its accustomed groove, 
 and opportunities for eating became precarious, break- 
 fast and dinner — ariston and deijmon—weie apt to 
 coalesce. Noon, the regular dinner-hour, might, 
 under such circumstances, be anticipated. Thus, 
 when Telemachus and Pisistratus were setting out 
 from Sparta towards Pylos, Menelaus, who was the 
 soul of hospitality, ordered a deijmon to be hastily 
 got ready, and it had certainly been preceded 'by no 
 lighter repast. The third Homeric meal — dorpon — 
 was taken at, or after sundown. Its status fluctuated. 
 Of primary importance to those busily engaged in 
 out-of-door occupations, it counted for relatively little 
 with idle folk like the Suitors, whose feasts and di- 
 versions might be prolonged, if they so willed it, from 
 dawn to dusk. Supper, on the other hand, was natu- 
 rally the chief meal of soldiers and sailors. ' Perils 
 will be paid with pleasures,' says Verulam ; and when 
 the rage of battle was spent, or the ship brought 
 safely into port, a banquet was spread with every 
 
206 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 available luxury, and enjoyed to the utmost. At sea, 
 
 cooking was reduced to a minimum, even to zero, the 
 
 probability being small that fires were ever kindled 
 
 on shipboard. So that the hardships of long voyages 
 
 were very great, if rarely incurred. When possible, 
 
 land was made by nightfall, the vessel moored, and 
 
 the crew disembarked. 
 
 Ac magno telluris amore 
 Egressi, optata potiuntur Troes arena. 
 
 Supper followed, and sleep. 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 207 
 
 CHAPTEE VIII. 
 
 homer's magic herbs. 
 
 Theke are certain low-lying districts in southern 
 Spain where the branched lily, or king's spear, blooms 
 in such profusion that whole acres, seen from a dis- 
 tance towards the end of March, show as if densely 
 strewn with new-fallen snow. Just such in aspect 
 must have been the abode of the Odyssean dead. 
 There, along boundless asphodel plains, Odysseus 
 watched Orion, a spectral huntsman pursuing spectral 
 game : there Agamemnon denounced the treachery of 
 Clytemnestra : there Aj ax still nursed his wrath at 
 the award of the Argive kings : there Achilles gnawed 
 a shadowy heart in longing, on any terms, for action 
 and the. upper air : thither Hermes conducted the 
 delinquent souls of the suitors of Penelope. A tran- 
 quil dwelling-place : where the stagnant air of apathy 
 was stirred only by sighs of inane regret. 
 
 Homer's asphodel grows only in the under world, 
 yet it is no mythical plant. It can be quite clearly 
 
208 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 identified with the Asjrtodelns ramosus, 1 now exten- 
 sively used in Algeria for the manufacture of alcohol, 
 and cultivated in our gardens for the sake of its tall 
 spikes of beautiful flowers, pure white within and 
 purple-streaked without along each of the six petals 
 uniting at the base to form a deeply-indented starry 
 corolla. The continual visits of pilfering bees attest 
 a goodly store of honey ; while the perfume spread 
 over the northern shores of the Gulf of Corinth by 
 the abundant growth of asphodel was said to have 
 given their name, in some far-off century, to the 
 Ozolians of Locris. 
 
 Introduced into England about 1551, it was suc- 
 ceeded, after forty-five years, by the yellow asphodel 
 (Asjriwdelus luteus), of which already in 1633 Gerard 
 in his Herbal reports ' great plenty in our London 
 gardens.' Hence Pope's familiarity with this kind, 
 and his consequent matter-of-course identification of 
 it with the classical llower in the lines, 
 
 By those happy souls who dwell 
 On yellow meads of asphodel : 
 
 wherein he has entirely missed what may with some 
 reason be called the local colouring of Hades. 
 
 In order to explain the lugubrious associations 
 the branched asphodel, we must go back to an earlj 
 
 1 The daffodil has no other connexion with the asphodel tha 
 having unaccountably appropriated its name, through the old French 
 affodilU. It is a kind of narcissus, while the asphodel belongs to 
 the lily tribe. 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 209 
 
 stage of thought regarding the condition of the 
 dead. 
 
 Instinctively man assumes that his existence will, 
 in some form, be continued beyond the grave. Only 
 a few of the most degraded savages, or a handful of 
 the most enlightened sceptics, accept death with stolid 
 indifference as an absolute end. The almost univer- 
 sally prevalent belief is that it is a change, not a close. 
 Humanity, as a whole, never has admitted and never 
 can apostatise from its innate convictions by admit- 
 ting that its destiny is mere blank corruption. Apart 
 from the body, however, life can indeed be conceived, 
 but cannot be imagined; since imagination works 
 only with familiar materials. Eecourse was then 
 inevitably had to the expedient of representing the 
 under world as a shadowy reflection of the upper. 
 Disembodied spirits were supposed to feel the same 
 needs, to cherish the same desires, as when clothed 
 in the flesh ; but they were helpless to supply the 
 first or to gratify the second. Their opulence or 
 misery in their new abode depended solely upon the 
 pitying care of those who survived them. This mode 
 of thinking explains the savage rites of sacrifice atten- 
 dant upon primitive funeral ceremonies : it converted 
 the tombs of ancient kings into the treasure-houses of 
 modern archaeologists ; and it suggested a system of 
 commissariat for the dead, traces of which still linger 
 in many parts of the world . 
 
 Here we find the clue we are in search of. It is 
 
 p 
 
210 FAMILIAR STUDIES IX IIOMEK. 
 
 afforded by the simple precautions adopted by unso- 
 phisticated people against famine in the realm of 
 death. Amongst the early Greeks, the roots of the 
 branched lily were a familiar article of diet. The 
 asphodel has even been called the potato of antiquity. 
 It indeed surpassed the potato in fecundity, though 
 falling far below it in nutritive qualities. Pliny, in 
 his * Natural History,' states that about eighty tubers, 
 each the size of an average turnip, were often the 
 produce of a single plant ; and the French botanist 
 Charles de l'Ecluse, travelling across Portugal in 
 1564-5, saw the plough disclose fully two hundred 
 attached to the same stalk, and together weighing, he 
 estimated, some fifty pounds. Moreover, the tubers 
 so plentifully developed are extremely rich in starch 
 and sugar, so that the poorer sort, who possessed no 
 flocks or herds to supply their table with fat pork, 
 loins of young oxen, roasted goats' tripe, or similar 
 carnal delicacies, were glad to fall back upon the 
 frugal fare of mallow and asphodel lauded by Hesiod. 
 Theophrastus tells us that the roasted stalk, as well 
 as the seed of the asphodel served for food; but 
 chiefly its roots, which, bruised up with figs, were in 
 extensive use. Pliny seems to prefer them cooked in 
 hot ashes, and eaten with salt and oil ; but it may be 
 doubted whether he spoke from personal experience. 
 
 Their consumption, however, was recommended 
 by the example of Pythagoras, and was said to have 
 helped to lengthen out the fabulous years of Epime- 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HEEBS. 211 
 
 nides. Yet, such illustrious examples notwithstand- 
 ing, the degenerate stomachs of more recent times 
 have succeeded ill in accommodating themselves to 
 such spare sustenance. When about the middle of 
 last century the Abate Alberto Fortis was travelling 
 in Dalmatia, he found inhabitants of the village of 
 Bossiglina, near Trau, so poor as to be reduced to 
 make their bread of bruised asphodel roots, which 
 proving but an indifferent staff of life, digestive 
 troubles and general debility ensued. This is the 
 last recorded experiment of the kind. The needs of 
 the human economy are far better, more widely, and 
 almost as cheaply subserved by the tuber brought by 
 Ealeigh from Virginia. The plant of Persephone is 
 left for Apulian sheep to graze upon. 
 
 Asphodel roots, accordingly, rank with acorns as 
 a prehistoric, but now discarded article of human 
 food. They were, it is likely, freely consumed by the 
 earliest inhabitants of Greece, before the cultivation 
 of cereals had been introduced from the East. There 
 is little fear of error in assuming that the later 
 AchsGan immigrants found them already consecrated 
 by traditional usage to the sustenance of the dead — 
 perhaps because the immemorial antiquity of their 
 dietary employment imparted to them an idea of 
 sacredness; or, possibly, because the slightness of 
 the nourishment they afforded was judged suitable to 
 the maintenance of the unsubstantial life of ghosts^ 
 At any rate, the custom became firmly established of 
 
 p 2 
 
212 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 planting graves with asphodel, with a view to making 
 provision for their silent and helpless, yet still needy 
 inmates. With changed associations the custom still 
 exists in Greece, and, very remarkably, has been 
 found to prevail in Japan, where a species of asphodel 
 is stated to be cultivated in cemeteries, and placed, 
 blooming in pots, on grave-stones. We can scarcely 
 doubt that the same train of thought, here as in 
 Greece, originally prompted its selection for sepul- 
 chral uses. Unquestionably some of the natives of 
 the Congo district plant manioc on the graves of their 
 dead, with no other than a provisioning design. 1 The 
 same may be said of the cultivation of certain fruit- 
 trees in the burying-grounds of the South Sea Islan- 
 ders. One of these is the Cratceva religiosa, bearing 
 an insipid but eatable fruit, and held sacred in Ota- 
 heite under the name of ' Purataruru.' The Termi- 
 nal! a glabrosa fills (or filled a century ago) an analo- 
 gous position in the Society Islands. It yields a nut 
 resembling an almond, doubtless regarded as accept- 
 able to phantasmal palates. 
 
 We now see quite clearly why the Homeric shades 
 dwell in meadows of asphodel. These were, in the 
 fundamental conception, their harvest-fields. From 
 them, in some unexplained subsensual way, the at- 
 tenuated nutriment they might require must have 
 been derived. But this primitive idea does not seem 
 to have been explicitly present to the poet's mind. 
 1 linger, Die Pflanzc ah Todtcnschmiicli, p. 23. 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 213 
 
 It had already, before his time, we can infer, been to 
 a great extent lost sight of. It was enough for him 
 that the plant was popularly associated with the 
 dusky regions out of sight of the sun. He did not 
 stop to ask why, his business being to see, and to 
 sing of what he saw, not to reason. He accordingly 
 made his Hades to bloom for all time with the tall 
 white flowers of the king's spear, and so perpetuated 
 a connexion he was not concerned to explain. 
 
 Homer cannot be said to have attained to any 
 real conception of the immortality of the soul. The 
 shade which flitted to subterranean spaces when the 
 breath left the body, resembled an 'animal principle 
 of life rather than a true spiritual essence. Disin- 
 herited, exiled from its proper abode, without func- 
 tion, sense, or memory, it survived, a vaporous image, 
 a mere castaway residuum of what once had been a 
 man. Tiresias, the Theban soothsayer, alone, by 
 special privilege of Persephone, retained the use of 
 reason : the rest were vain appearances, escaping 
 annihilation by a scarcely perceptible distinction. 
 No w T onder that life should have been darkened by 
 the prospect of such a destiny— or worse. For there 
 were, in the Homeric world to come, awful possibili- 
 ties of torment, though none — for the common herd — 
 of blessedness. Deep down in Tartarus, those who 
 had sinned against the gods — Sisyphus, Ixion, Tan- 
 talus — were condemned to tremendous, because un- 
 ending, punishment; while the haunting sense of 
 
214 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 m 
 
 loss, which seems to have survived every other for 
 of consciousness, giving no rest, nor so much as 
 exemption from fear, pursued good and bad alike. 
 Nownere does the utter need of mankind for the hope 
 brought by Christianity appear with such startling 
 clearness as in the verses of Homer, from the con- 
 trast of the vivid pictures of life they present with 
 the appalling background of despair upon which they 
 are painted. 
 
 Its relation to the unseen world naturally brought 
 to the asphodel a host of occult or imaginary quali- 
 ties. Of true medicinal properties it may be said to 
 be devoid, and it accordingly finds no place in the 
 modern pharmacopoeia. Anciently, however, it was 
 known, from its manifold powers, as the ' heroic ' 
 herb. It was sovereign against witchcraft, and was 
 planted outside the gates of villas and farmhouses to 
 ward off malefic influences. It restored the wasted 
 strength of the consumptive : it was an antidote to 
 the venom of serpents and scorpions : it entered ai 
 an ingredient into love-potions, and was invincible b 
 evil spirits : children round whose necks it was hun 
 cut their teeth without pain, and the terrors of th 
 night flew from its presence. Briefly, its facultie 
 were those of (in Zoroastrian phraseology) a ' smite: 
 of fiends ' ; yet from it we moderns distil alcohol 
 Of a truth it has gone over to the enemy. 
 
 Sweet is moly, but his root is ill, 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 215 
 
 wrote Spenser in one of his sonnets. But it may be 
 doubted whether he would have committed himself 
 to this sentiment had he realised that the gift of 
 Hermes was neither more nor less than a clove of 
 garlic. 
 
 Odysseus approaching the house of Circe in search 
 of his companions (already, as he found out later, 
 transformed into swine), was- met on the road by the 
 crafty son of Maia, and by him forewarned and fore- 
 armed against the wiles of the enchantress. Skilled 
 in drugs as she was, a more potent herb than any 
 known to her had been procured by .the messenger of 
 the gods. ' Therewith,' the hero continued in his 
 narrative to the Phaeacian king, ' the slayer of Argos 
 gave me the plant that he had plucked from the 
 ground, and he showed me the nature thereof. It 
 was black at the root, but the flower was like to milk. 
 The gods call it moly, but it is hard for mortal men 
 to dig; howbeit, with the gods all things are possible.' 
 It is thus evident that the Homeric moly is com- 
 pounded of two elements — a botanical, so to speak, 
 and a mythological. A substratum of fact has re- 
 ceived an embellishment of fable. Before the mind's 
 eye pf the poet, when he described the white flowers 
 and black root of the vegetable snatched from the 
 reluctant earth by Hermes, was a specific plant, which 
 he chose to associate, or which had already become 
 associated, with floating legendary lore, widely and 
 anciently diffused among our race. The identification 
 
216 FAMILIAR STtTDlES IK HOMER. 
 
 nni 
 
 of that plant has often been attempted, and not 
 unsuccessfully. 
 
 The earliest record of such an effort is contained in 
 Theophrastus's * History of Plants.' He there asserts 
 the moly of the Odyssey to have been a kind of garlic 
 (Allium nigrum, according to Sprengel), growing on 
 Mount Cyllene in Arcadia (the birthplace, be it 
 observed, of Hermes), and of supreme efficacy as an 
 antidote to poisons ; but he, unlike Homer, adds that 
 there is no difficulty in plucking it. We shall see 
 presently that this difficulty was purely mythical. 
 The language of Theophrastus suggests that the 
 association of moly with the Arcadian garlic was 
 traditional in his time ; and the tradition has been 
 perpetuated in the modern Greek name, molyza, of a 
 member of the same family. 
 
 John Gerard in his Herbal, calls moly (of which 
 he enumerates several species) the * Sorcerer's garlic,' 
 and describes as follows the Theophrastian, assumed 
 as identical with the epic, kind. 
 
 Homer's moly hath very thick leaves, broad toward the 
 bottom, sharp at the point, and hollowed like a trough or gutter, 
 in the bosom of which leaves near unto the bottom cometh 
 forth a certain round bulb or ball of a green colour; which 
 being ripe and set in the ground, groweth and becometh a fair 
 plant, such as is the mother. Among those leaves riseth up a 
 naked, smooth, thick stalk of two cubits high, as strong as is a 
 small walking- staff. At the top of the stalk standeth a bundle 
 of fair whitish flowers, dashed over with a wash of purple 
 colour, smelling like the flowers of onions. When they be ripe 
 there appeareth a black seed wrapt in a white skin or husk. 
 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 217 
 
 The root is great and bulbous, covered with a blackish skin on 
 the outside, and white within, and of the bigness of a great 
 onion. 
 
 So much for the question in its matter-of-fact 
 aspect. We may now look at it from its fabulous 
 side. 
 
 And first, it is to be remembered that moly was 
 not a charm, but a counter- charm. Its powers were 
 defensive, and presupposed an attack. It was as a 
 shield against the thrust of a spear. Now if any clear 
 notion could be attained regarding the kind of weapon 
 of which it had efficacy thus to blunt the point, we 
 should be perceptibly nearer to its individualisation. 
 But we are only told that the magic draught of Circe, 
 the effects of which it had power to neutralise, con- 
 tained pernicious drugs. The poet either did not 
 know, or did not care to tell more. 
 
 There is, however, a plant round which a crowd 
 of strange beliefs gathered from the earliest times. 
 This is the Atropa mandragora, or mandrake, probably 
 identical with the Dudaim of Scripture, and called by 
 classical writers Circcea, from its supposed potency in 
 philtres. The rude resemblance of its bifurcated 
 root to the lower half of the human frame started 
 its career as an object of credulity and an instru- 
 ment of imposture. It was held to be animated with 
 a life transcending the obscure vitality of ordinary 
 vegetable existence, and occult powers of the most 
 remarkable kind were attributed to it. The little 
 
218 FAMILIAR STUDIES IJST HOMER. 
 
 images, formed of the mandrake root, consulted as 
 oracles in Germany under the name of Alrunen, and 
 imported with great commercial success into this 
 country during the reign of Henry YIIL, were 
 credited with the power of multiplying money left 
 in their charge, and generally of bringing luck to 
 their possessors, especially when their original seat 
 had been at the foot of a gallows, and their first 
 vesture a fragment of a winding-sheet. But privi- 
 lege, as usual, was here also fraught with peril. The 
 operation of uprooting a mandrake was a critical one, 
 formidable consequences ensuing upon its clumsy or 
 negligent execution. These could only be averted 
 by a strict observance of forms prescribed by the 
 wisdom of a very high antiquity. According to Pliny, 
 three circles were to be drawn round the plant with a 
 sword, within which the digger stood, facing west. 
 This position had to be combined, as best it might, 
 with an approach from the windward side, upon his 
 formidable prey. Through the pages of Josephus the 
 device gained its earliest publicity, of employing a 
 dog to receive the death penalty, attendant, in his 
 belief, on eradication. It was widely adopted, and 
 by mediaeval sagacity fortified with the additional pre- 
 scriptions that the canine victim should be black with- 
 out a white hair, that the deed should be done before 
 dawn on a Friday, and that the ears of the doer 
 should be carefully stuffed with cot ton- wool. For, at 
 the instant of leaving its parent-earth, a fearful 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 219 
 
 sound, which no mortal might hear and sanely sur- 
 vive, issued from the uptorn root. This superstition 
 was familiar in English literature down to the seven- 
 teenth century. 
 
 Thus Suffolk alleging the futility of bad language 
 in apology for the backwardness in its use with which 
 he has just been reproached by the ungentle queen of 
 Henry VI., exclaims, 
 
 Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake's groan, 
 I would invent as bitter- searching terms, 
 As curst, as harsh, and horrible to hear, 
 Deliver'd strongly through my fixed teeth, 
 With full as many signs of deadly hate, 
 As lean-fac'd Envy in her loathsome cave. 
 
 And poor Juliet enumerates among the horrors of the 
 charnel-house, 
 
 Shrieks like mandrakes' torn out of the earth, 
 That living mortals hearing them, run mad. 
 
 The persuasion was, moreover, included amongst 
 the Vulgar Errors gravely combated by Sir Thomas 
 Browne. 
 
 Mandragora, then, is the most ancient and the 
 most widely famous of all magic herbs ; and the old 
 conjecture is at least a plausible one that from its 
 exclusive possession were derived the evil powers 
 employed to the detriment of her wind-borne guests 
 by the inhospitable daughter of Perse. 
 
 Moly, on the other hand, must be sought for 
 amongst the herbaceous antidotes of fable. Perhaps 
 
220 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 the best known of these is the plant repugnant to 
 the fine senses of Horace, and equally abominable to 
 the nostrils of Elizabethan gallants. The name of 
 garlic in Sanskrit signifies 'slayer of monsters.' 
 Juvenal ridiculed the Egyptians for paying it re- 
 verence as a divinity. 
 
 Porruin et cepe nefas violare ac frangere inorsu. 
 O sanctas gentes, quibus haec nascuntur in liortis 
 Numina ! 
 
 The Eddie valkyr, Sigurclrifa, sang of its unassailable 
 virtue. As a sure preservative from witchcraft it 
 was, by mediaeval Teutons, infused in the drink of 
 cattle and horses, hung up in lonely shepherds' huts, 
 and buried under thresholds. It was laid on beds 
 against nightmare : planted on cottage roofs to keep 
 off lightning : it cured the poisoned bites of reptiles : it 
 was eaten to avert the evil effects of digging helle- 
 bore ; while, in Cuba, immunity from jaundice was 
 secured by wearing, during thirteen days, a collar 
 consisting of thirteen cloves of garlic, and throwing it 
 aw T ay at a cross-road, without looking behind, at 
 midnight on the expiration of that term. The occult 
 properties of this savoury root originated, no doubt, 
 as M. Hehn conceives, 1 in its pungent taste and smell. 
 Substances strongly impressive to the senses are apt 
 to acquire the reputation of being distasteful to ' spirits 
 of vile sort.' Witness sulphur, employed from of old, 
 in ceremonial purification. But this may have been 
 1 Wcmdefings of Plants, p. 158. 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 221 
 
 owing to its association, through the ' sulphurous ' 
 smell of ozone, with the sacred thunder-bolt. 
 
 All the magic faculties of garlic, it may be re- 
 marked, are directed to beneficent purposes ; whereas 
 those of the mandrake (regarded as an herb, not as 
 an idol) are purely maleficent. Later folk-lore, how- 
 ever, has not brought them into direct competition. 
 Each is thought of as supreme in its own line. Only 
 in the Odyssey (on the supposition here adopted) 
 they were permitted to meet, with the result of signal 
 defeat for the powers of evil. 
 
 Thus we see that the identification of moly with 
 garlic is countenanced by whatever scraps of botanical 
 evidence are at hand, fortified by a constant local 
 tradition, no less than by the fantastic prescriptions 
 of superstitious popular observance. The difficulty 
 or peril of uprooting, which made the prophylactic 
 plant obtained by Hermes all but unattainable to 
 mortals, is a common feature in vegetable mythology. 
 It figures as the price to be paid for something rarely 
 precious, enhancing its value and at the same time 
 affixing a scarcely tolerable penalty to its possession. 
 It belonged, for instance, in varying degrees, to helle- 
 bore and mistletoe, as well as to mandragora. With 
 the last it most likely originated, and from it was 
 transferred by Homer, in the exercise of his poetical 
 licence, to moly. 
 
 From the adventure in the iEsean isle, as from so 
 many others, Odysseus came out unscathed. But it 
 
222 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 was not without high moral necessity that he passed 
 through them. The leading motive of his character 
 is, in fact, found in his multiform experience. He is 
 appointed to see and to suffer all that comes within 
 the scope of Greek humanity. No vicissitudes, no 
 perils are spared him. Protection from the extremity 
 of evil must and does content him. For his keen 
 curiosity falls in with the design of his celestial 
 patroness, in urging him to drink to the dregs the 
 costly draught of the knowledge of good and evil. Yet 
 it is to be noted that from the house of the enchan- 
 tress there is no exit save through the gates of hell. 
 
 Within the spacious confines of the universe there 
 is perhaps but one race of beings whose implanted 
 instincts and whose visible destiny are irreconcilably 
 at war. Man is born to suffer; but suffering has 
 always for him the poignancy of surprise. The long 
 record of multiform tribulation which he calls his 
 history, has been moulded, throughout its many 
 vicissitudes, by a keen and ceaseless struggle for en- 
 joyment. Each man and woman born into the world 
 looks afresh round the horizon of life for pleasure, 
 and meets instead the ever fresh outrage of pain. 
 Our planet is peopled with souls disinherited of what 
 they still feel to be an inalienable heritage of happiness. 
 No wonder, then, that quack-medicines for the cure of 
 the ills of life should always have been popular. Of 
 such nostrums, the famous Homeric drug nepenthes 
 is an early example, and may serve for a type. 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 223 
 
 We read in the Odyssey that Telemachus had no 
 sooner reached man's estate than he set out from 
 Ithaca for Pylos and Lacedaemon, in order to seek 
 news of his father from Nestor and Menelaus, the 
 two most eminent survivors of the expedition against 
 Troy. But he learned only that Odysseus had vanished 
 from the known world. The disappointment was 
 severe, even to tears, notwithstanding that the ban- 
 quet was already spread in the radiant palace of the 
 Spartan king. The remaining guests, including the 
 illustrious host and hostess, caught the infection of 
 grief, and the pleasures of the . table were over- 
 clouded. 
 
 Then Helena the child of Zeus strange things 
 Devised, and mixed a philter in their wine, 
 Which so cures heartache and the inward stings, 
 That men forget all sorrow wherein they pine. 
 He who hath tasked of the draught divine 
 Weeps not that day, although his mother die 
 And father, or cut off before his eyne 
 Brother or child beloved fall miserably, 
 Hewn by the pitiless sword, he sitting silent by. 
 
 Drugs of such virtue did she keep in store, 
 Given her by Polydamna, wife of Thon, 
 In Egypt, where the rich glebe evermore 
 Yields herbs in foison, some for virtue known, 
 Some baneful. In that climate each doth own 
 Leech- craft beyond what mortal minds attain ; 
 Since of Pseonian stock their race hath grown. 
 She the good philter mixed to charm 1 their pain, 
 And bade the wine outpour, and answering spake again. 1 
 
 1 Odyssey, iv. 219-32 (Worsley's translation). 
 
224 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Such is the stor.y which has formed the basis of 
 innumerable conjectures. The name of the drug 
 administered by Helen signifies the negation of 
 sorrow ; and we learn that it grew in Egypt, and that 
 its administration was followed by markedly soothing 
 effects. Let us see whither these scanty indications 
 as to its nature will lead us. 
 
 Many of the ancients believed nepenthes to have 
 been a kind of bugloss, the leaves of which, infused 
 in wine, were affirmed by Dioscorides, Galen, and 
 other authorities, to produce exhilarating effects. It 
 is certain that in Plutarch's time the hilarity of 
 banquets was constantly sought to be increased by 
 this means. But this was done in avowed imita- 
 tion of Helen's hospitable expedient. It was, in other 
 words, a revival, not a survival, and possesses for us, 
 consequently, none of the instructiveness of an un- 
 broken tradition. 
 
 A new idea was struck out by the Eoman traveller 
 Pietro della Valle, who visited Persia and Turkey 
 early in the seventeenth century. He suspected the 
 true nepenthean draught to have been coffee ! From 
 Egypt, according to the antique narrative, it was 
 brought by Helen; and by way of Egypt the best 
 Mocha reached Constantinople, where it served to 
 recreate the spirits, and pass the heavy hours, of the 
 subjects of Achmet. Of this hypothesis we may say, 
 in the phrase of Sir Thomas Browne, that it is * false 
 below confute.' The next, that of honest Petrns la 
 
IIOMEK'S MAGIC HERBS. 225 
 
 Seine, has even less to recommend it. His erudite 
 conclusion was that in nepenthes the long-sought 
 aurum potabile, the illusory ornament of the Paracel- 
 sian pharmacopoeia, made its first historical appear- 
 ance ! Egypt, he argued, was the birthplace of 
 chemistry, and the great chemical desideratum from 
 the earliest times had been the production of a drink- 
 able solution of the most perfect among metals. Nay, 
 its supreme worth had lent its true motive to the 
 famous Argonautic expedition, which had been fitted 
 out for the purpose of securing, not a golden fleece in 
 the literal sense, but a parchment upon which the 
 invaluable recipe was inscribed. The virtues of the 
 elixir were regarded by the learned dissertator as 
 superior to proof or discussion, in which exalted posi- 
 tion we willingly leave them. 
 
 More enthusiastic than critical, Madame Dacier 
 looked at the subject from a point of view taken up, 
 many centuries earlier, by Plutarch. Nepenthes, 
 according to both these authorities, had no real exis- 
 tence. The effects ascribed to it were merely a figura- 
 tive way of expressing the charms of Helen's conversa- 
 tion. 
 
 But this was to endow the poet with a subtlety 
 which he was very far from possessing. Simple and 
 direct in thought, he invariably took the shortest way 
 open to him in expression ; and circuitous routes of 
 interpretation will invariably lead astray from his 
 meaning. It is clear accordingly that a real drug, of 
 
 
226 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 Egyptian origin, was supposed to have soothed and 
 restored appetite to the guests of Menelaus — a drug 
 quite possibly known to Homer only by the rumour of 
 its qualities, which he ingeniously turned to account 
 for the purposes of his story. Now, since those quali- 
 ties were undoubtedly narcotic, the field of our choice 
 is a narrow one. We have only to inquire whether 
 any, and, if so, what, preparations of the kind 
 were anciently in use by the inhabitants of the Nile- 
 valley. 
 
 Unfortunately our information does not go very 
 far back. A certain professor of botany fron Padua, 
 however, named Prosper Alpinus, has left a remark- 
 able account of his personal observations on the point 
 towards the close of the sixteenth century. The 
 vulgar pleasures of intoxication appear to have been 
 (as was fitting in a Mohammedan country) little in 
 request : among all classes their place was taken by 
 the raptures of solacing dreams and delightful visions 
 artificially produced. The means employed for the 
 purpose were threefold. There was first an electuary 
 of unknown composition imported from India called 
 bernavi. But this may at once be put aside, since 
 the ' medicine for a mind diseased ' given by Poly- 
 damna to Helen was, as we have seen, derived from 
 a home-grown Egyptian herb. There remain of the 
 three soothing drugs mentioned by Alpinus, hemp, 
 and opium. Each was extensively consumed ; and 
 the practice of employing each as a road to pleasur- 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 227 
 
 able sensations was already, in 1580, of immemorial 
 antiquity. One of them was almost certainly the 
 true Homeric nepenthes. We have only to decide 
 which. 
 
 The first, as being the cheaper form of indulgence, 
 was mainly resorted to, our Paduan informant tells 
 us, amongst the lower classes. From the leaves of 
 the herb Cannabis sativa was prepared a powder 
 known as assis, made up into boluses and swallowed, 
 with the result of inducing a lethargic state of dreamy 
 beatitude. Assis was fundamentally the same with 
 the Indian bhang, the Arabic hashish — one of the 
 mainstays of Oriental sensual pleasure. 
 
 The earliest mention of hemp is by Herodotus. 
 He states that it grew in the country of the Scythians, 
 that from its fibres garments scarcely distinguishable 
 in texture from linen were woven in Thrace, and that 
 the fumes from its burning seeds furnished the nomad 
 inhabitants of what is now Southern Eussia, with 
 vapour-baths, serving them as a substitute for 
 washing. Marked intoxicating effects attended this 
 peculiar mode of ablution. 
 
 In China, from the beginning of the third century 
 of our era, if not earlier, a preparation of hemp 
 was used (it was said, with perfect success) as an 
 anaesthetic ; and it is mentioned as a remedy 
 under the name of blianga, in Hindu medical works 
 of probably still earlier date. Its identity with 
 nepenthes was first suggested in 1889, and has since 
 
 o 2 
 
228 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMEK, 
 
 been generally acquiesced in. But there are two 
 objections. 
 
 The practice of eating or smoking hemp, for the 
 sake of its exalting effects upon consciousness, appears 
 to have originated on the slopes of the Himalayas, to 
 have spread thence to Persia, and to have been trans- 
 mitted farther west by Arab agency. It was not, 
 then, primitively an Egyptian custom, and was assu- 
 redly unknown to the wife of Thon. Moreover, hemp 
 is not indigenous on the banks of the Nile. It came 
 thither as an immigrant, most probably long after 
 the building of the latest pyramid. Herodotus in- 
 cludes no mention of it in his curious and particular 
 account of the country ; and, which is still more 
 significant, no relic of its textile use survives. Not 
 a hempen fibre has ever been found in any of the 
 innumerable mummy-cases examined by learned Euro- 
 peans. The ancient Egyptians, it may then be con- 
 cluded, were unacquainted with this plant, and we 
 must look elsewhere for the chief ingredient of the 
 comfort-bringing draught distributed by the daughter 
 of Zeus. 
 
 There is only opium left. It is legitimately 
 reached by the ' method of exclusions.' Should it 
 fail, no substitute can be provided. But it does not 
 fail. No serious discrepancy starts up to shake our 
 belief that in recognising opium under the disguise of 
 nepenthes we have indeed struck the truth. All the 
 circumstances correspond to admiration : the identi- 
 
HOMER'S MAGIC HERBS. 229 
 
 fication runs ' on all fours.' The physical effects indi- 
 cated agree perfectly with those resulting from a 
 sparing use of opium. They tend to just so much 
 elevation of spirits as would impart a roseate tinge to 
 the landscape of life. The intellect remains unclouded 
 and serene. The Nemesis of indulgence, however 
 moderate, is still behind the scenes. The exhibition 
 of a soporific effect has even been seriously thought 
 to have been designed by the poet in the proposal of 
 Telemachus to retire to rest shortly after the nepen- 
 thean cup has gone round; but so bald a piece of 
 realism can scarcely have entered into the contempla- 
 tion of an artist of such consummate skill. 
 
 For ages past, Thebes in Egypt has witnessed the 
 production of opium from the expressed juice of 
 poppyheads. Six centuries ago, the substance was 
 known in Western Europe as Opium Thebdicum, or 
 the ' Theban tincture.' Prosper Alpinus states that 
 the whole of Egypt was supplied, at the epoch of his 
 visit, from Sajeth, on the site of the ancient hundred- 
 gated city. And since a large proportion of the upper 
 classes were undisguised opium-eaters, the demand 
 must have been considerable. Now it was precisely 
 in Thebes that Helen, according to Diodorus, received 
 the sorrow-soothing drug from her Egyptian hostess ; 
 while the women of Thebes, and they only, still in 
 his time preserved the secret of its qualities and 
 preparation. Can we doubt that the ancient nepen- 
 thes was in truth no other than the mediaeval Theban 
 
280 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 tincture? Even stripping from the statement of 
 Diodorus all historical value, its legendary signifi- 
 cance remains. It proves, beyond question, the ex- 
 istence of a tradition localising the gift of Polydamna 
 in a spot noted, from the date of the earliest authentic 
 information on the subject, for the production of a 
 modern equivalent. The inference seems irresistible 
 that the two were one, and that, as De Quincey said, 
 Homer is rightly reputed to have known the virtues 
 of opium. 
 
THE METALS IN HOMER. 231 
 
 CHAPTEK IX. 
 
 THE METALS IN HOMER. 
 
 The undivided Aryans knew very little of the under- 
 ground riches of the earth. They transmitted to 
 their dispersed descendants no common words for 
 mining, forging, or smelting, none to indicate a metal 
 in general, and only one designative of a metal in 
 particular. This took in Sanskrit the form ayas, in 
 Latin, ces; it is represented by the German Erz, 
 equivalent to the English ore ; and, after drifting 
 through a Celtic channel, took a new meaning and 
 form as Eisen, or iron. 1 The original signification 
 of the term was copper ; and copper seems, in general, 
 to have been the first metal to engage the attention 
 of primitive man. This is easily accounted for. 
 Copper is widely distributed ; it frequently occurs in 
 the native state, when its strong colour at once 
 catches the eye ; it is easily worked, and displays a 
 luminous glow highly engaging to an unsophisticated 
 
 1 Much, Die Kupferzeit in Europa, p. 173 ; Schrader and Jevons, 
 Prehistoric Antiquities of the Aryans, p. 188 ; Taylor, Origin of 
 the Aryans, p. 138. 
 
232 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMEE. 
 
 
 taste for ornament. And, because copper was at 
 first the only substance of the kind known, its name 
 was used to determine those of other related sub- 
 stances. Thus, in Sanskrit, iron was called ' dark 
 blue ay as,' ay as having come to mean metal in 
 general ; and a specific sign (possibly that for hard- 
 ness) added, in the Egyptian inscriptions, to the 
 hieroglyph for copper, causes it to denote iron. 1 But 
 in South Africa these positions are exchanged. There 
 iron ranks as the fundamental metal ; gold being 
 known to at least one Kafir tribe as 'yellow,' silver as 
 'white,' copper as 'red 1 iron. 2 And to these lin- 
 guistic facts corresponds the exceptional circumstance, 
 due probably to early intercourse with Egypt, that 
 the stone- age in South Africa yielded immediately to 
 an iron-age. 
 
 In Asia, gold was discovered next after copper, 
 the Massagetse, described by Herodotus, exemplifying 
 this stage of progress ; silver, or ' white gold ' suc- 
 ceeded, bringing lead in its train ; then, little by little, 
 tin crept into use ; while iron, destined to predomi- 
 nate, came last. All the six, however, are enume- 
 rated in a Khorsabad inscription ; 3 they were familiar 
 to the ancient Egyptians, to the Israelites of the 
 Exodus, and to the Homeric Greeks. 
 
 Gold was with Homer supreme among terrestrial 
 
 1 Lepsius, Les Metaux dans les hiscriptions Egyptiennes, p. 55. 
 * Schrader and Jevons, op. tit. p. 154 ; Rougemont, L'Age de 
 Bronze , p. 14. 
 
 i Lenormant, Trans. Soc. Bibl. Archceology, vol. vi. p. 345. 
 
THE METALS IN HOMER 233 
 
 substances. It represented to him beauty, splendour, 
 power, wealth, incorruption. It was the metal of 
 the gods, and mortals by its profuse employment, 
 borrowed something of divine glory. Its availability 
 for them had, nevertheless, narrow limitations unfelt 
 supernally. For the visionary metal of Olympus 
 might be dispensed at will without restrictions either 
 as to quantity or qualities. Inexhaustible stores of it 
 lay at command ; and it could be rendered infrangible 
 and impenetrable by some mythical process un- 
 known to sublunary metallurgists. Hence the golden 
 hobbles with which Poseidon secured his coursers 
 might have proved less satisfactory for the restraint 
 of commonplace Thracian or Thessalian horses ; the 
 golden sword of Apollo would surely have bent in the 
 hand of Hector ; the golden mansion of the sea-god 
 built for aye in the blue depths of the iEgean, could 
 not have supported its own w r eight for an hour on 
 realistic dry land; nor would the process of lifting 
 earth to heaven by hauling on a rope have been 
 facilitated by making that rope (as Zeus proposed to 
 do for the purpose in question) of gold. Of gold, 
 too, were the garments of the gods, their thrones, 
 utensils, implements, appurtenances ; the pavement 
 of their courts was ' trodden gold ' ; golden were the 
 wings of Iris, golden was the beauty of Aphrodite. 
 No doubt, all these attributions were half consciously 
 metaphorical, but their main design was to set off 
 immortal existence by decorating it with an en- 
 
284 FAMILIAR STUDIES IN HOMER. 
 
 hanced degree of the same kind of magnificence 
 marking the dignity of mortal potentates. 
 
 It is remarkable that the Olympian gold in the 
 Shield of Achilles retained some part of the occult 
 virtue properly belonging to it only in that elevated 
 sphere. Of the five metallic layers composing the 
 great buckler, the middle and most precious one gets 
 the whole credit of having arrested the quivering 
 spears of jEneas and Asteropaeus. 1 The verses, to be 
 sure, recording its superior efficacy are held to be 
 spurious, and the inclusion of a hidden stratum of 
 gold does indeed seem without reason, as it is cer- 
 tainly without precedent. Yet the original poet would 
 not have altogether disavowed the inspiring idea of 
 the passage ; and the alleged impenetrability of the 
 gold-mail of Masistius 2 may be held to imply that 
 traces of its old mystical faculty of resistance lingered 
 about the metal so late as when Xerxes invaded 
 Greece. 
 
 The metallic treasures allotted to the gods in the 
 Iliad are confiscated for human enrichment in the 
 Odyssey. For the golden automata of Hephaestus 
 are substituted the golden watch- dogs and torch- 
 bearers of Alcinous; resplendent dwellings are erected, 
 no longer on Olympus or at Mgee, but in Sparta and 
 Phseacia ; Helen shares with Artemis in the Odyssey 
 the golden distaff exclusively attributed to the latter 
 
 1 Iliad, xx. 268 ; xxi. 165 ; and Leaf's annotations. 
 
 2 Herodotus, ix. 22. 
 
THE METALS IN HOMEK. 235 
 
 in the Iliad ; the ' dreams of avarice,' in short, are 
 tangibly realised, in the Epic of adventure, only by 
 human possessions ; they shrink for the most part 
 into shadowy epithets where divine surroundings are 
 concerned. Nor is this diversity accidental or un- 
 meaning. It indicates a genuine shifting of the 
 mythological point of view — an advance, slight yet 
 significant, towards a more spiritualised conception 
 of deity. 
 
 Oriental contact first stirred the auri sacra fames 
 in the Greek mind. That this was so the Greek 
 language itself tells plainly. For chrusos, gold, is a 
 Semitic loan