The Fall of Troy
The Fall of Troy
Originally written in Greek, sometime about the middle of the 4th Century A.D. Translation by A.S. Way.
Book Excerpt
Later on, he
makes Menelaus slay Deiphobus unresisting, "heavy with wine,"
whereas Homer ("Odyssey" viii. 517-20) makes him offer such a
magnificent resistance, that Odysseus and Menelaus together could
not kill him without the help of Athena. In fact, we may say
that, though there are echoes of the "Iliad" all through the
poem, yet, wherever Homer has, in the "Odyssey", given the
outline-sketch of an effective scene, Quintus has uniformly neglected to develop it, has sometimes substituted something much weaker -- as though he had not the "Odyssey" before him!
outline-sketch of an effective scene, Quintus has uniformly neglected to develop it, has sometimes substituted something much weaker -- as though he had not the "Odyssey" before him!
For this we have no satisfactory explanation to offer. He may
have set his own judgment above Homer -- a most unlikely
hypothesis: he may have been consistently following, in the
framework of his story, some original now lost to us: there may
be more, and longer, lacunae in the text than any editors have
ventured to indicate: but, whatever theory we adopt, it must be
based on mere conjecture.
The Greek text here given is that of Ko
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