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Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica
This file contains translations of the following works:
Hesiod: "Works and Days", "The Theogony", fragments of "The
Catalogues of Women and the Eoiae", "The Shield of Heracles"
(attributed to Hesiod), and fragments of various works attributed to
Hesiod.
Homer: "The Homeric Hymns", "The Epigrams of Homer" (both
attributed to Homer).
Various: Fragments of the Epic Cycle (parts of which are sometimes
attributed to Homer), fragments of other epic poems attributed to
Homer, "The Battle of Frogs and Mice", and "The Contest of Homer
and Hesiod".
This file contains only that portion of the book in English; Greek texts
are excluded. Where Greek characters appear in the original English
text, transcription in CAPITALS is substituted.
PREPARER'S NOTE: In order to make this file more accessable to the
average computer user, the preparer has found it necessary to
re-arrange some of the material. The preparer takes full responsibility
for his choice of arrangement.
A few endnotes have been added by the preparer, and some additions
have been supplied to the original endnotes of Mr. Evelyn-White's.
Where this occurs I have noted the addition with my initials "DBK".
Some endnotes, particularly those concerning textual variations in the
ancient Greek text, are here ommitted.
***
This electronic edition was edited, proofed, and prepared by Douglas B.
Killings (
[email protected]), June 1995.
*********************************************************
********
PREFACE
This volume contains practically all that remains of the post- Homeric
and pre-academic epic poetry.
I have for the most part formed my own text. In the case of Hesiod I
have been able to use independent collations of several MSS. by Dr.
W.H.D. Rouse; otherwise I have depended on the apparatus criticus of
the several editions, especially that of Rzach (1902). The arrangement
adopted in this edition, by which the complete and fragmentary poems
are restored to the order in which they would probably have appeared
had the Hesiodic corpus survived intact, is unusual, but should not need
apology; the true place for the "Catalogues" (for example), fragmentary
as they are, is certainly after the "Theogony".
In preparing the text of the "Homeric Hymns" my chief debt -- and it is
a heavy one -- is to the edition of Allen and Sikes (1904) and to the
series of articles in the "Journal of Hellenic Studies" (vols. xv.sqq.) by
T.W. Allen. To the same scholar and to the Delegates of the Clarendon
Press I am greatly indebted for permission to use the restorations of the
"Hymn to Demeter", lines 387-401 and 462-470, printed in the Oxford
Text of 1912.
Of the fragments of the Epic Cycle I have given only such as seemed to
possess distinct importance or interest, and in doing so have relied
mostly upon Kinkel's collection and on the fifth volume of the Oxford
Homer (1912).
The texts of the "Batrachomyomachia" and of the "Contest of Homer
and Hesiod" are those of Baumeister and Flach respectively: where I
have diverged from these, the fact has been noted.
Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Rampton, NR. Cambridge. Sept. 9th, 1914.
INTRODUCTION
General
The early Greek epic -- that is, poetry as a natural and popular, and not
(as it became later) an artificial and academic literary form -- passed
through the usual three phases, of development, of maturity, and of
decline.
No fragments which can be identified as belonging to the first period
survive to give us even a general idea of the history of the earliest epic,
and we are therefore thrown back upon the evidence of analogy from
other forms of literature and of inference from the two great epics
which have come down to us. So reconstructed, the earliest period
appears to us as a time of slow development in which the characteristic
epic metre, diction, and structure grew up slowly from crude elements
and were improved until the verge of maturity was reached.
The second period, which produced the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey",
needs no description here: but it is very important to observe the effect
of these poems on the course of post-Homeric epic. As the supreme
perfection and universality of the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey" cast into
oblivion whatever pre-Homeric poets had essayed, so these same
qualities exercised a paralysing influence over the successors of Homer.
If they continued to sing like their great predecessor of romantic themes,
they were drawn as by a kind of magnetic attraction into the Homeric
style and manner of treatment, and