'Fitzgerald has solved virtually every problem that
has plagued translators of Homer.' Atlantic Monthly The
Iliad is the story of a few days' fighting in the tenth
year of the legendary war between the Greeks and the
Trojans, which broke out when Paris, son of King Priam
of Troy, abducted the fabulously beautiful Helen, wife
of King Menelaus of Sparta. After a quarrel between the
Greek commander, Agamemnon, and the greatest of the
Greek warriors, Achilles, the gods become more closely
involved in the action. Their intervention leads to the
tragic death of Hector, the Trojan leader, and to the
final defeat of the Trojans. But the Iliad is much more
than a series of battle scenes. It is a work of
extraordinary pathos and profundity that concerns itself
with issues as fundamental as the meaning of life and
death. Even the heroic ethic itself - with its emphasis
on pride, honour, prowess in battle, and submission to
the inexorable will of the gods - is not left
unquestioned. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years
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