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The Poet Index · Entry 006

Homer
Poems

Lifespan
-900–-800
Nationality
Ionian League
Indexed Works
40

The opening argument presents the main conflict of the *Iliad* — Achilles' anger and the plague affecting the Greek camp — setting up the key dramatic stakes before you immerse yourself in the entire poem.

Where to start

The Works

Sort byYearTitle
  1. 01; such as, perhaps, could not be easily paralleled. I question ifUndated
  2. 02A LIST OF THE 812 VOLUMES ARRANGED UNDER AUTHORSUndated
  3. 03ARGUMENTUndated
  4. 04ARGUMENT OF THE EIGHTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  5. 05ARGUMENT OF THE EIGHTH BOOK.Undated
  6. 06ARGUMENT OF THE ELEVENTH BOOK.Undated
  7. 07ARGUMENT OF THE FIFTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  8. 08ARGUMENT OF THE FIFTH BOOK.Undated
  9. 09ARGUMENT OF THE FIRST BOOK.Undated
  10. 10ARGUMENT OF THE FOURTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  11. 11ARGUMENT OF THE FOURTH BOOK.Undated
  12. 12ARGUMENT OF THE NINETEENTH BOOK.Undated
  13. 13ARGUMENT OF THE NINTH BOOK.Undated
  14. 14ARGUMENT OF THE SECOND BOOK.Undated
  15. 15ARGUMENT OF THE SEVENTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  16. 16ARGUMENT OF THE SEVENTH BOOK.Undated
  17. 17ARGUMENT OF THE SIXTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  18. 18ARGUMENT OF THE SIXTH BOOK.Undated
  19. 19ARGUMENT OF THE TENTH BOOK.Undated
  20. 20ARGUMENT OF THE THIRD BOOK.Undated
  21. 21ARGUMENT OF THE THIRTEENTH BOOK.Undated
  22. 22ARGUMENT OF THE TWELFTH BOOK.Undated
  23. 23ARGUMENT OF THE TWENTIETH BOOK.Undated
  24. 24ARGUMENT OF THE TWENTY-FIRST BOOK.Undated
  25. 25ARGUMENT OF THE TWENTY-FOURTH BOOK.Undated
  26. 26ARGUMENT OF THE TWENTY-SECOND BOOK.Undated
  27. 27ARGUMENT OF THE TWENTY-THIRD BOOK.Undated
  28. 28Book xv., the note 13.—The note10 Book xvi., of that volume, andUndated
  29. 29BY HER LADYSHIP'S MOST DEVOTEDUndated
  30. 30DCCC.LX.Undated
  31. 31J. JOHNSON, LL.B.Undated
  32. 32MILTON.Undated
  33. 33SECOND EDITION.Undated
  34. 34SHAKSPEARE.Undated
  35. 35TRANSLATED INTOUndated
  36. 36TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH BLANK VERSEUndated
  37. 37VIRGILUndated
  38. 38WILLIAMUndated
  39. 39WILLIAM COWPER.Undated
  40. 40WITH NOTES,Undated

Recurring themes

Biographical record

About Homer

Homer is at the forefront of Western literature — not merely a footnote, but the entire first chapter. He is known for writing the *Iliad* and the *Odyssey*, two epic poems that together explore the Trojan War and its long, brutal aftermath. These pieces were far from minor cultural artifacts; they profoundly influenced how ancient Greeks perceived heroism, fate, the gods, and what it means to be human.

The honest answer to the question "who was Homer?" is that we don't truly know. He was likely from the Ionian region — the Greek-speaking communities along the western coast of modern Turkey — with most scholars dating him to the 8th or 9th century BCE. Beyond that, the specifics become unclear. Ancient traditions offered various birthplaces: Smyrna, Chios, Colophon, and more, all vying for his origin. Chios had the most robust tradition, with a guild of rhapsodes known as the Homeridae — or "sons of Homer" — performing his works for generations.

Debates over whether Homer was a single individual, a composite figure, or a label for a long-standing oral tradition have persisted since ancient times.

What we do know is that the poems attributed to him exhibit a remarkable consistency of voice and a strong mastery of oral formulaic technique — the repeated epithets, stock phrases, and ring compositions — indicating a tradition of sung performance that evolved over centuries before being written down.

The *Iliad* is a war poem, but it’s not straightforward. It focuses on the rage of Achilles and the human toll of pride and glory. The *Odyssey* tells a homecoming tale, but it’s really about endurance, cleverness, and what a person clings to when everything else is taken away. Both poems were memorized, performed, and regarded almost as scripture in ancient Greece. Even Plato, who had mixed feelings about poetry, had to confront Homer as an educator of Greece.

Biographical span
-900Birth
-800Death

Poets in the same orbit

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