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Agar's Homerica.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

T. W. Allen
Affiliation:
Queen's College, Oxford

Extract

Mr. Agar has collected his adversaria on the Odyssey which have been enjoying cold storage these many years in the blue depths of the Journal of Philology, and increased them by about three-quarters. He has produced a very interesting and valuable book, the most important contribution to the linguistic history of the Homeric text that has been made for a long time. Mr. Agar holds that the language of Homer represents the original ‘Achaean’ speech, and that its abnormalities in vocabulary, word-formation and metre are the result of natural unforced processes of transmission. This position, held by so well equipped and so trenchant an investigator as Mr. Agar, is reassuring. It does not involve any of the mythological factors of the Higher or the Lower Criticism still recommended among us by Mr. Leaf, Father Browne and Mr. Verrall–Pisistratus, Onomacritus, the Ionian conquest of Smyrna, the Thessalian Iliad, the original Achilleis,–and disagrees with Professor Murray's sinister diagnosis clear away the Attic surface and there rises beneath another surface with another set of corruptions, where Ionic rhapsodes have introduced just the same elements of confusion into an Aeolic or at least a pre-Ionic language. The confusion of tongues is deep down in the heart of the Homeric, dialect, and no surgery in the world can cut beneath it’ (Rise of the Greek Epic p. 214). The last ten years’ work in Comparative Philology (especially Kretschmer's researches K.Z. xxxi. 1898, Glotta i. 1907) has made it clearer and clearer that the rule-of-thumb for distinguishing the historical non-Dorian dialects does not apply to the heroic and post-heroic age, and that the terms ‘Aeolic’ and ‘Ionic’ in their usual sense should disappear from the history of Homer. The Homeric tongue derives directly from the pre-colonial language of Greece wherein two elements are discernible, the original Ionian (or Pelasgian) and the Achaean or North-Greek which overlaid it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1909

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References

page 223 note 1 Mr. Murray hedges. The Aeolic Iliad is now given up even by the vitille garde (e.g. by Bechtel, ace. to Glotta i. 4. 373). With it goes all relation between Greek epos and the Thessalian race whether of Europe or Asia. Neither direct tradition nor the subject of the poems supports such a connection. Herr E. Meyer in the last edition of his Geschichte des Altcrtums (vol. i. 2. p. 721) has been unable to revise his views in this particular. The dying cause is supported with natural constancy by Herr P. Cauer in the second edition of his Grundfragen der Homerkritik.

page 223 note 2 The question is naturally far from settled, but the coincidence of the linguistic strata of Kretschmer (1 Ionian or Pelasgic, 2 Achaean, 3 Dorian) with the same strata inferred on ethnological grounds by Ridgesame strata inferred on ethnological grounds by Ridgeway, and demanded by Mackenzie (B.S.A. xiii.) as the result of the Cretan evidence, affords a certain presumption of truth.

page 224 note 1 Had we the information to enable us to say at what period the Achaeo-Ionia said παι⋯ων and Mαχ⋯ων, νηυσ⋯ and Nαυσικ⋯α, ⋯ρατειν⋯ς and ⋯ργενν⋯ς, the εὔαδε and ἅδε, the Homeric question on its chronological side were settled.

page 225 note 1 Restated by Sommer, Glotta i. 2. 146 sqq

page 227 note 1 The unlikelihood of change from the supposed original holds in many cases: e.g. 257, 273, §214.

page 227 note 2 Query

page 229 note 1 This motive I have so far been unable to find on works of art. A victim clutching the arm of his murderer, is frequent. So is a victim clutching a blade or spear driven into his body.