Mr Pearce discusses what we owe to the Ancients, focusing on Homer's Odysseus.
From The Imaginative Conservative
By Joseph Pearce
Lovers of Monty Python will recall the scene in The Life of Brian in
which John
Cleese, Eric Idle, and Michael Palin discuss the
contribution of the Romans to civilization: “What have the Romans ever
done for us?” In today’s supercilious culture we tend to believe that we
owe nothing to the past in general and to past civilizations in
particular. What have the Romans ever done for us, or, for that matter,
the Greeks?
Modernity, it seems, is intent on
forgetting the past or burying it, much like the contemptible cad who
kicks down the ladder by which he’s climbed. This being so, it might
prove helpful to take a look at Homer’s Odysseus. What on earth has a
fictional character, or, at any rate, a legendary character, to do with
us? What can an ancient Greek warrior wandering the known world three
thousand years ago, as told by a poet who is almost as ancient, teach us
about the real world in which we find ourselves?
Nothing, we might think, or at least very little.
Surprisingly, perhaps, Odysseus has a
great deal to teach us because he is one of us, not in the vague or
abstract sense in which he is a human being, but in the concrete way in
which he shows us who we are. In showing us Odysseus, Homer shows us
ourselves.
Odysseus serves as an image of homo viator.
Man on a journey. Travelling man. Man on a quest. His journey reflects
the journey on which all of us are embarked. Our life journey is indeed a
journey, as our life story is indeed a story. It has a beginning, a
middle, and an end, like all good journeys and all good stories. It has a
purpose, which is to achieve the goal, ultimately to reach that place
which we call home, that place where we belong, the place where we love
and are loved. The place that our heart desires and towards which it
strives.
Along the way, we will face challenges
and setbacks. We will make mistakes and, if we learn from them, we will
make progress by not repeating them. We will learn that humility leads
to wisdom and growth and that pride precedes a fall. We will learn to
respect both God and neighbor, which the Greeks enshrined in the law of xenia, the law which demands hospitality between host and guest and which demands respect for the stranger.
We will learn, as Odysseus does, that
the bigger we think we are the smaller we really are, and that the
smaller we think we are the greater we become. We will learn that
humility is not only the beginning of wisdom but the beginning of the
way home. We will learn that the journey requires self-sacrifice, which
is merely another word for love, the laying down of ourselves for others
and that, unless we make such sacrifices, no progress on the journey is
possible.
So, let’s return to our original
question. What has Odysseus to do with us? The answer is that he has
everything to do with us because he is who we are.
Republished with gracious permission from Faith & Culture (September 2019).
Editor’s Note: The featured image is “Odysseus and Nausicaa” by Joachim von Sandrart (1606-1688), courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
I would like to recommend to you and your readers the last talk given on this link.
ReplyDeleteGreat talk on subject above.By Fr. Richard Cipolla
http://sthughofcluny.org/2019/02/links-to-recorded-lepanto-conference-talks.html