Reading Questions Index
Iliad: Books XVI-XVIII
Book XVI (all)
- Why does Achilles
argue to let Patroklos stand in for him (be his
ritual substitute or therapon)? What conditions
does Achilles set for Patroklos’ participation?
- Zeus grants
Achilles only one half of his prayer: what is Zeus’ larger plan, do you
think?
- When
Sarpedon is killed, Zeus—Sarpedon’s
father, remember—is tempted to intervene (cf., Aphrodite’s intervention on
behalf of Aeneas in Book V). Why does Zeus allow Hera
to dissuade him from intervening?
- Apollo plays a
huge role in the final pages of Book XVI. Beyond obeying Zeus’ orders, why
is it important that it is Apollo who prevents
Patroklos from attacking the walls of Troy, and Apollo who stuns
Patroklos (allowing Hektor
to finish him off)? (Hint: consider what Apollo’s relationship is to
Sarpedon? To Achilles?
Book XVII (lines
1-281 and 765-852)
- Much of this Book
is a stalemate between the opposing armies as they fight over the corpse of
Patroklos; what are the motives on both sides
for this fight? Why do the Achaeans want the body so
badly, and why do the Trojans want it? How does all this fit into
the Code of Honor that Homer instantiates?
- What are
Hektor’s motivating factors in this particular
Book? How aware is he of his place in Zeus’ scheme? How is his attitude
toward his fate different from what we would expect of Achilles under
similar circumstances?
- What is the
significance of Hektor’s donning of Achilles’
armor?
Book XVIII (all)
- What is the
connection between Achilles’ grief over the death of
Patroklos and his ability—finally to say “enough” and end his rage
against Agamemnon? What is special about his relationship with
Patroklos that enables him to recognize his duty
to the Achaean people? (Hint: recall and revisit Phoenix’s story of
Meleager in Book IX, pp. 269-271).
-
Thetis
plays a significant role in Achilles’ plans here. Compare her connection
with Hephaistos to her relationship to Zeus as
delineated in Book I. She mentions that she was the only daughter of the
Old Man of the Sea whom Zeus married off to a mortal (Peleus).
How is this significant, do you suppose?
- Pages 481-487
contain the famous description of the shield Hephaistos
forges for Achilles upon his mother’s behest. What are the various symbolic
meanings that seem possible for the different tableaux depicted on the
shield? What might the “larger significance” of the shield be to Achilles
himself and his fate?