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The Iliad
- Narrated by: Charlton Griffin
- Length: 22 hrs and 6 mins
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Publisher's Summary
As you listen to this great work, you feel yourself to be in the presence of a grandeur that suffuses the very air. There is no question that the poet, whether his name was Homer or not, was one of the supreme artists of all time and all civilizations. But thiswonderful piece of poetry is not merely a catalog of events of the Trojan War. Specifically, the poem deals with the bitter dispute between Achilles and Agamemnon, and how the Greeks were almost destroyed by their hubris. Hovering about, the Olympian gods watch the unfolding events with keen interest, sometimes lending help and encouragement on one hand, or spreading fear and hatred on the other.
The Iliad is ultimately about the free will of man and his ability or failure to make rational choices in the face of conflict and chaos. Unlike the gods, menmust face death, which gives their decisions a spiritual meaning which is absent on Olympus. The great legacy of The Iliad is itsshattering revelation of what it means to be human in the face of life's uncertainty and fleeting mortality.
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- Jan
- 04-11-2018
Where’s the Trojan horse?
This is a long authentic sounding version of the Iliad but I wonder about the editing. There is all the boring genealogy to and fro of battle on the plains. It misses the bit at the beginning where Clytemnestra was sacrificed for a fair wind and finishes when Hector’s body is returned to Troy. Before the Trojan horse episode. So you never find out what happens. It’s like stopping the Ironman event coverage at three-quarter time. I’d advise you to try a different version.
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