Flight, pursuit, breach of contract, and ceasefire in classical epic
-
Paul Roche
Abstract
The description of flight and pursuit was an enduring (and celebrated: Pl. Ion 535B) component of epic battle narratives from the age of Homer to Late Antiquity. The structural patterns of this type-scene may be analysed in various subcategories. Each of these sub-categories contributes its own nuances of meaning to the narrative in which it is embedded and each is subject to meaningful adaptation over time. Flight and pursuit may be recounted in the form of quite unelaborated notices (marked by the key vocabulary φεύγω, διώκω, fugio, sequor) of collective flight from a single warrior or an army. These may mark major turning points within a battle narrative, such as at Hom. Il. 8.343-9 (the Greeks flee before Hector to their ships), 21.606-11 (the Trojans flee before Achilles into the city), or Verg. Aen. 1.466-8, where the major turning points of the battle at Troy are cast as flight and pursuit. Collective flight may reflect the prowess of the individual hero, or, alternately, the cowardice or shame of his opponent(s). Individual encounters on the battlefield may also lead to flight and/or pursuit.Warriors may flee when they are outnumbered, or at the prompting of a god, or when wounded; they may also flee in compliance with evidence of divine will. Such flight may result in wounding, death, or escape. Scenes of individual flight and pursuit attain their most complex and fully elaborated narrative structure when they recount the flight and pursuit of the poem’s main protagonists as part of their climactic confrontation. This sub-category may be enriched by similes, topographies, and itineraries of flight, narrative interruptions, speeches of observers, topoi, such as the prize motif, as well as exhortations to and from the individuals in the pursuit. The archetype is provided by Hector’s flight from Achilles at Hom. Il. 22.136-246; its most prominent point of reception within later epic is Turnus’ flight from Aeneas at Verg. Aen. 12.733-90. It will be the purpose of this chapter to establish the normative narrative patterns by which scenes of flight and pursuit in epic are conveyed under such categories. The chapter will consider how the various sub-categories of flight and pursuit interrelate within their own poems, and how divergences from and fragmentations of established narrative patterns generate new meanings in the succession of epic poems from Homer to Late Antiquity.
Abstract
The description of flight and pursuit was an enduring (and celebrated: Pl. Ion 535B) component of epic battle narratives from the age of Homer to Late Antiquity. The structural patterns of this type-scene may be analysed in various subcategories. Each of these sub-categories contributes its own nuances of meaning to the narrative in which it is embedded and each is subject to meaningful adaptation over time. Flight and pursuit may be recounted in the form of quite unelaborated notices (marked by the key vocabulary φεύγω, διώκω, fugio, sequor) of collective flight from a single warrior or an army. These may mark major turning points within a battle narrative, such as at Hom. Il. 8.343-9 (the Greeks flee before Hector to their ships), 21.606-11 (the Trojans flee before Achilles into the city), or Verg. Aen. 1.466-8, where the major turning points of the battle at Troy are cast as flight and pursuit. Collective flight may reflect the prowess of the individual hero, or, alternately, the cowardice or shame of his opponent(s). Individual encounters on the battlefield may also lead to flight and/or pursuit.Warriors may flee when they are outnumbered, or at the prompting of a god, or when wounded; they may also flee in compliance with evidence of divine will. Such flight may result in wounding, death, or escape. Scenes of individual flight and pursuit attain their most complex and fully elaborated narrative structure when they recount the flight and pursuit of the poem’s main protagonists as part of their climactic confrontation. This sub-category may be enriched by similes, topographies, and itineraries of flight, narrative interruptions, speeches of observers, topoi, such as the prize motif, as well as exhortations to and from the individuals in the pursuit. The archetype is provided by Hector’s flight from Achilles at Hom. Il. 22.136-246; its most prominent point of reception within later epic is Turnus’ flight from Aeneas at Verg. Aen. 12.733-90. It will be the purpose of this chapter to establish the normative narrative patterns by which scenes of flight and pursuit in epic are conveyed under such categories. The chapter will consider how the various sub-categories of flight and pursuit interrelate within their own poems, and how divergences from and fragmentations of established narrative patterns generate new meanings in the succession of epic poems from Homer to Late Antiquity.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Theories of epic
- Ancient and modern theories of epic 25
- The narrative forms and mythological materials of classical epic 51
- Learning the epic formula 81
- Narratology and classical epic 99
- Epic and rhetoric 115
- Alexandrian book division and its reception in Greek and Roman epic 133
-
Part II: Classification and genre
- Intergeneric influences and interactions 167
- History and myth in Graeco-Roman epic 193
- Didactic and epic: origins, continuity, and interactions 213
- Ovid’s Metamorphoses: the naughty boy of the Graeco-Roman epic tradition 275
- Epic fragments 317
- Narrative patterns and structural elements in Greek epyllia 357
- Epic structures in classical and post-classical Roman epyllia 443
-
Part III: Core structures
- The invocation of the Muses and the plea for inspiration 489
- Closure and segmentation: endings, medial proems, book divisions 531
- ‘Almost-episodes’ in Greek and Roman epic 565
- Aetiology and genealogy in ancient epic 609
- Epic catalogues 653
- Similes and comparisons in the epic tradition 727
- Artefact ekphrasis and narrative in epic poetry from Homer to Silius 773
- Indices 807
- Front Matter 2 I
- Contents V
-
Part I: Battle scenes
- Battle scenes in ancient epic – a short introduction 3
- Arming scenes, war preparation, and spoils in ancient epic 13
- Simply the best? Epic aristeiai 39
- Single combat in ancient epic 77
- Mass combat in ancient epic 111
- Chain-combats in ancient epic 159
- Teichoscopies in classical and late antique epic 207
- Nyktomachies in Graeco-Roman epic 245
- Theomachy in Greek and Roman epic 283
- Naval battles in Greek and Roman epic 317
- River battles in Greek and Roman epic 355
- Flight, pursuit, breach of contract, and ceasefire in classical epic 391
- Epic games: structure and competition 409
- Death, wounds, and violence in ancient epic 447
- Death, ritual, and burial from Homer to the Flavians 483
- Indices 523
- Front Matter 3 I
- Contents V
-
Part II: Journeys and related scenes
- Epic journeys and related scenes – a short introduction 3
- Arrival and reception scenes in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 13
- Banquet scenes in ancient epic 55
- Scenes of departure by sea in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 89
- Sea-storms in ancient epic 125
-
Part III: Time
- Time in ancient epic – a short introduction 171
- Time in Greek epic 183
- ‘Time as such’: chronotopes and periphrases of time in Latin epic 215
-
Part IV: Space
- An introduction to the concept of space in ancient epic 245
- Cities in ancient epic 261
- Landscapes in Greek epic 303
- Landscapes in Latin epic 325
- Mythical places in ancient epic 361
- Abodes of the gods in ancient epic 409
- Abodes of the dead in ancient epic 433
-
Part V: Communication
- Principles of communication in Greek and Roman epic-a short introduction 471
- Messenger scenes in Greek epic 481
- Messenger scenes in Roman epic 501
- Dream scenes in ancient epic 563
- Prophecies in Greek epic 597
- Prophecies in Roman epic 615
- Apparition scenes in ancient epic 685
- Divine council scenes in ancient epic 719
- Necromancies in ancient epic 747
- Indices 799
- Front Matter 4 I
- Contents V
- The origin, tradition, and reinvention of epic structures – a short introduction 1
- Poetic form and narrative theme in early Greek and Akkadian epic 7
- The transformation of the epic genre in Late Antiquity 25
- Greek biblical epic: Nonnus’ Paraphrase and Eudocia’s Homerocentones 53
- Between imitation and transformation: the (un)conventional use of epic structures in the Latin biblical poetry of Late Antiquity 79
- Epic forms and structures in late antique Vergilian centos 135
- The tradition of epic poetry in Byzantine literature 175
- Medieval epicity and the deconstruction of classical epic 211
- Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic from 1440 to 1500 257
- Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic: 16th–19th century 301
- Experiments in digital publishing: creating a digital compendium 331
- Overview: Graeco-Roman epyllia and epics from Homer to Late Antiquity 349
- Core bibliography 357
- Indices 389
- List of contributors 417
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Theories of epic
- Ancient and modern theories of epic 25
- The narrative forms and mythological materials of classical epic 51
- Learning the epic formula 81
- Narratology and classical epic 99
- Epic and rhetoric 115
- Alexandrian book division and its reception in Greek and Roman epic 133
-
Part II: Classification and genre
- Intergeneric influences and interactions 167
- History and myth in Graeco-Roman epic 193
- Didactic and epic: origins, continuity, and interactions 213
- Ovid’s Metamorphoses: the naughty boy of the Graeco-Roman epic tradition 275
- Epic fragments 317
- Narrative patterns and structural elements in Greek epyllia 357
- Epic structures in classical and post-classical Roman epyllia 443
-
Part III: Core structures
- The invocation of the Muses and the plea for inspiration 489
- Closure and segmentation: endings, medial proems, book divisions 531
- ‘Almost-episodes’ in Greek and Roman epic 565
- Aetiology and genealogy in ancient epic 609
- Epic catalogues 653
- Similes and comparisons in the epic tradition 727
- Artefact ekphrasis and narrative in epic poetry from Homer to Silius 773
- Indices 807
- Front Matter 2 I
- Contents V
-
Part I: Battle scenes
- Battle scenes in ancient epic – a short introduction 3
- Arming scenes, war preparation, and spoils in ancient epic 13
- Simply the best? Epic aristeiai 39
- Single combat in ancient epic 77
- Mass combat in ancient epic 111
- Chain-combats in ancient epic 159
- Teichoscopies in classical and late antique epic 207
- Nyktomachies in Graeco-Roman epic 245
- Theomachy in Greek and Roman epic 283
- Naval battles in Greek and Roman epic 317
- River battles in Greek and Roman epic 355
- Flight, pursuit, breach of contract, and ceasefire in classical epic 391
- Epic games: structure and competition 409
- Death, wounds, and violence in ancient epic 447
- Death, ritual, and burial from Homer to the Flavians 483
- Indices 523
- Front Matter 3 I
- Contents V
-
Part II: Journeys and related scenes
- Epic journeys and related scenes – a short introduction 3
- Arrival and reception scenes in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 13
- Banquet scenes in ancient epic 55
- Scenes of departure by sea in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 89
- Sea-storms in ancient epic 125
-
Part III: Time
- Time in ancient epic – a short introduction 171
- Time in Greek epic 183
- ‘Time as such’: chronotopes and periphrases of time in Latin epic 215
-
Part IV: Space
- An introduction to the concept of space in ancient epic 245
- Cities in ancient epic 261
- Landscapes in Greek epic 303
- Landscapes in Latin epic 325
- Mythical places in ancient epic 361
- Abodes of the gods in ancient epic 409
- Abodes of the dead in ancient epic 433
-
Part V: Communication
- Principles of communication in Greek and Roman epic-a short introduction 471
- Messenger scenes in Greek epic 481
- Messenger scenes in Roman epic 501
- Dream scenes in ancient epic 563
- Prophecies in Greek epic 597
- Prophecies in Roman epic 615
- Apparition scenes in ancient epic 685
- Divine council scenes in ancient epic 719
- Necromancies in ancient epic 747
- Indices 799
- Front Matter 4 I
- Contents V
- The origin, tradition, and reinvention of epic structures – a short introduction 1
- Poetic form and narrative theme in early Greek and Akkadian epic 7
- The transformation of the epic genre in Late Antiquity 25
- Greek biblical epic: Nonnus’ Paraphrase and Eudocia’s Homerocentones 53
- Between imitation and transformation: the (un)conventional use of epic structures in the Latin biblical poetry of Late Antiquity 79
- Epic forms and structures in late antique Vergilian centos 135
- The tradition of epic poetry in Byzantine literature 175
- Medieval epicity and the deconstruction of classical epic 211
- Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic from 1440 to 1500 257
- Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic: 16th–19th century 301
- Experiments in digital publishing: creating a digital compendium 331
- Overview: Graeco-Roman epyllia and epics from Homer to Late Antiquity 349
- Core bibliography 357
- Indices 389
- List of contributors 417