History of English Note 1 PDF
History of English Note 1 PDF
History of English Note 1 PDF
Ancient Greece
Three periods
Archaic
Before the Archaic period, it was the Greek Dark Ages, characterized by ignorance,
injustices, and various kinds of misery
Classical
Hellenistic
Archaic Period
City-states formed
• Ruled by tyrants
Greatest of the Greek epic poets Nothing definite known of his life
Many Lives of Homer have been written from ancient period onwards
Works
The Iliad
• Epic
The Odyssey
• Depicts the journey of Odysseus or Ulysses back home to Ithaca, after the fall
of Troy
Other than The Iliad and The Odyssey, many epics and poems have been
attributed to Homer
Classical Period
Athens
Rise of Philosophy
• Thales of Miletus
• Anaximander
• Xenophanes of Colophon
• Pythagoras
• Heraclitus
• Parmenides
• Zeno of Elea
• The Sophists
Tragedy
• Dionysus is the god of wine and ecstasy - known as Bacchus among the
Romans
Comedy
Greek Theatre
Koilon or Theatron: The seats for the audience were arranged like a horseshoe
in rising tiers
• Parados: Chorus enters, chanting an ode that gives more back ground to the
story
• Episodes and Stasimon: Action is contained in the 5 episodes; the choral odes
are called stasima
• Exodus: The concluding scene - it includes the deus ex machina, in which a
god is brought in to intervene in the action
•
The Tragedians
3 tragedians
• At the beginning, there was only one actor in a tragedy, who interacted with
the Chorus
Aeschylus
• Introduced the second actor and thus brought variety into drama (says
Aristotle in Poetics)
• Father of tragedy
• In the competitions held at the festival of Dionysia, Aeschylus always won the
first prize
The Oresteia
A trilogy
• Agamemnon
• The Eumenides
Story of the Greek hero Agamemnon, who is killed by his wife Clytemnestra
and her lover Aegisthus
Helen and Clytemnestra were born of the double egg laid by Leda, the swan,
who was raped by Zeus
Theban Trilogy
• Oedipus at Colonus
• Antigone
When Oedipus is born to Laius and Jocasta, the king and queen of Thebes, the
Delphic Oracle prophesizes that he will kill his father and marry his mother
One day, he quarrels with a man and kills him, without knowing that he is his
father Laius
By solving the riddle of the Sphinx, Oedipus becomes the King of Thebes,
marries the widowed queen Jocasta and has 4 children by her
When the truth is revealed by another prophecy, Jocasta kills herself and
Oedipus blinds himself
Oedipus at Colonus
She has a tough decision to make - to let her brother Polynices's body remain
unburied outside the city walls, exposed to the wild animals, or to bury him
and face death
Took the major step of depicting mythical heroes as ordinary people with
inner lives and motives
Medea
The story of Medea's revenge on her husband Jason who has left her for
another woman
Medea kills her husband's bride Glauce as well as her father King Creon
Other Writers
The Clouds
The Wasps
Lysistrata
The Frogs
• There is a famous debate (agon) in the play between Aeschylus and Euripides
regarding who is the better poet
Odes
• Encomiastic
• 3 types of stanzas in each ode, based on choral dance positions: strophe, anti-
strophe and epode
Classical Critics
Born into an aristocratic family in the island of Aegina near Athens in c. 428 BC
Received excellent education, which aroused in him a respect for tradition and
a keen political sensibility
By the age of 20, like all young men of Athens, Plato came under the influence
of Socrates
Initiation to Philosophy
The Peloponnesian War ended and the oligarchic rule of the Thirty Tyrants
began in Athens
The Academy
After the death of Socrates in 399 BC, Plato left Athens and travelled to Italy,
Sicily and Egypt
The Academy became very famous due to the Neoplatonists, and functioned
till AD 526, when it was closed down by Emperor Justinian for its pagan
orientations
At the gate of the Academy was written: "Let no one without mathematics
(geometry) enter."
The Dialogues
36 Dialogues, including
• Republic, Protagoras, Apology, Gorgias, Ion, Phaedrus
Republic is a vindication of the idea that good life is possible only in an ideal
state; and the aim of a good life is justice
Never wrote a single work on poetry; his ideas on poetry have to be extracted
from various Dialogues
Aristotle was born into a well to-do family in the Macedonian town of Stagira
in 384 BC
In 367, when Aristotle was 17, his uncle sent him to Athens to study at Plato's
Academy
After Plato's death in c. 348, the Academy was headed by his nephew
Speusippus, who often diverged from Plato's teachings
This was also the time when the Athenians looked upon the Macedonians with
resentment, as foreign invaders
Aristotle married Hermeias's niece Pythias with whom he had a daughter, also
named Pythias
When Hermeias was killed by the Persians, Aristotle moved to the island of
Lesbos in the eastern Aegean
Under his direction, his students and associates carried out research on
philosophical and scientific topics
Aristotle once again left Athens and took refuge in his mother's birthplace,
Chalcis
Aristotle's Works
Almost all of Aristotle's works were lost to the West after the fall of the Roman
Empire in the 5th century AD
What the Westerners know of Aristotle today was left to them by Arab
philosophers such as Averroes in the 12th century
The works known in Aristotle's own lifetime were some 27 dialogues modelled
on those of Plato, but these are now lost
Surviving works include Poetics, Rhetoric and Nichomachean Ethics
Poetics
Hellenistic Period
Conquests of Alexander the Great during this period spanned the Persian
Empire and reached as far as India
Greek culture and thought spread outside the nation into the other regions of
the Mediterranean
In Rome, monarchy was over thrown and replaced by the republic in the 6th
century BC
1st century BC: Transitional period, Republic was transforming into an Empire
Civil War broke out between the republicans and Caesar's supporters
Another Civil War broke out between Octavian and the. combined forces of
Mark Antony and his beloved, Cleopatra of Egypt
• This was the Battle of Actium of 31 BC, the final war of the Roman Republic
Octavius Caesar won the battle and became the first emperor of Rome; he
took the title Augustus Caesar
Defeated Mark Antony and boasted on his deathbed that he turned Rome
from clay to marble
Roman Classicism
Two Stages
• Age of Cicero (80 to 43 BC)
Stoic philosophy
Epicureanism
Scepticism
• Beauty is fleeting
The Aeneid
• Strong associations between Augustus and Aeneas, the one as founder and
the other as re-founder of Rome
• In Dante's Divine Comedy, Virgil appears as Dante's guide through hell and
purgatory
Odes
Satires
Epistles (Letters)
Metamorphoses
• Narrative poem beginning with the creation of the world and ending in Ovid's
time
Tragedies of Blood
• Famous: Thyestes