"The
Greeks were rallied by the two Ajaxes
Along with
Odysseus and Diomedes -
Not that
they quailed before the Trojan attack.
In still weather, when the winds that
usually
Scatter the shadowy clouds are asleep,
Huge banks of mist lie absolutely steady
Where Zeus has set them on the mountain tops.
The Greeks met the Trojans without a tremor." Iliad 5. 561-568 (Lombardo translation)
This simile occurs in the
middle of the fifth book. The scene is
set in the midst of the first day of battle, after the wounding of
Aphrodite. Sarpedon has just scolded
Hector for letting the Greeks advance, so the Trojans are charging the Greeks,
who are holding their ground. In
analyzing this simile, one must first consider the anomalous wording. Words like still, shadowy, asleep, and steady, along with the image of misted
mountains, create a calm, aloof mood completely contrasting with the chaos of
battle. The simile is describing the
Greek army, so the army is the tenor and the banks of mist are the
vehicles. There are several similarities
between them, first and foremost the reason for the simile; the poet is
emphasizing the unmoving quality of the Greek army by blatantly describing the
mist as "absolutely steady".
The banks of mist are also described as "huge", big enough to
cover mountains, bringing back the earlier set of similes denoting the
astounding size of the Greek army.
Speaking of referencing earlier similes, the "banks of mist"
concept has a direct correlation in a simile from when the Greeks first enter
the plain (before the battle) in book three:
"While
the Greeks moved forward in silence,
Their breath
curling in long angry plumes
That
acknowledged their pledges to die for each other.
Banks of mist settle on mountain peaks
And seep into the valleys. Shepherds dislike it
But for a thief it is better than night,
And a man can see only as far as he can
throw a stone.
No more
could the soldiers see through the cloud of dust
The armies
tramped up as they moved through the plain." Iliad 3.11-19
While the army's
atmospheric condition is the tenor in this simile, not the army itself, the
mist is again the vehicle, lending a background to the simile from book
five. Furthermore, while the book five
simile faithfully continues the nature theme found in most Homeric similes, the
correlation with the book three simile gives it a more specific theme; mist is
often associated with the unknown and uncontrollable, and therefore with the
plans of the gods, an overarching theme throughout this epic and others.
While this
simile reaches back in the poem, it also reaches forward, as there is a hint of
foreshadowing in the last line ("...where Zeus has set them on the
mountain tops."). Ultimately, Zeus's
plan is for the Greeks to win the war, and the words of this simile hint at how
Zeus easily manipulates the armies into this outcome, as if he can just
"set" each event into place.
The fact that he is the one setting the Greeks (the mist) into an
"absolutely steady" position is a clue that no matter how close to
losing they seem to be, they were meant to win form the start. At first glance, this simile seem s to be
some simple imagery to help the reader grasp the mood and actions of the Greek
army, but on closer examination, it not only repeats past themes and images, but
also foreshadows future events.
1 comment:
A beautiful photo to illustrate your simile! And your comparison to the simile in Book 3 is apt. This is a thought-provoking post. There is a whole network of fog/mist/cloud similes (e.g., Nick Cellino's post on the snow simile) that link together in thematically interesting ways-- the fog of war, the inability of mortals to see clearly, the mist that can disguise humans and deities. Think, for example, about Zeus as the Cloud Gatherer, and the divine mist that surrounds Zeus and Hera as they make love in Book 14.
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