Materials for the discussion of Homer, World Masterpieces section 02, Rutgers-Camden, 2009
Excerpts from Erich Auerbach, Mimesis: Dargestellte Wirklichkeit in der abendländischen Literatur [Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature], 1946, from the translation of Willard Trask, online at http://www.westmont.edu/~fisk/Articles/OdysseusScar.html.
The excerpts are from Chapter One: The Scar of Odysseus. The passage
that Auerbach discusses is the moment in book 19 when Eurykleia
sees the scar on O’s thigh, and the narrator interrupts the narrative
to tell the story of how O got the scar, but also of how the nurse
reacts, how the people move, what Penelope is doing at that
moment.
The excursus
upon the origin of Odysseus’ scar is not basically different from the
many passages in which a newly introduced character, or even a newly
appearing object or implement, though it be in the thick of a battle,
is described as to its nature and origin; or in which, upon the
appearance of a god, we are told where he last was, what he was doing
there, and by what road he reached the scene; indeed, even the Homeric
epithets seem to me in the final analysis to be traceable to the same
need for an externalization of phenomena in terms perceptible to the
senses. Here is the scar, which comes up in the course of the
narrative; and Homer’s feeling simply will not permit him to see it
appear out of the darkness of an unilluminated past; it must be set in
full light, and with it a portion of the hero’s boyhood— just as, in
the Iliad, when the first ship is already burning and the Myrmidons
finally arm that they may hasten to help, there is still time not only
for the wonderful simile of the wolf, not only for the order of the
Myrmidon host, but also for a detailed account of the ancestry of
several subordinate leaders (16, vv. 155). To be sure, the aesthetic
effect thus produced was soon noticed and thereafter consciously
sought; but the more original cause must have lain in the basic impulse
of the Homeric style: to represent phenomena in a fully externalized
form, visible and palpable in all their parts, and completely fixed in
their spatial and temporal relations. Nor do psychological processes
receive any other treatment: here too nothing must remain hidden and
unexpressed. With the utmost fullness, with an orderliness which even
passion does not disturb, Homer’s personages vent their inmost hearts
in speech; what they do not say to others, they speak in their own
minds, so that the reader is informed of it. Much that is terrible
takes place in the Homeric poems, but it seldom takes place wordlessly:
Polyphemus talks to Odysseus; Odysseus talks to the suitors when he
begins to kill them; Hector and Achilles talk at length, before battle
and after; and no speech is so filled with anger or scorn that the
particles which express logical and grammatical connections are lacking
or out of place.
[. . . ]
The
Biblical narrator was obliged to write exactly what his belief in the
truth of the tradition (or, from the rationalistic standpoint, his
interest in the truth of it) demanded of him—in either case, his
freedom in creative or representative imagination was severely limited;
his activity was perforce reduced to composing an effective version of
the pious tradition. What he produced, then, was not primarily oriented
toward “realism” (if he succeeded in being realistic, it was merely a
means, not an end); it was oriented toward truth. Woe to the man who
did not believe it! One can perfectly well entertain historical doubts
on the subject of the Trojan War or of Odysseus’ wanderings, and still,
when reading Homer, feel precisely the effects he sought to produce;
but without believing in Abraham’s sacrifice, it is impossible to put
the narrative of it to the use for which it was written. Indeed, we
must go even further. The Bible’s claim to truth is not only far more
urgent than Homer’s, it is tyrannical—it excludes all other claims. The
world of the Scripture stories is not satisfied with claiming to be a
historically true reality—it insists that it is the only real world, is
destined for autocracy. All other scenes, issues, and ordinances have
no right to appear independently of it, and it is promised that all of
them, the history of all mankind, will be given their due place within
its frame, will be subordinated to it. The Scripture stories do not,
like Homer’s, court our favor, they do not flatter us that they may
please us and enchant us—they seek to subject us, and if we refuse to
be subjected we are rebels.
Let no one object that this goes too
far, that not the stories, but the religious doctrine, raises the claim
to absolute authority; because the stories are not, like Homer’s,
simply narrated “reality.” Doctrine and promise are incarnate in them
and inseparable from them; for that very reason they are fraught with
“background” and mysterious, containing a second, concealed meaning. In
the story of Isaac, it is not only God’s intervention at the beginning
and the end, but even the factual and psychological elements which come
between, that are mysterious, merely touched upon, fraught with
background; and therefore they require subtle investigation and
interpretation, they demand them. Since so much in the story is dark
and incomplete, and since the reader knows that God is a hidden God,
his effort to interpret it constantly finds something new to feed upon.
Doctrine and the search for enlightenment are inextricably connected
with the physical side of the narrative—the latter being more than
simple “reality”; indeed they are in constant danger of losing their
own reality, as very soon happened when interpretation reached such
proportions that the real vanished.
If the text of the Biblical
narrative, then, is so greatly in need of interpretation on the basis
of its own content, its claim to absolute authority forces it still
further in the same direction. Far from seeking, like Homer, merely to
make us forget our own reality for a few hours, it seeks to overcome
our reality: we are to fit our own life into its world, feel ourselves
to be elements in its structure of universal history. This becomes
increasingly difficult the further our historical environment is
removed from that of the Biblical books; and if these nevertheless
maintain their claim to absolute authority, it is inevitable that they
themselves be adapted through interpretative transformation.
Against
Auerbach's argument here one might set the fact that some readers began
finding meaning beyond the surface in Homer pretty early. Heraclitus
the Allegorist (1st century AD) was not the earliest, but he may be
used as an example. He argued among other things that “the adventures
of Odysseus [are] a
human being’s journey through life to acquire wisdom and self-control”
(Peter Struck, Birth of the Symbol 14).