Reprinted from Biology
Books
I have long been interested in classical Greek and Roman civilization,
and have spent hours thumbing through the wonderful Loeb Classics
library editions jotting down random bits of wisdom or hilarious observations.
Before I found Atchity and McKenna's book, however, I never quite
knew how to tie it all together. The book's style is far more interesting
than an encycolpedia's style, but the volume of information is perfect
for novices. The chapters consist of chronological excerpts from a
wide variety of Greek academics. Whether your interest is history,
literature, philosophy, art, math, science, or an amalgam of any or
all of these, you will find something fascinating to read here. Parents
of high school and college students should think about giving this
book as a gift to their children--it would be invaluable to students
in the arts and sciences.
The Classical Greek Reader marks an exciting departure from
the traditional anthology approach to Greek literature and thought.
By focusing not only on the "big names" but also on the
lesser-heard voices - the women, doctors, storytellers,, "New
Age herbalists," and romance writers, this book offers a glimpse
of ancient Greece as we've rarely seen it. It gives the general reader
firsthand access to literary, artistic, social, political, religious,
scientific, and philosophical texts that shaped Greek thinking, from
the Homeric epic's canonization of the earliest myths and war stories
to the last remaining vestiges of Greek thought in the Roman era.
An introduction precedes each selection, identifying the author and
providing ways for modern readers to reconsider these ancient texts
in a new light.
Scholarly commentary on the nuances of Greek writing fills library
shelves, even entire libraries. Yet nothing can take the place of
the documents themselves. Here are the wonders of the Greek world
presented in a modern, accessible manner - perfect for those whose
"Greek" has gotten rusty and those who have yet to discover
the exciting intellectual energy of the classical world.
Reprinted from Smithsonian
by Kathleen Burke
At 3 o'clock one summer morning, a young classics scholar was crashing
around in the underbrush, making his way up a winding trail on the
Cycladic island of Naxos. Kenneth Atchity was in pursuit of nothing
less than Homer's dawn. "It was very dark," he recalls,
"but somehow I made it up the twisted path, hampered from time
to time by the undergrowth and by my vivid imagination of unpropitiated
Harpies rooting in the eerie darkness." Suddenly, from the summit
of the island's highest hill, he spied the "rosy-fingered dawn":
"I fixed my gaze on the eastern horizon," he writes, "and
saw the first glimpse of light, which indeed illuminated in pink a
hand-like spread of perpendicular cirrus clouds." Atchity's passionate
connection to a lost and compelling world underlies every entry in
his page-turning Classical Greek Reader. In a refreshing departure
from the standard anthology format, he draws us into the realm not
only of Plato and Aeschylus but of lesser-known figures who chronicled
the ancient world in vivid and unexpected ways. Across the centuries,
ranging from the Homeric poets to Graeco-Roman writers of the third
century A.D., we find ourselves in the company of physicians and storytellers,
herbalists and romance writers--and women.
Atchity is mining a tradition of inexhaustible riches: the voices
we encounter here offer passage to the literary, artistic, social,
political, religious, scientific and philosophical texts that underlie
Western intellectual tradition.
Certainly, one can return with the pleasure of renewed acquaintance
to the forceful, brooding eloquence of Socrates or Thucydides. The
historian's masterful meditation on the folly of war bears reading
a thousand times over. And the deathbed oration of the doomed philosopher
remains eternally transfixing: "The difficulty," Socrates
reminds his companions, "is not to avoid death, but to avoid
unrighteousness; for that runs faster than death. I am old and move
slowly, and the slower runner has overtaken me, and my accusers
are keen and quick, and the faster runner, who is unrighteousness,
has overtaken them. And now I depart hence condemned by you to suffer
the penalty of death; they too go their ways condemned by the truth
to suffer the penalty of villainy and wrong."
Under Atchity's tutelage, we can turn, also, to a source as remote
and yet familiar as Euclid, marveling at the spare contemporaneity
of his defined terms: "A line is length without breadth";
"A triangle is a rectilinear figure included by three sides."
The Elements of Geometry, "still in use today," as Atchity
reminds us, dates from 300 B.C. Rewarding as these encounters with
the undisputed luminaries may be, it is Atchity's introduction to
minor, yet memorable, characters that lends a distinctive poignancy
and charm to this survey. Take, for example, the lyric poet Archilochos,
cantankerous, impecunious and often forced to make ends meet as
a mercenary, writing around 650 B.C. There was, as he saw it, no
glory in war: "Well, what if some barbaric Thracian glories/in
the perfect shield I left under a bush?/I was sorry to leave it--but
I saved my skin./Does it matter? Oh hell, I'll buy a better one."
Or one Alcaeus (590 B.C.), a fellow bard who devised the ideal formula
for weathering a bone-chilling night: "Damn the winter cold!
Pile up the burning logs/and water the great flagons of red wine;/place
feather pillows by your head, and drink."
From the pen of the distinguished Theophrastus, student of Plato
and protege of Aristotle, we possess a sharp and satirical portrait
of late-classical Athens' citizenry. In The Characters, Theophrastus
attempted to provide a systematic (according to his perceptions,
anyway) description of the various types one might meet in the street,
singling out his particular objects of derision. There is, for instance,
"the boor"; he's "the sort of man who drinks barley-brew
before going to the Assembly; who asserts that garlic smells as
sweet as any perfume; wears shoes too big for his feet; and can't
talk without bellowing." Inevitably, too, one will cross the
path of "the skinflint," the fellow who "would never
let you eat a fig out of his garden, or walk through his land, or
pick up one of his windfall olives or dates. . . . He forbids his
wife to lend salt, or lamp-wick, or herbs, or barley-grains, or
garlands, or holy-cakes." Theophrastus' text in fact became
a reference much sought out by playwrights, who drew heavily on
his material, especially in the creation of believable buffoons.
Another everyday preoccupation of the ancients, a fascination
with folklore and a reliance on folk remedies (the two arenas often
intersected), is represented in the obscure and quirky Theriaca
(On Poisonous Animals). Compiled by the herbalist Nicander around
170 B.C., the entries provide "unique insight into the herbal
industry both of his own time and earlier antiquity." To this
earnest chronicler we owe our knowledge of a charm for warding off
snakes, addressed to any traveler stranded in a forest. "If
you rub a caterpillar from the garden in a little vinegar, the dewy
caterpillar with a green back, or if you anoint your limbs all about
with the teeming fruit of the marsh mallow, then you will pass the
night unscathed."
The celebration of virtue, another theme sounded from Homer onward,
also reverberates throughout these texts. In the first century A.D.,
one Dio Chrysostomos, an aristocratic philosopher who traveled to
the farthest reaches of the Roman Empire, constructs a riveting
version of the Good Samaritan tale. In his Euboean Speech, a paean
to the simple and generous peoples of that peninsula, he recounts
the good deeds of an impoverished shepherd. Despite his straitened
circumstances, the peasant offers what food he has, even a tunic
from his daughter, to shipwrecked travelers cast up on his shore.
"I knew the houses and tables of the rich . . . of vice-regents
and kings," reports Chrysostomos. Yet, he avers, with a forcefulness
and yearning that ring true, "I . . . thought their life blessed
beyond any I knew."
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