The Iliad by Homer
Theodoros Kafantaris
Published on July 07, 2026
Introduction: Sing, Goddess, the Anger of Achilles
It begins with rage. "Sing, Goddess, the anger of Achilles, son of Peleus, that brought countless ills upon the Achaeans." The Iliad—composed nearly 3,000 years ago and attributed to Homer—is the fountainhead of Western literature. Its 15,693 lines of dactylic hexameter poetry have influenced every subsequent epic, from Virgil's Aeneid to modern war novels and films. Yet the poem remains shockingly immediate: its warriors are not cardboard heroes but complex men grappling with pride, grief, and the terror of mortality.
The Wrath of Achilles
The poem covers only 52 days in the tenth year of the Trojan War. Agamemnon, the Greek commander, humiliates Achilles by taking his war prize, the enslaved woman Briseis. Achilles, the Greeks' greatest warrior, withdraws from battle and asks his divine mother Thetis to persuade Zeus to let the Trojans prevail. The consequences cascade: Patroclus, Achilles' beloved companion, wears Achilles' armor into battle and is killed by Hector. Achilles' grief transforms his rage from wounded pride into something far more terrible—a fury that leads him to slaughter Hector and desecrate his body.
Gods and Mortals
The Olympian gods are not distant abstractions but active participants in the war. Athena, Hera, and Poseidon support the Greeks; Apollo, Aphrodite, and Ares back the Trojans. Zeus attempts to maintain cosmic balance but is swayed by Thetis's plea. The gods amplify and mirror human passions—their interventions make the war both more significant and more tragic, as mortals become pawns in divine conflicts.
Hector and the Tragedy of War
If Achilles is the poem's fury, Hector is its heart. Defender of Troy, loving husband to Andromache, father to the infant Astyanax—Hector fights not for glory but for home and family. His farewell to Andromache is one of the most moving scenes in literature. His death at Achilles' hands, and the subsequent desecration of his body, brings the poem to its devastating emotional climax. When Priam, Hector's aged father, comes to Achilles' tent to beg for his son's body, even Achilles is moved to tears—and to humanity.
Key Takeaways
- Rage destroys: Achilles' anger consumes enemies, friends, and ultimately himself.
- Glory and mortality are inseparable: The hero's choice—long life or eternal fame—echoes through the ages.
- Even enemies share humanity: The moment of recognition between Achilles and Priam transcends war.