<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0062.tlg018.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0062.tlg018.perseus-eng2" subtype="section" n="39"><sp><speaker>TIMOCLES</speaker><p>For my part I don’t think that any further proof is
necessary on top of all this. Nevertheless I'll tell
ou. Answer me this: do you think that Homer is
the best poet?
</p></sp><sp><speaker>DAMIS</speaker><p>Yes, certainly,
</p></sp><sp><speaker>TIMOCLES</speaker><p>Well, it was he that convinced me with his portrayal of the providence of the gods.
</p></sp><sp><speaker>DAMIS</speaker><p>But, my admirable friend, everybody will agree
with you that Homer is a good poet, to be sure, but not that he or any other poet whatsoever is a truthful witness. They do not pay any heed to truth, I take it, but only to charming their hearers, and to this end they enchant them with metres and entrance <pb n="v.2.p.151"/> them with fables and in a word do anything to give pleasure. </p></sp></div><div type="textpart" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0062.tlg018.perseus-eng2" subtype="section" n="40"><sp rend="merge"><speaker>DAMIS</speaker><p>However, I should like to know what it was of Homer’s that convinced you most. What he says about Zeus, how his daughter and his brother and his wife made a plot to fetter him?<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.1">Iliad 1, 396.</note> If Thetis had not summoned Briareus, our excellent Zeus would have been caught and put in chains. For this he returned thanks to Thetis by deceiving Agamemnon, sending a false vision to him, in order that many of the Achaeans might lose their lives.<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.2">Iliad 2, 5.</note> Don’t you see, it was impossible for him to hurl a thunderbolt and burn. up Agamemnon himself without making himself out a liar? Or perhaps you were most inclined to believe when you heard how Diomed wounded Aphrodite and then even Ares himself at the suggestion of Athena,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.3">Iliad 5, 335, 855.</note> and how shortly afterwards the gods themselves fell to and began duelling promiscuously, males and females;<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.4">Iliad 20, 54.</note> Athena defeated Ares, already overtaxed, no doubt by the wound he had received from Diomed,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.5">Iliad 21, 403.</note> and "Leto fought against Hermes, the stalwart god of good fortune.”<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.6">Iliad 20, 72.</note> Or perhaps you thought the tale about Artemis credible, that, being a fault-finding person, she got angry when she was not invited to a feast by Oeneus and so turned loose on his land a monstrous boar of irresistible strength.<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.2.p.151.n.7">Iliad 9, 533.</note> Did Homer convince you by saying that sort of thing? </p></sp></div></div></body></text></TEI>