Salvete omnes,
I just watched a documentary about Odysseus on the BBC in which the 'moral lesson' behind Homer's poem was, somewhat surprisingly perhaps, described as a sort of Epicureanism 'avant la lettre'. Striving for fame is vain (derived from the episode in the underworld where Odysseus meets Achilles, who tells him he would rather be the lowest serf on earth than the king of all the dead), striving for eternal sensual pleasure ultimately bores and does not satisfy (Odysseus stay with Calypso) etc. True life for Homer, according to the documentary-makers consisted in a simple but rewarding life at home, with wife and children, with friends and family, enjoying the good things daily life provides. Of course, in these few lines, I have rendered the content this 60 minute documentary in a somewhat simplified way, but nevertheless I'd like to know what the other sodales think about it. Do you think it a satisfying account, or do you find it a bit one-sided, a construction 'a posteriori', or perhaps do you even think our looking for a "moral behind the story" is simply a wrong way of approaching Homer's masterpiece ? I'd like to hear some other people's opinions on this issue and will intervene with my thoughts on it as the discussion develops.
Valete optime,
Q. Pomponius Atticus