The Odysseys of Homer
Homer
Gelesen von Phil Schempf





The Odysseys are a collection of stories about Ulysses' journey home from the war at Troy purportedly written in the 8th century BCE by Homer, a blind poet thought to have lived in the Greek colonies in Asia Minor, possibly at Smyrna. The events described are thought to have occurred centuries before being recorded by Homer, handed down orally since the twelfth century BCE, the golden era of the Greek Bronze Age when the world was populated by heroic mortals and often visited by the Gods. This verse translation in couplets by George Chapman was originally published in 1616, the first translation from the ancient Greek directly to English, although likely influenced by previous Latin translations. Chapman's translation has been admired by many, including John Keats and others. Many of these stories are familiar to us, Ulysses and the Sirens, Circe turning his crew to swine, their escape from the Cyclops on the bellies of his sheep, but Chapman's version includes violent episodes and suggestive innuendo that I don't recall from my childhood days. (Introduction by Fritz) (14 hr 42 min)
Kapitel
First Book | 36:20 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Second Book | 33:35 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Third Book | 36:33 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Fourth Book, Part 1 | 26:47 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Fourth Book, Part 2 | 36:32 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Fifth Book | 37:46 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Sixth Book | 27:56 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Seventh Book | 25:46 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Eighth Book | 43:07 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Ninth Book | 41:21 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Tenth Book | 37:10 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Eleventh Book | 44:37 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twelfth Book | 34:16 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Thirteenth Book | 34:21 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Fourteenth Book | 39:53 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Fifteenth Book | 37:34 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Sixteenth Book | 33:34 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Seventeenth Book | 41:25 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Eighteenth Book | 31:39 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Ninteenth Book | 42:05 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twentieth Book | 29:48 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twenty-first Book | 29:51 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twenty-second Book | 33:39 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twenty-third Book | 27:30 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
Twenty-fourth Book | 39:09 | Gelesen von Phil Schempf |
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A couple of updates





Jemm B
I love this work. I've not listened to this translation yet but it's description contains a serious pet peeve of mine (you know, the type that makes you shout at phones & kindles when you see it!!) so I just have to explain that the imperfect "hero" of Homers Odyssey (& a notable understudy in its prequel, "The Iliad") was actually called Odysseus. Ulysses is that name Latinised, most notably in Virgil's Aeneid. The other point isn't a peeve but an 'update'. Many scholars believe that Homer, rather than being one momentous poet, is actually a collection of poets who each added to the collated works of the pseudonym "Homer". I hope my explaining my peeve hasn't offended anyone.