Coldblooded Aegean

     Coldblooded Aegean

“The heart is deceitful above all things,
and desperately wicked: who can know it?”  Jeremiah 17:9

“ ‘Why did the whole Greek world exult over the combat scenes in the Iliad?’ asks Friedrich Nietzsche.  We modern readers do not even begin to understand them ‘in a sufficiently “Greek” manner’.  If we understood them in Greek, ‘we should shudder’.  Nietzsche does not mean in the Greek language but in the Greek spirit.  Whoever reads the Iliad … has to come to terms with the profound ‘otherness’ of one of the very traditions which lies at the root of ours.” ~ Michael Schmidt, The First Poets, 17

The Greeks were not humane, not any more

Than owners of the Guineamen on waves

Of empire.  Ancient Greeks loved Homer’s gore.

They loved men’s death, hard rape of women, slaves,

Yes, all the worst of war.  They loved it all.

The glory of the gore was what it bought.

They loved the gore itself.  This might appall

Us now.   Our lily consciences are brought

To nausea, but Greeks had thorns for souls:

No mild pastels for nature, not for these

Axe warriors.  They drove swords and sharpened poles

Through bellies.  Blood soaked ground was not some sleaze

To them.  It opened up slick grandeurs, like

Wealth.  Greeks thought human nature was a spike.