Friday, October 25, 2019
Blind Faith Exposed in The Victim of Aulis :: Victim of Aulis Essays
Blind Faith Exposed in The Victim of Aulis     à     à  Ã   During World War  II, an entire race of people was decimated as a result of blind adherence to one  charismatic ruler; the holocaust has become emblematic of the senseless horror  of war and the loss of innocent lives. Perhaps influenced by World War II, the  Korean War, and the questioning of complete adherence to authority, whose seeds  were just breaking through the glorious faà §ade of the 1950's suburban idyll,  Dannie Abse wrote "The Victim of Aulis" in 1951-6. The poem is an accusation  against the disastrous effects of blind obedience, particularly as it is  manifested in religion and war. Abse anchors his critique within the safely  distant realm of Greek mythology; this creates a world with which most readers  are familiar and thus transfers his indictment of modern society into the images  of the cultural psyche. The poet borrows a scene from Greek mythology depicting  the sacrifice of Agamemnon's daughter Iphigenia to Artemis at the beginning of  the Trojan War,    which serves as the ultimate expression of the intimate  intermingling of war and religion.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã   The Greek gods were not only  intimately involved in the action of the Trojan War, they were also the impetus  for the war. Although the overt cause of the war was Paris' abduction of Helen,  this act was the result of quarrelling goddesses. The Trojan prince Paris was  forced to choose the fairest amongst the goddesses Hera, Aphrodite, and Athena.  Each goddess attempted to sway Paris with offerings, and Aphrodite's temptation  was Helen; this leads to the war and the immortal alliances that overshadow its  mortal activities. The story that the poem implicitly addresses is of the Achaen  king Agamemnon and his daughter Iphigenia. The Achaen forces have gathered at  Aulis before mounting their attack on Troy when one of Artemis' stags is killed;  this, coupled with Agamemnon's boasting of the act, is why "Artemis is offended"  (51). In retaliation, the goddess imprisons the troops at Aulis by preventing  the wind from powering their fleet. In order to appease the god   dess and begin  the war, Agamemnon sacrifices his own daughter Iphigenia as "the child" who will  become "the victim of Aulis." Although Artemis intervenes and makes Iphigenia  one of her priestesses, only the goddess knows that Iphigenia escaped death.  					    
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