With an Introduction and
Notes by Adam Roberts Royal Holloway, University of London
Homer's great epic describes the many adventures of Odysseus, Greek
warrior, as he strives over many years to return to his home island
of Ithaca after the Trojan War. His colourful adventures, his endurance,
his love for his wife and son have the same power to move and inspire
readers today as they did in Archaic Greece, 2800 years ago.
This poem has been translated many times over the years, but Chapman's
sinewy, gorgeous rendering (1616) stands in a class of its own. Chapman
believed himself inspired by the spirit of Homer himself, and matches
the breadth and power of the original with a complex and stunning idiom
of his own. John Keats expressed his admiration for the resulting work
in the famous sonnet, 'On first looking into Chapman's Homer': 'Much
have I travelled in the realms of gold...'