In recent years the subtlety and complexity of Apollonius' Ar- gonautica have been better appreciated, but in Dr Hunter's view the purposes and aesthetic of the epic are still not readily under- stood and much basic analysis remains to be done. The present book seeks both to offer some of that analysis and to place the Argonautica within its social and intellectual context. A series of studies deals with notions of heroism; with eros and the suffering of Medea; the role of the divine; poetic voice and literary self- consciousness; and the Ptolemaic context of the poem. A perva- sive theme of the book is Apollonius' creative engagement with Homer, and a final chapter sketches out an approach to Virgil's use of Apollonius in the Aeneid. The Argonautica emerges as a brilliant and original experiment. This book is the only advanced study of the Argonautica cur- rently available. Scholars of Greek and Roman literature, es- pecially Alexandrian poetry and the epic, will find it essential reading. All Greek is translated. THE ARGONAUTICA OF APOLLONIUS THE ARGONAUTICA OF APOLLONIUS Literary studies RICHARD HUNTER University Lecturer in Classics, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS PUBLISHED BY THE PRESS SYNDICATE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK 40 West 20th Street, New York NY 10011-4211, USA 477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia Ruiz de Alarcon 13, 28014 Madrid, Spain Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa http ://www. cambridge.org © Cambridge University Press 1993 This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1993 First paperback edition 2004 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress cataloguing in publication data Hunter, R. L. (Richard L.) The Argonautica of Apollonius: literary studies / Richard Hunter. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0 521 41372 9 hardback 1. Apollonius, Rhodius. Argonautica. 2. Argonauts (Greek mythology) in literature. 3. Epic poetry, Greek — History and criticism. 4. Jason (Greek mythology) in literature. 5. Medea (Greek mythology) in literature. 6. Heroes - Greece - Mythology. I. Title. PA3872.Z4H78 1993 883'.01— dc20 92-13398 CIP ISBN 0 521 41372 9 hardback ISBN 0 521 60438 9 paperback Contents Preface page IX List of abbreviations x 1 Introduction 2 Modes of heroism 8 (i) Epic character 8 (ii) The heroism of Jason i5 (iii) Heracles 25 (iv) Hylas 36 (v) Death and some deaths 4i 3 Images of love 46 (i) Lemnos and Colchis 47 (ii) Jason's cloak 52 (iii) Suffering for love 59 (iv) Drepane 68 4 The gods and the divine 75 (i) Gods as characters 77 (ii) Phineus and prophecy 90 (iii) Hera and Thetis 96 5 The poet and his poem 101 (i) The epic voice IOI (ii) Framing the epic 119 (iii) Similes 129 (iv) Speech and speeches ,38 6 The Argonautica and its Ptolemaic context (i) The Argonautica and court poetry •54 (ii) Creating a new order 162 viii Contents 7 Argonautica and Aeneid 170 (i) Aeneid 3 and the 'idea' of the Argonautica 173 (ii) Circe, Medea, Dido 175 (iii) Underworlds 182 (iv) Apollonius and Virgil: an overview 188 Appendix ev aeiCT|ia 6ir|V6K6s: Aristotle, Callimachus, Apollonius 190 Bibliography 196 General index 201 Index of passages discussed 204 Preface Why I have written this book is set out in the Introduction. Here is rather the place to acknowledge debts and give thanks to those who have helped in one way or another, and I hope that Alan Cameron, Susan Moore, Peter Parsons and two anonymous readers for Cam- bridge University Press will accept this small token of my gratitude for their much larger help. Parts of this book have been inflicted on many audiences over the past few years on both sides of the Atlantic. I have got far more from this experience than they have; where I am conscious of a particular debt, I have sought to acknowledge it, but these occasions have often identified weaknesses and obscurities in ways which I can no longer associate with a particular individual. The final version was prepared during an idyllic few months at Princeton University as a guest of The Council of the Humanities and the Department of Classics; I am deeply indebted to Elaine Fantham, Froma Zeitlin and all their colleagues for offering me the chance to work in such a locus amoenus, for the warmth of their welcome and the stimulus of their company. As I read over what I have written, I recognise one debt which outweighs all others. For many years now I have been lucky enough to have the chance to discuss ancient literature week in and week out with a group of Cambridge friends. Unlike the Argonauts, they require no Catalogue but, like good Greeks, they will know who they are; Orpheus, for example, comes in all shapes and sizes. I am very conscious how much they have taught me, though this book may make them wish to deny it; I offer it to them, nonetheless, with gratitude and affection. Earlier versions of parts of Chapters 2 and 3 appeared in Classical Quarterly 37 (1987) and 38 (1988), and are here reprinted by permis- sion of Oxford University Press. Cambridge R.L.H. February, igg2 Abbreviations 1. The text of Apollonius is cited, unless otherwise stated, from the Bude edition of Francis Vian (Paris 1974-81). Reference is made to the three volumes of this edition as Vian 1,11 and in. 2. Unless otherwise specified all translations are my own. The Iliad is normally cited from the translation by Martin Hammond (Harmondsworth 1987) and the Odyssey from the version of Walter Shewring (Oxford 1980). 3. Abbreviations for periodicals usually follow the system oiUAnnee Philologique. 4. In the spelling of Greek names, ease of recognition rather than consistency has been the principal aim. Thus, familiar names are usually latinised, whereas less familiar ones may simply be transliterated. 5. Modern works cited in the notes by author and date only are listed in the Bibliography. 6. Standard abbreviations for collections of texts and works of refer- ence are used, but the following may be noted: CA J. U. Powell (ed.), Collectanea Alexandrina (Oxford 1925) Ebeling H. Ebeling (ed.), Lexicon homericum (Leipzig 1880-5) KRS G. S. Kirk, J. Raven and M. Schofield, The Presocratic Philosophers (edn 2, Cambridge 1983) LIMC Lexicon iconograpkicum mythologiae classicae (Zurich/ Munich 1981- ) Roscher W. H. Roscher (ed.), Ausfiihrliches Lexikon dergriechischen und romischen Mythologie (Leipzig 1884-1937) SH H. Lloyd-Jones and P. Parsons (eds.), Supplementum Hellenisticum (Berlin/New York 1983)