By William H. Benson
The Parallel Lives
Of The NOBLE AMERICAN RELIGIOUS THINKERS AND BELIEVERS:
Roger Williams VS. Cotton Mathers
NEW ARTICLES
The Odyssey
Matt Damon plays the title role of Odysseus, Anne Hathaway his wife Penelope, Tom Holland their son Telemachus. Charlize Theron plays the role of Calypso, and Samantha Morton is Circe.
About 700 B.C., at the very beginning of Western Civilization’s literary output, an author named Homer collected the Greek’s oft-repeated oral stories about the war against Troy and wrote them down in two books: first “The Iliad” and then “The Odyssey.”
Scholars speculate that Homer may have written the latter perhaps thirty years after the first.
In both epics, Homer relied upon a poetic style called dactylic hexameter. That refers to six feet per line, and each foot includes an initial stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables, for a total of eighteen syllables per line of a standard ancient Greek text.
A note: certain English words are dactylic: poetry, difficult, mockingbird, and alphabet.
Homer composed 15,693 lines for “The Iliad,” 12,110 lines for “The Odyssey.” Each book he divided into twenty-four books, that corresponded to twenty-four papyrus scrolls.
In 2018, a British scholar, Emily Wilson, published an English translation of “The Odyssey,” but she used a different poetic style, that of iambic pentameter, only ten syllables per line and each line she divided into five pairs, one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.
Here is a line of an English translation from “The Odyssey,” written in dactylic hexameter.
“But when he had bathed all, and anointed himself with olive oil.” (VI, 227)
Here is Emily Wilson’s translation of the same passage written in iambic pentameter:
“But when he was all clean and richly oiled.”
Note that Wilson’s translation is shorter, less wordy.
“The Iliad” is a story of war, of the Greeks who sailed across the Aegean Sea to Troy, a city on the western coast of Asia Minor, to besiege that city for ten hard years.
“It covers a few crucial weeks during the tenth and final year of that war. It does not include the inciting cause of the war, the abduction of Helen, nor does it include the Greeks’ means of defeating Troy, by a gift of a wooden horse that contained Greek warriors hidden within.”
“The Odyssey” is a story of a single man, Odysseus, who fought in that Trojan War, but then was forced to struggle for an additional ten years to return to his kingdom in Ithaca, in Greece, and reunite with his wife, Penelope, and his son, Telemachus.
Odysseus’s adversaries included: Poseidon, the god of the sea, who places a curse upon Odysseus. There is a Cyclops, a giant one-eyed monster, whom Odysseus blinds. There is Calypso, a sea nymph who falls in love with Odysseus and holds him captive for seven years.
There is a Greek sorceress, Circe, who transforms Odysseus’s crew into pigs, and there is Charybdis, a ship-destroying whirlpool.
Yet, Odysseus survives all the obstacles that the gods pitch at him and presses toward home.
What does Homer teach us in his two books? That it is hard to vanquish an enemy in a war in a foreign country, and that is as hard to find a path to return home to wife and son.
Emily Wilson begins Book 1, Line 1: “Tell me about a complicated man. Muse, tell me how he wandered and was lost when he had wrecked the holy town of Troy, and where he went, and who he met, the pain he suffered in the storms at sea, and how he worked to save his life.”
Gettysburg and Vicksburg
In Gettysburg, a small town in Pennsylvania, population 2,400 in 1863, General Robert E. Lee failed a second time to win a crucial battle by leading his troops north, and invading a Union state. If he had won that battle, he could have next attacked Philadelphia or...
Battle of Breeds and Bunker Hill
In the year 1775, two peninsulas jutted into Boston’s Harbor. Each was connected to the Massachusetts mainland by a narrow isthmus.The first peninsula jutted due north, looked like a thumb, and upon it sat the city of Boston. The second jutted due east, looked like a...
July 4 Speeches
In 1834, Ralph Waldo Emerson, lecturer and essayist, moved to Concord, Massachusetts. The following year he bought a home in the town of 2000 residents, where he remained for all his remaining days, with his wife Lidian and their children. Concord lies...
To Prepare for the University
Dave Ramsey, host of the popular call-in radio show, helps listeners pry themselves free from debt by a series of “Baby Steps.” That debt often stems from houses, vehicles, or college. Ramsey ridicules the idea that high school graduates should embark upon an...
Learning Methods
May is for graduations, for ceremonies and parties. Some high school graduates will give up on further formal education and instead will enter straight into the work force. Others will pursue a challenging course of study at a university: mathematics, science,...
Five Useful Books
Take a break from the present, and consider the better books from the past. Of all the books published since the days of the ancients, I consider five most useful: Fibonacci’s “Liber Abaci,” Isaac Newton’s “Principia Mathematica,” Charles Darwin’s “On the Origin of...
Older Posts
Dilemma
Jeffrey W. Kitchen has taught an intense course on screenwriting to a series of small groups of just six people over the past 35 years. In recent weeks, I came across Kitchen on YouTube, and I was impressed by his skill, that of a classical dramatist. Kitchen says,...
Words: “What’s in a Name?”
In Shakespeare’s play, “Romeo and Juliet,” Juliet stands upon her balcony, and complains that Romeo has the wrong last name. Her family, the Capulet’s, and Romeo’s family, the Montague’s, were bitter enemies, locked in a bloody feud. She says, “’Tis but thy name that...
two peace marches
On Sunday, March 7, 1965, some 600 nonviolent, civil rights activists, mostly black, gathered at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, intending to march to Montgomery, Alabama, the state capital, a distance of 54 miles, to demand their constitutional right to...
The American Revolution, Small Pox, and Black Soldiers
George Washington was from Virginia, born February 22, 1732, noted last Sunday. Only once during Washington’s life, did he leave the North American continent, and that was in 1751, when he was 19, when he sailed to Barbados, an island in the south Caribbean Sea,...
Three Events on February 11, 1861
Black History Month began Sunday, February 1, and will end Sunday, March 1. At least three events occurred on February 11, 1861, that deserve our attention during Black History Month. On that day, the U.S. House of Representatives received a formal written...
thoughts on William Franklin
William Franklin was born in Philadelphia in 1730. His father was Benjamin Franklin. His mother was unknown. Ben brought William, his illegitimate son, into his home, that same year. Ben and his common-law wife, Deborah Reed, agreed to raise William together. ...

One of University of Northern Colorado’s 2020 Honored Alumni
William H. Benson
Local has provided scholarships for history students for 15 years
A Sterling resident is among five alumni selected to be recognized this year by the University of Northern Colorado. Bill Benson is one of college’s 2020 Honored Alumni.
Each year UNC honors alumni in recognition for their outstanding contributions to the college, their profession and their community. This year’s honorees were to be recognized at an awards ceremony on March 27, but due to the COVID-19 outbreak that event has been cancelled. Instead UNC will recognize the honorees in the fall during homecoming Oct. 10 and 11……
Newspaper Columns
The Duodecimal System
For centuries, the ancient Romans calculated sums with their clunky numerals: I, V, X, L, C, D, and M; or one, five, ten, 50, 100, 500, and 1,000. They knew nothing better.
The Thirteenth Amendment
On Jan. 1, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, and by it, he declared that “all persons held as slaves” within the rebellious states “are and henceforward shall be free.” Lincoln’s Proclamation freed some 3.1 million slaves within the Confederacy.
The Fourteenth Amendment
After Congress and enough states ratified the thirteenth amendment that terminated slavery, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866. This law declared that “all people born in the United States are entitled to be citizens, without regard to race, color, or previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude.” The Act equated birth to citizenship.
The New-York Packet and the Constitution
Jill Lepore, the Harvard historian, published her newest book a month ago, These Truths: A History of the United States. In a short introduction, she describes in detail the Oct. 30, 1787 edition of a semi-weekly newspaper, The New-York Packet.
Mr. Benson’s writings on the U.S. Constitution are a great addition to the South Platte Sentinel. Its inspiring to see the history of the highest laws of this country passed on to others.
– Richard Hogan
Mr. Benson, I cannot thank you enough for this scholarship. As a first-generation college student, the prospect of finding a way to afford college is a very daunting one. Thanks to your generous donation, my dream of attending UNC and continuing my success here is far more achievable
– Cedric Sage Nixon
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– Extra Times
FUTURE BOOKS
- Thomas Paine vs. George Whitefield
- Ralph Waldo Emerson vs. Joseph Smith
- William James vs. Mary Baker Eddy
- Mark Twain vs. Billy Graham
- Henry Louis Mencken vs. Jim Bakker





