Use supporting evidence from the texts. Both Achilles and Beowulf show super human powers that help them to defeat their greatest enemies. Achilles is more stuck on his fame then Beowulf is. Beowulf stays very humble even though he is a great warrior.
Table of Contents Hector Hector is the mightiest warrior in the Trojan army. He leads the assault that finally penetrates the Achaean ramparts, he is the first and only Trojan to set fire to an Achaean ship, and he kills Patroclus.
Yet his leadership contains discernible flaws, especially toward the end of the epic, when the participation of first Patroclus and then Achilles reinvigorates the Achaean army.
He demonstrates a certain cowardice when, twice in Book 17, he flees Great Ajax. Indeed, he recovers his courage only after receiving the insults of his comrades—first Glaucus and then Aeneas.
He can often become emotionally carried away as well, treating Patroclus and his other victims with rash cruelty. But although Hector may prove overly impulsive and insufficiently prudent, he does not come across as arrogant or overbearing, as Agamemnon does.
Moreover, the fact that Hector fights in his homeland, unlike any of the Achaean commanders, allows Homer to develop him as a tender, family-oriented man. Hector shows deep, sincere love for his wife and children.
Hector never turns violent with him, merely aiming frustrated words at his cowardly brother. Moreover, although Hector loves his family, he never loses sight of his responsibility to Troy.
Admittedly, he runs from Achilles at first and briefly entertains the delusional hope of negotiating his way out of a duel. However, in the end he stands up to the mighty warrior, even when he realizes that the gods have abandoned him. His refusal to flee even in the face of vastly superior forces makes him the most tragic figure in the poem.Remembrance and Commemoration in the Iliad by Rosie all of the characters striving for this ‘kleos’ (‘glory’) that will outlive them; most notably of course is Achilles.
The issue of the worth of life in comparison with glory is one that is a key theme to the poem, not only in the terms of the ultimate cost of war but also.
As such, even if Hector‟s comments to Paris and Helen are taken as proof of Hector‟s concern for his people (it could alternatively be interpreted as an expression of Hector‟s desire to achieve glory in front of the people) it is clear that this pales in comparison to Hector‟s concern for his own honor.
Summary of Iliad Book XXII. Search the site GO. History & Culture.
Ancient History & Culture Literature Summary of Iliad Book XXII Achilles Kills Hector. Share Flipboard Email Print ZU_09 / Getty Images She has the women burn the store of Hector's clothing in his honor. Next: Major Characters in Book XXII.
The humans in the Iliad have inherent characteristics that provide the pride, honor, and revenge. No one is completely at peace with his defending my father’s honor and my own” (Iliad 6, ).
These traits– a deeply ingrained sense of honor, a loyalty to home - are clearly established in the.
In the Iliad, as a whole, Achilles reflects a paradigm of the hero that has fallen in deep love with honor and glory. Behind every action or decision of Achilles lies. In the poem "The Iliad," the author Homer, illustrates the extent that honor and pride played in the lives of the ancient Greeks.
During that time period, men were willing to sacrifice anything and everything in order to achieve or uphold their honor and pride and the common goal.