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The Iliad. Review Game. Question 1 – Group 1. What are the first 8 lines of an epic poem called?. proem. Question 1 – Group 2. This immortal stops Achilles from killing Agamemnon. Athena. Question 1 – Group 3.
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The Iliad Review Game
Question 1 – Group 1 • What are the first 8 lines of an epic poem called?
Question 1 – Group 2 • This immortal stops Achilles from killing Agamemnon.
Question 1 – Group 3 • What is the name for the descriptive phrases that regularly accompany character names
Question 1 – Group 4 • This immortal saves Paris.
Question 2 – Group 1 • This character, who has an aristeia in book 5, serves as a sort of replacement Achilles.
Question 2 – Group 2 • This is the name of Hector’s child.
Question 2 – Group 3 • Aside from Aphrodite, Diomedes also wounds this immortal.
Question 2 – Group 4 • When the embassy approaches Achilles, he is rocking out on the lyre and singing a song about this.
Question 3 – Group 1 • The Greek Healer, Machaon, is wounded by this character.
Question 3 – Group 2 • Who gives Patroclus the idea of wearing Achilles’ armor?
Question 3 – Group 3 • This character has many epithets. One epithet likens him to the river while another refers to him as “man-killing”
Question 3 – Group 4 • While Zeus is asleep, this character is able to knock out Hector
Question 4 – Group 1 • Zeus, overwhelmed by his desire for Hera, chooses this tactic to woo his wife.
Question 4 – Group 2 • Zeus sends this immortal to tell Poseidon that he should withdraw from the battle.
Question 4 – Group 3 • This character talks to horses.
Question 4 – Group 4 • This is the name of Priam’s wife.
Question 5 – Group 1 • Which god makes Achilles’ new armor?
Question 5 – Group 2 • Which character first injures Patroclus AND is later murdered by Menelaus?
Question 5 – Group 3 • Which god/goddess fools Hector when he’s running around the city walls, which leads to his death?
Question 5 – Group 4 • Who AND what does Achilles use as a sacrifice for Patroclus’ funeral pyre?
Question 6 – Group 1 “Bury me, quickly – let me pass to the gates of Hades. They hold me off at a distance, all the souls, the shades of the burnt-out, breathless dead, never to let me cross the river, mingle with them…They leave me to wander up and down, abandoned, lost at the House of Death with the all-embracing gates.”
Question 6 – Group 2 • 'Ah me, my child, your birth was bitterness. Why did I raise you? If only you could sit by your ships untroubled, not weeping,since indeed your lifetime is to be short, of no length. Now it has befallen that your life must be brief and bitter beyond all men's. To a bad destiny I bore you in my chambers.'
Question 6 – Group 3 • 'Poor ____________Why does your heart sorrow so much for me?No man is going to hurl me to Hades, unless it is fated,but as for fate, I think no man has yet escaped itonce it has taken its first form, neither brave man nor coward.'
Question 6 – Group 4 • 'Ah me, that it is destined that the dearest of men, Sarpedon, must go down under the hands of Menoitios' son Patroklos. The heart in my breast is balanced between two ways as I ponder, whether I should snatch him out of the sorrowful battleand set him down still alive in the rich country of Lykia, or beat him under at the hands of the son of Menoitios.'
Question 7 – Group 1 • I carry two sorts of destiny toward the day my death. Either, if I stay here and fight beside the city of Trojans, my return home is gone, but my glory shall be everlasting;but if I return home to the beloved land of my fathers, the excellence of my glory is gone, but there will be a long life left for me, and my end in death will not come to me quickly.'