Archive for September 2008


Fame Was More Important Than Life

The Iliad describes one small incident in the Trojan War—a quarrel, a bitter clash of egos, between Agamemnon, king of Mycenae and leader of the Greek army, and Achilles, captain of one of its squadrons. Once he felt that his honor had been impugned, Achilles endangered the entire Greek cause by withdrawing all his men from the fray. In the course of the ensuing conflict, Achilles’ best friend, Patroclus, was tragically killed by Hector, son of King Priam of Troy. The Odyssey was set after the war and described the ten-year voyage of Odysseus, who had to journey through many strange lands until he was finally reunited with his wife in Ithaca. In both poems, Homer celebrated the excitement of battle, the joy of comradeship, and the glory of the aristeia, when a warrior lost himself in a “victorious rampage” and became an irresistible force, sweeping all before him. In war, Homer seemed to suggest, men lived more intensely. If his glorious deeds were remembered in epic song, the hero overcame the oblivion of death and achieved the only immortality that was possible for moribund human beings.

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The library is still here

Dojo Darelir does indeed have a library, or, more accurately, a study. But the Dojo is more than that: it is a training hall, a residence, even an embassy. The new site will reflect that greater whole.

Because the Dojo is more than a library

The Library of Xenograg was fine as a reference site, but was a one-way transfer of information. So I am recreating the site as Dojo Darelir, a place where visitors can (soon) comment on the material here.