It is hardly possible to overestimate the importance for Western Literature of the s demonstration that the fall of an enemy, no less than of a friend or leader, is tragic and not comic. With the , once for all, an objective and disinterested element enters into the poet's vision of human life. Without this element, poetry is merely instrumental to various social aims, to propaganda, to amusement, to devotion, to instruction: with it, it acquires the authority that since the it has never lost, an authority based, like the authority of science, on the vision of nature as an impersonal order.
Homer