Homer’s Literary Legacy - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From Official Cambridge Guide to IELTS Academic Reading Test 4 · Part 3 · Questions 27–40
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Homer's Literary Legacy
Why was the work of Homer, famous author of ancient Greece, so full of clichés?
A Until the last tick of history's clock, cultural transmission meant oral transmission and poetry, passed from mouth to ear, was the principal medium of moving information across space and from one generation to the next. Oral poetry was not simply a way of telling lovely or important stories, or of flexing the imagination. It was, argues the classicist Eric Havelock, a “massive repository of useful knowledge, a sort of encyclopedia of ethics, politics, history and technology which the effective citizen was required to learn as the core of his educational equipment”. The great oral works transmitted a shared cultural heritage, held in common not on bookshelves, but in brains. In India, an entire class of priests was charged with memorizing the Vedas with perfect fidelity. In pre-Islamic Arabia, people known as Rawis were often attached to poets as official memorizers. The Buddha's teachings were passed down in an unbroken chain of oral tradition for four centuries until they were committed to writing in Sri Lanka in the first century B.C.
B The most famous of the Western tradition's oral works, and the first to have been systematically studied, were Homer's Odyssey and Iliad. These two poems – possibly the first to have been written down in the Greek alphabet – had long been held up as literary archetypes. However, even as they were celebrated as the models to which all literature should aspire, Homer's masterworks had also long been the source of scholarly unease. The earliest modern critics sensed that they were somehow qualitatively different from everything that came after – even a little strange. For one thing, both poems were oddly repetitive in the way they referred to characters. Odysseus was always “clever Odysseus”. Dawn was always “rosy-fingered”. Why would someone write that? Sometimes the epithets seemed completely off-key. Why call the murderer of Agamemnon “blameless Aegisthos”? Why refer to “swift-footed Achilles” even when he was sitting down? Or to “laughing Aphrodite” even when she was in tears? In terms of both structure and theme, the Odyssey and Iliad were also oddly formulaic, to the point of predictability. The same narrative units – gathering armies, heroic shields, challenges between rivals – pop up again and again, only with different characters and different circumstances. In the context of such finely spun, deliberate masterpieces, these quirks* seemed hard to explain.
C At the heart of the unease about these earliest works of literature were two fundamental questions: first, how could Greek literature have been born ex nihilo* with two masterpieces? Surely a few less perfect stories must have come before, and yet these two were among the first on record. And second, who exactly was their author? Or was it authors? There were no historical records of Homer, and no trustworthy biography of the man exists beyond a few self-referential hints embedded in the texts themselves.
D Jean-Jacques Rousseau was one of the first modern critics to suggest that Homer might not have been an author in the contemporary sense of a single person who sat down and wrote a story and then published it for others to read. In his 1781 Essay on the Origin of Languages, the Swiss philosopher suggested that the Odyssey and Iliad might have been “written only in men's memories. Somewhat later they were laboriously collected in writing” – though that was about as far as his enquiry into the matter went.
E In 1795, the German philologist Friedrich August Wolf argued for the first time that not only were Homer's works not written down by Homer, but they weren't even by Homer. They were, rather, a loose collection of songs transmitted by generations of Greek bards*, and only redacted* in their present form at some later date. In 1920, an eighteen-year-old scholar named Milman Parry took up the question of Homeric authorship as his Master's thesis at the University of California, Berkeley. He suggested that the reason Homer's epics seemed unlike other literature was because they were unlike other literature. Parry had discovered what Wood and Wolf had missed: the evidence that the poems had been transmitted orally was right there in the text itself. All those stylistic quirks, including the formulaic and recurring plot elements and the bizarrely repetitive epithets – “clever Odysseus” and “gray-eyed Athena” – that had always perplexed readers were actually like thumbprints left by a potter: material evidence of how the poems had been crafted. They were mnemonic* aids that helped the bard(s) fit the meter and pattern of the line, and remember the essence of the poems.
F The greatest author of antiquity was actually, Parry argued, just “one of a long tradition of oral poets that ... composed wholly without the aid of writing”. Parry realised that if you were setting out to create memorable poems, the Odyssey and the Iliad were exactly the kind of poems you'd create. It's said that clichés* are the worst sin a writer can commit, but to an oral bard, they were essential. The very reason that clichés so easily seep into our speech and writing – their insidious memorability – is exactly why they played such an important role in oral storytelling. The principles that the oral bards discovered as they sharpened their stories through telling and retelling were the same mnemonic principles that psychologists rediscovered when they began conducting their first scientific experiments on memory around the turn of the twentieth century. Words that rhyme are much more memorable than words that don't, and concrete nouns are easier to remember than abstract ones. Finding patterns and structure in information is how our brains extract meaning from the world, and putting words to music and rhyme is a way of adding extra levels of pattern and structure to language.
Glossary
quirk: behaviour or a habit which seems to be unique to one person
ex nihilo: a Latin phrase used to express the idea of 'creation out of nothing'
bard: a person who composed and recited long, heroic poems
redacted: published
mnemonic: a sentence or short poem used for helping someone to remember something
cliché: a phrase or idea that is unoriginal because people use it very frequently
Questions
Questions 27–32 Matching Information
Reading Passage 3 has six paragraphs, A-F.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
NB You may use any letter more than once.
Questions 33–34 Multiple Choice (Two Answers)
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
Questions 35–36 Multiple Choice (Two Answers)
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
Questions 37–40 Summary Completion
Complete the summary below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
The importance of the spoken word and how words are remembered
Spoken poetry was once the means by which each 37 of a particular culture or community could pass on its knowledge. Indeed, it has been suggested that it was the duty of a 38 to know poetry so they would be informed about subjects such as politics and history.
Psychologists now know that when people are trying to remember information, they may find it difficult to remember words that express 39 ideas. It is easier to remember words which sound similar or go together with 40 .
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q27 | E | They were, rather, a loose collection of songs transmitted by generations of Greek bards, and only redacted in their present form at some later date | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage tells us that these famous works were first just many separate songs passed down through many different people, and they were only made into the versions we have now at a later time. Answer Explanation: The answer means that Paragraph E contains the information saying that the Odyssey and Iliad were originally a group of different songs rather than the single, unified poems we know today. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is E because this paragraph mentions the theory of Friedrich August Wolf, who believed that Homer's famous works started as a 'loose collection of songs' shared by many storytellers (bards). This means they were not one single 'poem' in their first version, but many smaller pieces of music and storytelling that were only put together much later. Key terms to notice are 'collection of songs' and 'present form'. |
| Q28 | D | Jean-Jacques Rousseau was one of the first modern critics to suggest that Homer might not have been an author in the contemporary sense of a single person who sat down and wrote a story and then published it for others to read | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Rousseau thought Homer was different from a modern author who writes a story by themselves and prints it. Answer Explanation: The answer is paragraph D because it discusses a different way to understand what being an 'author' means. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is D because it introduces Jean-Jacques Rousseau's idea. He proposed that Homer was not an 'author' in the way we usually use the word today—meaning one specific person who writes and publishes a book. Instead, he suggested the poems were stories kept in people's memories. This represents a 'reinterpretation' because it changes the definition of an author from a single writer to a keeper of oral history. Keywords like 'author' and 'contemporary sense' show that he was rethinking the term. |
| Q29 | C | There were no historical records of Homer, and no trustworthy biography of the man exists beyond a few self-referential hints embedded in the texts themselves | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that there are no official documents about Homer and no accurate book written about his life, other than a few things he mentioned about himself in his own writing. Answer Explanation: The answer is paragraph C because this section of the text mentions that there is very little information about who Homer was as a person. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C because it directly discusses the lack of knowledge regarding Homer's life. The paragraph notes that there are no 'historical records' or a 'trustworthy biography' available, which means we do not have confirmed facts about his life story. |
| Q30 | E | All those stylistic quirks, including the formulaic and recurring plot elements and the bizarrely repetitive epithets – “clever Odysseus” and “gray-eyed Athena” – that had always perplexed readers were actually like thumbprints left by a potter: material evidence of how the poems had been crafted | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that the unusual patterns in the poems are like the finger marks left by a person making pottery, which prove how the art was created. Answer Explanation: The answer is paragraph E. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is E because this paragraph uses a simile to compare the specific writing style of Homer’s poems to physical marks left on a piece of pottery. It explains that the strange repetitions (epithets) and structural patterns in the text act as 'material evidence' of how the work was built, much like a potter's finger marks show how a clay pot was shaped. The word 'potter' refers to an artist or craftsman, providing the comparison to another art form requested in the question. |
| Q31 | A | In India, an entire class of priests was charged with memorizing the Vedas with perfect fidelity. In pre-Islamic Arabia, people known as Rawis were often attached to poets as official memorizers | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that in India, a specific group of priests was given the job of remembering holy books perfectly. It also mentions that in Arabia, people called Rawis worked with poets to serve as professional memory-keepers. Answer Explanation: The answer is Paragraph A. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because this paragraph provides specific examples of different groups of people whose job was to remember and protect information through memory. It mentions 'priests' in India who had to remember religious texts and 'Rawis' in Arabia who were hired to remember poems for poets. These terms describe the 'kinds of people' and 'employed' (or charged with a duty) to 'recall language' (information, poems, or teachings). |
| Q32 | B | Sometimes the epithets seemed completely off-key. Why call the murderer of Agamemnon “blameless Aegisthos”? Why refer to “swift-footed Achilles” even when he was sitting down? Or to “laughing Aphrodite” even when she was in tears | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that some of the descriptions used for characters did not make sense in the context of the story, leading to questions and doubts from those who studied the texts. Answer Explanation: The answer is paragraph B, which discusses why scholars were confused by certain words Homer used to describe characters. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B because this paragraph specifically mentions that researchers felt 'unease' (a form of doubt) about how Homer described people. It notes that the poems were 'oddly repetitive' and used descriptions called epithets that felt 'off-key' or 'inappropriate' because they did not match what the character was doing at that moment. For example, a character might be called 'swift-footed' even while sitting still, which made critics wonder why a great author would write that way. |
| Q33 | — | — | |
| Q34 | C / D | However, even as they were celebrated as the models to which all literature should aspire, Homer's masterworks had also long been the source of scholarly unease The same narrative units – gathering armies, heroic shields, challenges between rivals – pop up again and again, only with different characters and different circumstances |
Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that these poems were seen as perfect examples that other writers should try to copy. It also explains that the stories use the same basic parts, such as scenes about soldiers or hero's shields, many times in different places. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the two famous poems, the *Odyssey* and the *Iliad*, are very much alike in what they talk about and were considered the best examples of writing for other people to follow. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is supported by Section B of the text. The author mentions that these two poems were "celebrated as the models to which all literature should aspire," meaning they were seen as perfect examples (Choice D). Additionally, the author notes that the stories use the "same narrative units"—like specific scenes of armies or hero fights—repeatedly, which makes the content of the poems very similar and predictable (Choice C). |
| Q35 | — | — | |
| Q36 | B / C | In 1795, the German philologist Friedrich August Wolf argued for the first time that not only were Homer's works not written down by Homer, but they weren't even by Homer The greatest author of antiquity was actually, Parry argued, just “one of a long tradition of oral poets that composed wholly without the aid of writing” |
Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that some scholars believed the stories were not really by a man named Homer and that the people who made these poems did so without using any form of writing. Answer Explanation: The answer means that some researchers think Homer did not write these poems and that the poems were made using only voices and memory, not paper and pens. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer includes two main theories discussed in the passage. First, Friedrich August Wolf argued that Homer was not the actual author and that the poems were just a collection of songs from many people (Theory B). Second, thinkers like Rousseau and Milman Parry argued that these stories were created through speaking and memory, which means they were made without being written down (Theory C). Keywords like 'oral transmission' and 'composed wholly without the aid of writing' show that these theories focused on how the stories existed before they were recorded in books. |
| Q37 | generation | Until the last tick of history's clock, cultural transmission meant oral transmission and poetry, passed from mouth to ear, was the principal medium of moving information across space and from one generation to the next | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that for most of history, people shared knowledge by speaking and listening to poetry. This was the main way they sent information to new groups of people. Answer Explanation: The answer 'generation' refers to a group of people who are about the same age and live during the same time. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'generation' because the passage explains that in the past, poetry was how information was shared between different groups of people over time. It says information moved 'from one generation to the next,' which matches the summary's description of passing on knowledge within a culture. |
| Q38 | citizen | “massive repository of useful knowledge, a sort of encyclopedia of ethics, politics, history and technology which the effective citizen was required to learn as the core of his educational equipment” | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that oral poetry was like a large collection of information about things like history and politics. It describes a citizen as someone who was expected to learn this information as a main part of their education. Answer Explanation: The answer "citizen" refers to a person who is a member of a community or a country. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is found in Paragraph A. The passage explains that in the past, oral poetry acted as a major source of information. A researcher named Eric Havelock described it as a "repository of useful knowledge" or an "encyclopedia" that covered topics like "politics" and "history." He argued that an "effective citizen" was "required to learn" this poetry as a main part of their education. This matches the summary's logic that it was the duty of a citizen to know poetry to stay informed about those subjects. |
| Q39 | abstract | Words that rhyme are much more memorable than words that don't, and concrete nouns are easier to remember than abstract ones | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that rhymes and solid, physical names (concrete nouns) help people remember things better, whereas non-physical words (abstract ones) are more difficult to keep in the mind. Answer Explanation: The answer "abstract" refers to ideas or thoughts that are not physical objects, such as feelings or concepts that you cannot touch or see. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is found in the section of the text discussing memory. The passage mentions that certain types of words are easier for the brain to keep track of than others. Specifically, it states that "concrete" words (words for real, physical things) are easier to recall, while "abstract" ones are not. In the summary, it asks which kind of ideas are "difficult to remember," which matches the description of abstract nouns being harder to remember than concrete ones. |
| Q40 | music | Finding patterns and structure in information is how our brains extract meaning from the world, and putting words to music and rhyme is a way of adding extra levels of pattern and structure to language | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that humans look for patterns to understand things. By combining words with music and rhyme, we add organization to language, which helps our brains remember the information more easily. Answer Explanation: The answer "music" refers to tunes or melodies that often go along with lyrics in songs. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is "music" because the text explains that our brains remember information better when it has a clear pattern. The passage mentions that rhyme (words that sound similar) and music are two tools used to create these patterns, making it easier for people to learn and repeat long stories. The summary describes "sound similar" to represent rhyme and "go together with" to represent the use of music. |
