The works of Home were collected and published by Henry Mackenzie in 1822 (3 vols. 8vo), but several of his smaller poems seem to have escaped the editor s observation. These are "The Fate of Cresar," " Verses upon Inveraray," " Epistle to the Enrl of Eglintoun," "Prologue on the Birthday of the Prince of Wales, 1759," and several " Epigrams," which are printed in vol. ii. of Original Poems by Scottish Gentlemen, 1762.
HOMEL, or Gomel, a town of Russia in Europe, in the government of Mohiletf, 132 miles S. of Mohiletf , on the highway to Tchernigoff, and on the right bank of the Sosh, which joins the Dnieper about 45 miles further down. It is a place of considerable importance, possessing (according to the St Petersburg Calendar for 1878) a population of 13,030, the suburb of Bielitsa being included. Most of the houses are of wood, but there are a good number of churches, several hospitals, and public schools. Three of the Orthodox churches were built by Rumatitzeff, who lie.s buried in St Peter s. The sugar-refineries are the most im portant of the industrial establishments. A good trade is carried on in the agricultural produce of the surroundiiu dist.ict, partly with Warsaw and partly with Riga. In 1860, when the population amounted to 13,659, there were 3637 Raskolniks (separatists) and 6518 Jews.
Homel, which appears in the older documents as Gomie or Gomi and Gom, is mentioned tor the first time in 1142, when it belonged to the Tchernigoff principality. The first inhabitants were Rodimitchians. In the 12th century we find Izyaslaff Daviditch taking refuge at Homel on his expulsion from Kieff. Along with Tchernigoff the town passed under the power of Lithuania ; but in the 15th century Simeon, son of John of Mozhaisk, to whom it had been entrusted by King Alexander, entered the service of John III. of Moscow, and it was not till 1537 that it was recovered for Sigismund Augustus by Prince Radzivill and a body of dim Tatars. The bailiwick was granted to the Polish grandees ; and by the last of these Prince Tcharovizhski a strong oaken castle was erected. In 1648 the town suffered from the invasion of Bogudan Khmel- nitzki, Avho put to death 1500 Roman Catholics and Jews. In 1655 it passed voluntarily to the side of the insurgent Cossacks, but at the peace of Andrusoff it remained with Poland. It was not incor porated with AVhite Russia till the reign of Catherine II., who assigned it to Field-Marshal Rumantzeff Zadunaiski. In 1834 it was purchased by Prince Paskevitch, and in 1852 it was made the chief town of a district.
HOMER (O/x^pos) was by the general consent of antiquity the first and greatest of poets. Many of the works once attributed to him are lost ; those which remain are the two great epics, the Iliad and. the Odyssey, about thirty Hymns, a mock epic (the Battle of the Frogs and Mice), and some pieces of a few lines each (the so-called Epigrams}.
Ancient Accounts of Homer.—Of the date of Homer probably no record, real or pretended, ever existed. Herodotus (ii. 55) maintains that Hesiod and Homer lived not more than 400 years before his own time, consequently not much before 850 b.c. From the controversial tone in which he expresses himself it is evident that others had made Homer more ancient; and accordingly the dates given by later authorities, though very various, generally fall within the 10th and 11th centuries b.c. It is needless to go into the questions raised by these statements, none of which has any claim to the character of external evidence.[1]
The extant lives of Homer (edited in Westermann s Vitamin Scriptorcs Greed minores) are eight in number, including the piece called the Contest of Hesiod and Homer. The longest is written in the Ionic dialect, and bears the name of Herodotus, but is certainly spurious. According to Joh. Schmidt (in the Dissertationes philologies Halenses, vol. ii. pp. 97-21 9), it belongs to the time which was fruit ful beyond all others in literary forgeries, viz., the 2d century of our era. The other lives are probably not more ancient. They contain a strange medley, ranging from the simplest outgrowth of popular fancy to the frigid inventions of the age which would not confess itself ignorant of the name of Hecub) s mother. Thus the story that Homer was the son of the Meles (the river on which Smyrna is situated) and the nymph Critheis is evidently a local legend. Another story of a primitive cast describes the manner of Homer s death in the island of los. Seeing some young fishermen on the beach with their nets, he asked them—
" Fishermen sprung of Arcadia, have we aught ?"
To which they answered in a riddle—
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" What we caught we left behind, What we caught not we bear with us."
- ↑ Sea Lauer, G csch. dcr limner. Pocsie, pp. 115-30; Sciigebusen, Homerica dissertatio posterior, p. 77.