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Life & Wisdom Quote by Robert Fitzgerald

"Yes, and there were changes of light on landscapes and changes of direction of the wind and the force of the wind and weather. That whole scene is too important in Homer to neglect"

About this Quote

Fitzgerald is quietly rebuking a modern bad habit: treating nature in Homer as decorative backdrop rather than narrative engine. The line’s first move is mimicry. That repeated “changes of” sounds like a translator’s ear training itself to hear what impatient readers skip over - light shifting, wind turning, wind strengthening, weather arriving as plot. It’s an inventory, but also an argument: epic realism is built from atmosphere, not just action.

The subtext is that Homer’s world is not an abstract moral stage where heroes perform prewritten fates. It’s a physical system that pushes back. Wind direction decides whether ships move, stall, or break; weather doesn’t “set a mood” so much as reorganize possibility. Fitzgerald, as a major translator of The Odyssey and The Iliad, is defending the sensory scaffolding that makes Homer feel alive in English. Ignore the winds and you flatten the poem into a storyboard of “greatest hits”: the rage, the cunning, the gods. Attend to them and you see how suspense works - the way a storm can be as decisive as Athena’s nudge.

There’s also a translator’s politics here. Fitzgerald is insisting that fidelity isn’t only about getting the big nouns right (honor, wrath, glory). It’s about preserving the poem’s meteorological intelligence: the way the sea is never neutral, the way landscape is read like a text, the way human intention is constantly negotiated with conditions. Homer’s environment is a character with leverage. Neglect it, and you miss the epic’s most modern insight: agency is always weathered.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Fitzgerald, Robert. (2026, January 16). Yes, and there were changes of light on landscapes and changes of direction of the wind and the force of the wind and weather. That whole scene is too important in Homer to neglect. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/yes-and-there-were-changes-of-light-on-landscapes-109980/

Chicago Style
Fitzgerald, Robert. "Yes, and there were changes of light on landscapes and changes of direction of the wind and the force of the wind and weather. That whole scene is too important in Homer to neglect." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/yes-and-there-were-changes-of-light-on-landscapes-109980/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Yes, and there were changes of light on landscapes and changes of direction of the wind and the force of the wind and weather. That whole scene is too important in Homer to neglect." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/yes-and-there-were-changes-of-light-on-landscapes-109980/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Robert Add to List
Fitzgerald on Homer: Light, Wind, and Weather
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

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Robert Fitzgerald (October 12, 1910 - January 16, 1985) was a Author from USA.

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