Kleos — glory as sonic phenomenon, as poetic institution, as existential wager — occupies a foundational position in the depth-psychology library's treatment of archaic heroic culture. Gregory Nagy's monumental analysis dominates the corpus, establishing kleos not merely as renown but as the very medium through which Hellenic poetry constitutes itself. Etymologically rooted in the verb kluô ('to hear'), kleos designates 'that which is heard,' yet through the poet's sovereign act of transmission, it becomes glory itself: the Muses hear, the poet recites, the audience receives, and the hero is immortalized. Nagy demonstrates that kleos aphthiton — 'unfailing glory' — functions as Achilles' explicit compensation for the forfeited nostos, a bargain crystallized at Iliad IX 413, where the two terms stand in irreducible tension. Kleos thus operates at the intersection of mortality, memory, and Panhellenic poetic authority: it is what cult's timê cannot provide but Epos alone can confer. The corpus further reveals kleos operating reciprocally — between Odysseus and Penelope, between hero and tradition, between local cult and the universalizing epic project. Beekes supplies the etymological anchoring, tracing kleos to the IE root *kleu-s-, confirming the acoustic register that Nagy's thematic reading presupposes. What the corpus as a whole makes clear is that kleos is not praise incidentally rendered but glory structurally produced by the poetic medium itself.
In the library
12 passages
I have lost a safe return home [nostos], but I will have unfailing glory [kleos]. IX 413 … the kleos of the Iliad tradition should be an eternal consolation for losing a safe return home, a nostos.
This passage establishes the foundational Iliadic bargain: kleos aphthiton is the explicit, self-conscious substitution Achilles accepts for nostos, making kleos the defining compensation of the heroic life-choice.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979thesis
"That which is heard," kleos, comes to mean "glory" because it is the poet himself who uses the word to designate what he hears from the Muses and what he tells the audience. Poetry confers glory.
Nagy argues that kleos is not a passive social judgment but an active poetic institution: the Hellenic singer is the sovereign agent who transforms acoustic transmission into heroic immortality.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979thesis
Achilles, on the other hand, names as compensation for his impending death not timê but a kleos that is aphthiton 'unfailing' (IX 413). Whereas timê 'honor' is conferred by cult, the prestige that kleos brings is the undying glory of Epos.
This passage draws the critical distinction between cult's timê and epic's kleos, demonstrating that kleos is the specifically poetic mode of immortality unavailable through local ritual.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979thesis
the kleos of Achilles and the kleos of Odysseus, through generations of both shifting and abiding preferences in performer-audience interaction, have culminated in our Iliad and Odyssey. These epics are Panhellenic in the dimension of time as well as space.
Nagy extends kleos from individual epithet to collective evolutionary process, arguing that the Panhellenic epics themselves are the product of kleos accumulating across generations of performer-audience interaction.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979thesis
The inherited function of our Theogony, then, is to give kleos to the genesis of the gods. The hearing of such kleos is a remedy for penthos.
By extending kleos to the Hesiodic Theogony, Nagy demonstrates that the term's function as sonic antidote to grief (penthos) is a transgeneric principle governing both heroic epic and cosmogonic poetry.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979thesis
Thus the kleos of his aretê shall never perish, and the immortals shall fashion for humans a song that is pleasing for sensible Penelope.
The kleos of Odysseus is shown to be reciprocally bound to Penelope's aretê, establishing kleos as a relational rather than purely individual achievement mediated through the immortalizing song.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979supporting
the klea andrôn/hêrôôn 'kleos [plural] of men who were heroes' of Iliad IX 524-525 represents the evolution of Greek epic from earlier 'stories about the ancestors,' … contrasting the cult of heroes, which is restricted to the local level of the polis, with the Homeric kleos of heroes, which is Panhellenic.
Nagy situates kleos within a social-historical argument, contrasting its Panhellenic reach in epic with the local, bounded character of hero cult, positioning the two as parallel but non-identical institutions of commemoration.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979supporting
the ultimate referent of kleos at Odyssey xxiv 196 is the song of Odysseus, the Odyssey, even if the immediate referent is Penelope. The relationship between the kleos of Odysseus and the kleos of Penelope is metonymical and reciprocal.
This passage argues that kleos in the Odyssey is metonymically self-referential — the poem designates itself as the kleos it claims to transmit — and that its heroic and spousal forms are structurally intertwined.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979supporting
The kleos is aphthiton 'unfailing' in that it is a glory conferred by poetry; for the poetic connotations of kleos, see Nagy 1974.244-255. On the contrast in genre between kleos and nostos.
The gloss explicitly identifies the aphthiton qualifier as a marker of poetry's conferral rather than a natural property, and cross-references the genre-contrast between kleos and nostos as structurally constitutive.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979supporting
Beekes supplies the etymological foundation for kleos, tracing it to the Indo-European root *kleu-s-, confirming the acoustic basis Nagy develops thematically and establishing kleos's cognate network across ancient languages.
Beekes, Robert, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, 2010supporting
eipe d' ho ti klaieis kai odureai endothi thumôi Argeiôn Danaôn ide Iliou oiton akouôn.
The passage illustrates kleos operating in its oral-performative register: Odysseus weeps upon hearing the song of Troy, dramatizing the affective power of heroic narrative as auditory event.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979aside
Kleopatre herself has the stance of lamentation (oduromenê 'mourning', IX 591), just as those who 'mourn' Hektor (odurontai: XXIV 740).
The onomastic analysis of Kleopatre connects the kleos-root in proper names to the thematic register of penthos and lamentation, showing how heroic nomenclature encodes the tension between glory and grief.
Gregory Nagy, The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, 1979aside