The aim of this paper is to examine and describe the rules of violence and the pride of bloodshed in Greek epic poetry, within the perspectives of oral composition by traditional formulas and themes. There is an intrinsic interrelation between heroes, bloodthirstiness, and the words and the images of blood in fighting scenes. We explore the heroes nature by the function of traditional epithets beginning from the formulaic expression emata d'aimatoenta («the bloody days») as a metonymy of the epic theme of the persis, i.e. the sack of the city. Here we can find the highest degree of savagery and violence: the prey of bloodthirstiness is represented by elders, women and little children. The ostentation of blood and carnage is a typical motif ...