First stories in humanity? The tradition itself, as a written form, is no older than 3000 years old (being written down mostly in Alexandria much later), similar to the age of the Vedas, Upninishads, and far younger than the Oracle Bone writing of Ancient China (though that wasn't predominantly narrative), or the pictographic writings of Sumeria, Egypt, or various other systems from all over the world. Greek culture isn't the oldest, and the oral tradition there isn't, since life there wasn't the first place, so evidently it its stories aren't the oldest.
On the whole though, they are pretty old, and based on a rather misinformed reverence for classical models, due to the fall of Rome, and the subsequent descent into what was thought of as a "dark age", Greek myths became a sort of foundation for literature (more often than not found with Roman equivalents transposed into the Greek frame). The reliance on Greek then, can be attributed to a self-conscious, masochistic culture, that somehow kept seeing itself as inferior.
The novel though, has generally been apart from there. The reason is, quite simply, it is dominated by narrative, over metaphor. Metaphor is less central, and therefore the myth is replaced with concrete examples, or fanciful imaginings. The educated Greek system, reserved for an elite schooled in Greek and Roman thought, would generally not really suit the audience at any rate - certainly the myths by this point had lost their original flavor in a world ruled by change backed up by a perceived sense of social injustice, and failed opportunity. The 18th century preoccupation of rich wig-wearing aristocrats writing idylls about shepherdesses had, quite simply, lost its flavor, as the audience - the reading public - began to change rapidly.
Later on, the Greek would make a comeback, as all mythology would, in a sense, because the myths themselves were reshaped, thanks to the help of a body of scholarship, preaching that these myths were fundamental to the subconscious of Humanity, and were the structures of all our thought - notably, the book "The Golden Bough", which had a direct influence on Eliot, for instance, as well as other works, including Freud, Jung, and later thinkers like Campbell and Frye.
Without this interpretation, or reverence, quite simply, it can be argued, the Greek flavor didn't hold. The tastes of exoticism were pulled mostly toward a sense of Gothic - the romantic castle where the murders took place, or a sort of spooky church or glen. I won't hesitate to throw Scotland as a whole into the frame of "literary preoccupation", in a sort of colonial, romanticized view of Scotland, facilitated by Walter Scott, as well as highly romanticized themes brought in from Medieval traditions, also facilitated by Walter Scott. There quite simply, was no preoccupation with the Greek tradition within the frame of 19th century romanticized settings, the way such settings attracted renaissance writers.




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more benign Achilles. But did Dickens have that allusion in mind? I guess he had to. If you know the Greek myths, as we do, as the Victiorians did, then you can't help bringing them in. 