ILIAD: SUMMARY
The Iliad is about the Wrath of Achilles arising from an affront
to his honour by the hubristic Agamemnon... but, it is also about many
other things, both human and divine: it is a work which, though now printed
and finally consigned to a permanent recension, is paradoxically in a
state of constant flux, for no two readings ever seem to be alike.
The following summary
is adapted from Albin Lesky, A History of Greek Literature; trans.
de Heer &; Willis, London: Methuen &; Co., 1966.
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BOOK
I
A quarrel between
Achilles and Agamemnon ensues over the return of Chryseis to her father.
Athene dissuades Achilles from rash action, but he swears he will
not fight again. He calls his mother Thetis from the depths of the
sea and asks her to obtain from Zeus some gratification of his resentment.
Thetis agrees to do so when the gods shall have returned from their
twelve day banquet among the Ethiopians. Meanwhile Odysseus has returned
Chryseis to her father, who placates the god towards the Greeks. Thetis
lays her request before Zeus, who nods assent. His intentions are
kept secret from all, including Hera, despite her bitter complaints.
It is left for the cupbearer Hephaestus--lame and the butt of everyone's
joke--to bring back the laughter which should accompany the feasts
of the immortals.
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BOOK
XIII
Despite
the commands of Zeus, the gods who favour the Achaeans can remain onlookers
of their peril no longer. Poseidon, in the guise of Calchas, encourages
them to fight bravely: later, in the shape now of Thoas, he is further
grieved to see his grandson Amphimachus slain by Hector. In the long
drawnout battle that follows, in which Idomeneus, king of Crete, plays
a dominating part, Achaean resistance grows stiffer. Polydamas calls
for a concentration of the Trojan force and in a council of war warns
Hector that Achilles will not remain idle much longer. Hector accepts
the advice to call his men together, but disregards the reference to
Achilles. The battle goes on.
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BOOK
II
Zeus
sends a dream commanding Agamemnon to attack Troy. The king tells the
elders and assembles the army. It is now near the end of the ninth year,
and it seems advisable to sound the feelings of the warriors. Agamemnon
pretends a desire to return home, and the idea is more popular than
he had thought. The attitude of the army delays the joining of battle,
but Odysseus and Nestor rally the ranks for war: Thersites rails against
the leaders, but is put to silence. A succession of highly wrought similes
now describes the marshalling of the army: then follows a fresh invocation
of the Muses to give an accurate account of Greek strength in the Catalogue
of Ships, which is followed by a shorter catalogue of the Trojan
Forces.
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BOOK
XIV
Nestor
now leaves Machaon, whom he has been tending in his pavilion, to find
how the battle is going. He meets Diomede, Odysseus and Agamemnon, all
returning wounded from the fray. For the third time Agamemnon speaks
of withdrawal, now in terms of flight under cover of darkness. Odysseus
and Diomede disagree: Poseidon encourages the king, and his voice puts
heart into the army. Female cunning now enters the lists: Hera borrows
Aphrodite's enchanted saltire and rouses Zeus' passion on Mount Ida,
where he soon enough falls asleep. Her helper Hypnus hastens to the
plain to tell Poseidon that he can now help the Greeks without thought
of Zeus. The god vigorously encourages them, and soon a stone from Ajax
lays Hector low. He is long senseless, and meanwhile the Trojans suffer
other setbacks.
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BOOK
III
Despite
these elaborate preliminaries, general battle is not yet to be joined.
A new delaying device holds up the increasing pressure of events. Paris
declares himself ready to settle the issue by single combat with Menelaus,
and at the last minute an armistice is declared. Iris takes human form,
speaks to Helen, and the latter goes up to the wall over the Scaean
gate, where Priam and the elders are gazing onto the plain. At the king's
request she names and points out the greatest warriors of the Achaeans.
Priam is then called into the field to swear that he will abide by the
issue of the single combat. Menelaus' sword breaks on Paris' helmet:
he seizes him by the chinstrap and drags him towards the Achaean lines.
Paris' fate seems sealed, but Aphrodite makes the strap break, and rescues
Paris in a cloud, taking him back to his own house. Then, taking the
shape of an old woman, she bullies Helen and drives her into Paris'
arms. This striking deliverance of Aphrodite's favourite has created
an ambiguous situation: Paris is dallying with Helen, while Menelaus
rages over the field seeking him. Agamemnon claims victory for his brother
and the return of Helen and the booty: the war, he declares, is at an
end.
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BOOK
XV
The
Trojans have been driven back over the ditch when Zeus wakes up and
sees how he has been deceived. Hera has to obey his command and send
Iris and Apollo to him. Now for the first time she fully learns his
plan: Iris is to summon Poseidon from the field; Hector, strengthened
by Apollo, will drive the Greeks back to the ships of Achilles, whereupon
the latter will send Patroclus into battle. Patroclus will have many
successes - he will even slay Sarpedon - but in the end he will fall
by Hector's hand. In revenge Achilles will kill Hector, and from then
on the fate of the Trojans will be sealed. In the end their city will
be overthrown by a device of Athene's (the wooden horse). Hera conveys
the commands of Zeus to Olympus, where Athene restrains Ares from a
rash intervention in the battle. Poseidon unwillingly obeys the command
brought by Iris, and Hector with renewed strength drives the Greeks
back into their camp. Apollo himself levels the ditch and breaches the
wall: the Greeks are panicstricken as he shakes the aegis. As the Trojans
enter, Patroclus leaves the wounded Eurypylus and runs to Achilles.
Already the Trojans bearing firebrands are approaching the nearest ships,
and only Ajax still offers effective resistance.
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BOOK
IV
The
Achaean king may be in earnest in this view, but in the ensuing scene
in Olympus Zeus propounds it only to anger Hera and Athene. Both demand
the destruction of Troy; but we are not yet told the cause of their
hatred. At Hera's request Zeus agrees there is no other way of keeping
his promise to Thetis to send Athene to the Trojan field, where she
provokes Pandarus to break the armistice by shooting at Menelaus. The
latter is wounded, but speedily healed by Machaon, son of Asclepius
and physician to the army. Fighting is to be renewed: Agamemnon urges
on the heroes with words of praise or censure. Last to be addressed
is Diomedes, whom Agamemnon singles out for reproach. Unlike Achilles,
Diomedes takes rebuke patiently; but Sthenelus retorts sharply.
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BOOK
XVI
Patroclus' tearful
entreaties are wasted on Achilles, who still cannot forget the injustice
done him and has no time for Achaean self-pity. Nevertheless he sends
Patroclus with the Myrmidons and lends him his own armour, telling
him to repel the Trojans from the ships, but to go no further, lest
he diminish Achilles' reputation or meet some god who favours the
Trojans. Ajax is now exhausted, and Achilles urges Patroclus to make
haste, praying to Zeus of Dodona to grant him a safe return. Patroclus
drives back the Trojans from the ships and performs prodigies of velour.
Sarpedon falls by his hand, the son of Zeus himself. The battle rages
around his body; Zeus allows Apollo to shield it, and Sleep and Death
convey it to Lycia. Patroclus forgets his friend's warning and attacks
the very walls of Troy. He is repulsed by Apollo, who takes the form
of Asius and summons Hector to fight him. As the sun sinks, the god
himself comes behind Patroclus and strikes him between the shoulders,
so that his arms fall from him. Euphorbus wounds him from behind with
a spear, and Hector transfixes him with his lance.
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BOOK
V
Diomedes
is now to the fore: Pandarus' arrow cannot hurt him; Athene strengthens
him; his prowess is not content with mortal adversaries. He wounds Aphrodite
in the hand as she intervenes to protect her son Aeneas: she flies to
Olympus to be comforted by her mother Dione. Next Apollo protects Aeneas:
Diomedes prepares to attack him too, but the god's warning voice keeps
him back. With the encouragement and support of Ares the Trojans attack
boldly. Hera and Athene plunge into the fray the latter even serves
as Diomedes' charioteer. With their help he wounds Ares, who flees to
Olympus, and the goddesses also withdraw.
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BOOK
XVII
A
furious battle rages round the corpse. Menelaus slays Euphorbus, but
retreats before Hector, who strips Achilles' armour from Patroclus'
body and puts it on. The Achaeans defend the body, stoutly led by Ajax.
Thick darkness overtakes the combatants. Achilles' divine steeds, mourning
for Patroclus, are given fresh heart by Zeus. Athene and Apollo add
further fury to the fight around the corpse. At the prayer of Ajax,
Zeus takes away the darkness: now Menelaus can look for Antilochus,
the son of Nestor, and send him to Achilles with the fatal tidings.
Victory inclines towards the Trojans, but Menelaus and Meriones drag
away the body, while the two Ajaxes defend them from the angry onslaughts
of the enemy.
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BOOK
VI
The Trojans' danger
grows greater. The seer Helenus calls on Hector and Aeneas to rally
the ranks; then he sends Hector into the city, where the women are
to propitiate Athene with offerings and vows. Meanwhile Glaucus and
Diomedes meet on the field of battle, recognize each other as guest
friends, and exchange armour the Lycian's gold against the Argive's
bronze. This encounter in the midst of the fighting serves as an example
of knightly courtesy: it has another function also: to hold up the
swift development of the action in the fifth book and to let us see
what is happening in Troy. Hector hastens to his mother, and the Trojan
women fall to their ineffective prayers. He next looks for Paris,
to recall him to the field: he wishes to bid farewell to his wife
and child, but they are not at home. He finds them by the Scaean gate,
to which Andromache's fears have driven her. There is a conversation
between husband and wife, full of love and grief, as if Hector were
never more to return home. Andromache goes back to the house and mourns
him as if he were already dead. Paris now joins Hector, and they return
to the battle.
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BOOK
XVIII
Achilles
is seized with such violent grief that Thetis and the Nereids come from
the sea to comfort him. His mother offers him new arms, but says that
Hector's death must shortly be followed by his own. The body of Patroclus
is still in the gravest danger, and Achilles, directed by Iris and endowed
with fearful stature by Athene, runs to the ditch, where his war-cry
appals the Trojans. Hera hastily makes the sun set, and the battle ends.
Polydamas repeats his warning, but Hector makes the Trojans camp in
the field so as to renew the battle next day. Achilles bewails his dead
friend, while Hephaestus at Thetis' entreaty makes new arms for him,
in particular a wondrous shield with metal inlays displaying all the
scenes of human life.
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BOOK
VII
Fighting
now flares up again; but Athene and Apollo agree that it has gone far
enough for the day, and that Hector should challenge one of the Achaeans
to single combat. The seer Helenus transmits their decision, and Hector
sends out his challenge. Ajax is chosen by lot to be his opponent. At
the approach of night the combatants are separated by heralds, and the
day ends as indecisively as it began. The Greeks decide to bury their
dead next morning and to build a wall round their ships. The Trojans
for their part ask for the return of the bodies of the fallen, and are
willing, since Paris will not give up Helen, to return at all events
the treasure. The Greeks reject the overture, but next morning the dead
are collected and burned. The wall round the ships is built in the course
of the next day
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BOOK
XIX
At
dawn Thetis brings these arms to her son, and preserves Patroclus' body
with ambrosia. Achilles calls for a meeting of the host, briefly renouncing
his resentment, while Agamemnon in a long speech laments the folly that
Zeus had sent upon him and promises reparation. He also swears that
he has never touched Briseis. Achilles' impatience will hardly brook
delay while the army eats. The forces are marshalled and Achilles arms
himself. His horse speaks, prophesying his death.
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BOOK
VIII
Zeus
forbids the gods to take part in the battle, which he surveys from the
summit of Ida. The fighting begins with the dawn, and at midday Zeus
weighs the lots of the opposing armies: the scales decide for the Trojans.
In the varying fortunes of the battle Diomedes remains the mainstay
of the Achaeans, while Hector, confident of ultimate victory, is the
champion of the Trojans. Hera is obstinate in her determination to break
the commands of Zeus: she tries unsuccessfully to persuade Poseidon
to intervene in the fighting, and gives fresh courage to Agamemnon,
who prevails upon Zeus to spare the hard-pressed Achaean host. Hera
tries to help them, but Iris brings her a peremptory command from Zeus.
Now the Thunderer himself comes and explains his plan for the future:
the next day is to bring even more misfortune to the Greeks, and Hector
will remain unchecked until Achilles takes the field in defence of the
ships and fighting rages round the corpse of Patroclus. Night ends the
still indecisive battle, and Hector camps with his followers on the
plain.
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BOOK
XX
For
the last battle, the most ferocious of all in the Iliad, Zeus leaves
the gods free to do what they will. As they enter the lists, Zeus thunders,
Poseidon sends an earthquake; but as yet they are spectators. Achilles
first meets Aeneas, whom Poseidon rescues. Hector also is once more
saved from death by Apollo. Achilles rages like a forest fire in dry
woods.
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BOOK
IX
In
his despondency Agamemnon now inclines to the counsel which in Book
II he had proposed only to test reactions - to break off the war and
go home. He is vigorously opposed by Diomedes: in a council of the princes
Nestor suggests an appeal to Achilles. Agamemnon is willing to provide
the necessary gifts for an embassy to Achilles, and Odysseus, Ajax and
Phoenix set out to his tent. They are well received, and make speeches
to win him over. Odysseus speaks with skill and address; Phoenix is
more human and emotional, with well-chosen examples; the speech of Ajax
is brief and soldierly. They move Achilles' feelings, but his resentment
still cannot be assuaged: he will fight when Hector artacks his ships,
not before. The ambassadors return with their bad news, but Diomedes
urges all to be calm and confident.
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BOOK
XXI
The
battle beside the river is on a level of elemental savagery. Achilles
fills the Scamander with corpses, and takes twelve youths prisoner to
be sacrificed for Patroclus. Lycaon, Priam's son, pleads in vain for
his life: he too is slain and thrown into the river. The river god protests,
Achilles rages on unheeding, and Scamander now threatens him with his
waters. The gods now take a hand; Hephaestus with his fire dries up
the plain and defeats the river. By now the gods are fighting after
their various fashions: Athene wounds Ares with a stone, but Apollo
declines to fight with Poseidon over mortal men. Artemis is more bellicose,
until Hera breaks her bow and arrows over her head. All the gods now
return to Olympus. Agenor posts himself before the gate to withstand
Achilles' assault, but Apollo rescues him, takes his shape, and lures
Achilles away, so that the fleeing Trojans can withdraw within the walls.
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BOOK
X
Everyone
is asleep except Agamemnon and Menelaus, who wander anxiously about
the camp. Meeting each other outside, near the sentinels, they decide
to send Odysseus and Diomedes to reconnoitre. Hector also has sent out
a spy, Dolon, promising him the horses of Achilles. He falls in with
the two Greeks, who find out all that he knows and then despatch him,
having thus learned of the arrival of the Thracian king Rhesus with
his splendid horses. They kill Rhesus and twelve of his followers, and
ride back to camp with the horses.
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BOOK
XXII
Hector
remains in the field, despite the prayers of Priam and Hecuba that he
should take refuge in the city. He recalls now how he was thrice warned
by Polydamas and how he led his countrymen to destruction. Achilles
approaches, and he flees from him three times round the walls of the
city. Zeus weighs the fatal lots: that of Hector sinks. Apollo now deserts
his favourite, and Athene checks his flight by appearing in the form
of Deiphobus and promising help. Hector falls at the hand of Achilles.
As in his anger, so in his revenge Achilles knows no bounds. The dying
Hector had begged that his body be given back for burial: Achilles drags
the corpse to the ships behind his chariot. Priam, Hecuba and Andromache
break into wild lamentation.
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BOOK
XI
The
next day's fighting (the description of which lasts until book 18) begins
with the aristeia of Agamemnon. His arms are described in great detail.
Once again the expected development of the action is held up: Agamemnon's
prowess seems likely to unsettle Zeus' plan for the discomfiture of
the Achaeans, but the god knows what he is about. He sends Iris to Hector,
telling him to hold back while Agamemnon is fighting: his time will
come when Agamemnon is wounded and leaves the field. So it comes to
pass, but Odysseus and Diomedes maintain the battle on equal terms.
The wounding of Diomedes leaves Odysseus in sore straits, and even Ajax
now gives ground before the numbers of the enemy. Nestor takes the wounded
Machaon onto his chariot: Achilles, viewing the battle from the prow
of his ship, wants to know whom Nestor is rescuing, and sends Patroclus
to find out. The old man holds Patroclus long in conversation and urges
him to persuade Achilles to fight, or alternatively to give his arms
to Patroclus and send him into the fray. Patroclus, moved by this appeal,
hurries back: on his way he meets the wounded Eurypylus, who needs medical
help and gives but a poor account of Greek prospects.
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BOOK
XXIII
Two
corpses now await the purifying flames. Three times the Myrmidons march
round the corpse of Patroclus; finally they hold the funeral feast.
His shade appears to Achilles and prays for speedy cremation. Next morning
the pyre is made ready: the flames are fed with sumptuous offerings
- among them the twelve Trojan captives. The next day the bones of Patroclus
are gathered together, and elaborate funeral games with costly prizes
are celebrated. In the various contests Odysseus and Ajax are pitted
against each other - craft against strength. The indecisive wrestling-match
is a foretaste of the later 'judgment of arms' - a theme probably known
to Homer. It is significant that Achilles, not hitherto noted for temperance
of emotion or expression, plays the part of the peacemaker in a dispute
over the chariot-race. Here we have an anticipation of the Achilles
of the ransom scenes.
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BOOK
XII
The
first verses of book 12 begin a new section - lasting until the end
of 15 - of the great battle. At the start we find the Achaeans fighting
to defend the wall round their ships, although their retreat from the
battlefield has not been described. In fact, by a technique unusual
in epic, it has taken place while Patroclus has his scenes with Nestor
and Eurypylus. By the end of 15 Hector is about to set fire to the Greek
ships. The intervening four books contain a sequence - only substantially
interrupted by the machinations of Hera in 14 - of fluctuating fortune
in general and individual encounter, deeds of heroes and deaths of lesser
mortals, clearly composed as an artistic whole. After the retreat of
the Achaeans to their ships, the Trojans try to storm the wall. Hector's
first proposal, to drive at it headlong in their chariots, is opposed
by Polydamas, who more wisely wishes to leave the chariots at the edge
of the ditch. This is his first appearance as adviser and amender of
Hector's counsels - a role which he sustains up till book 18. The fate
of Asius, who assaults the wall singlehanded in his chariot, shows that
Polydamas cannot be disregarded with impunity. The Trojans, attacking
in five companies, are appalled by an evil omen, and Polydamas counsels
withdrawal. Hector rejects the warning and renews the attack. Sarpedon
breaks down part of the palisade, and Hector shatters one of the gates
with a great stone.
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BOOK
XXIV
The
anger and grief of Achilles are far from assuaged. Every day he drags
Hector's body three times round Patroclus' grave. On the twelfth day
the gods intervene. Against the wishes of the gods who hate the Trojans
- it is here that we are first told of the judgment of Parisl as the
cause of Hera's and Athene's hatred - Thetis is sent to Achilles to
ask him to return the body of Hector. Iris persuades Priam to face a
visit to the Greek camp. By night he sets out with rich gifts for the
man who slew the noblest of his sons. Achilles thinks of his own father:
both men weep and dismiss their anger and resentment. The angry and
implacable Achilles has learned to open his heart to another's grief.
Priam returns with Hector's body and the promise of an armistice of
twelve days. Andromache, Hecuba and Helen bewail Hector. For nine days
the Trojans gather wood; then Hector's pyre is kindled and his burial
mound is built.
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