And the cry of battle was not unmarked of Nestor, albeit at his wine,
but he spake winged words to the son of Asclepius: "Bethink thee, goodly
Machaon, how these things are to be; louder in sooth by the ships waxes
the cry of lusty youths. Howbeit do thou now sit where thou art and
quaff the flaming wine, until fair-tressed Hecamede shall heat for thee
a warm bath, and wash from thee the clotted blood, but I will go straightway
to a place of outlook and see what is toward."
So spake he and
took the well-wrought shield of his son, horse-taming Thrasymedes, that
was lying in the hut, all gleaming with bronze; but the son had the
shield of his father. And he grasped a valorous spear, tipped with sharp
bronze, and took his stand outside the hut, and forthwith saw a deed
of shame, even the Achaeans in rout and the Trojans high of heart driving
them; and the wall of the Achaeans was broken down. And as when the
great sea heaveth darkly with a soundless swell, and forebodeth the
swift paths of the shrill winds, albeit but vaguely, nor do its waves
roll forward to this side or to that until some settled gale cometh
down from Zeus; even so the old man pondered, his mind divided this
way and that, whether he should haste into the throng of the Danaans
of swift steeds, or go after Agamemnon, son of Atreus, shepherd of the
host. And as he pondered, this thing seemed to him the betteróto go
after the son of Atreus. But the others meanwhile were fighting on and
slaying one another, and about their bodies rang the stubborn bronze,
as they thrust one at the other with swords and two-edged spears.
And Nestor was
met by the kings, fostered of Zeus, as they went up from the ships,
even all they that had been smitten with the bronze, the son of Tydeus,
and Odysseus, and Atreus' son, Agamemnon. Far apart from the battle
were their ships drawn up on the shore of the grey sea; for these had
they drawn up to land in the foremost row, but had builded the wall
close to the hindmost. For albeit the beach was wide, yet might it in
no wise hold all the ships, and the host was straitened; wherefore they
had drawn up the ships row behind row, and had filled up the wide mouth
of all the shore that the headlands shut in between them. The kings
therefore were faring all in one body, leaning each on his spear, to
look upon the war and the combat, and grieved were the hearts in their
breasts. And old Nestor met them, and made the spirit to quail in the
breasts of the Achaeans. Then lord Agamemnon lifted up his voice and
spake to him: "O Nestor, son of Neleus, great glory of the Achaeans,
wherefore hast thou left the war, the bane of men, and come hither?
I fear me lest in sooth mighty Hector make good his word and the threats
wherewith on a time he threatened us, as he spake amid the Trojans,
even that he would not return to Ilios from the ships till he had burned
the ships with fire and furthermore slain the men. On this wise spake
he, and now all this is verily being brought to pass. Out upon it! surely
the other well-greaved Achaeans are laying up wrath against me in their
hearts, even as doth Achilles, and have no mind to fight by the sterns
of the ships."
Then made answer
to him the horseman Nestor of Gerenia: "Yea, verily, these things have
now been brought to pass and are here at hand, neither could Zeus himself,
that thundereth on high, fashion them otherwise. For, lo, the wall has
been thrown down, wherein we put our trust that it should be an unbreakable
bulwark for our ships and ourselves. And the foemen at the swift ships
maintain a ceaseless fight, and make no end; nor couldst thou any more
tell, wert thou to look never so closely, from what side the Achaeans
are driven in rout, so confusedly are they slain, and the cry of battle
goeth up to heaven. But for us, let us take thought how these things
are to be, if so be wit may aught avail. But into the war I bid not
that we should enter; in no wise may a wounded man do battle."
Then again made
answer the king of men, Agamemnon: "Nestor, seeing they are fighting
at the sterns of the ships, and the well-built wall hath availed not,
nor in any wise the trench, whereat the Danaans laboured sore, and hoped
in their hearts that it would be an unbreakable bulwark for their ships
and for themselvesóeven so, I ween, must it be the good pleasure of
Zeus, supreme in might, that the Achaeans should perish here far from
Argos, and have no name. I knew it when with a ready heart he was aiding
the Danaans, and I know it now when he is giving glory to our foes,
even as to the blessed gods, and hath bound our might and our hands.
Nay, come, even as I shall bid, let us all obey. Let us drag down the
ships that are drawn up in the first line hard by the sea, and let us
draw them all forth into the bright sea, and moor them afloat with anchor-stones,
till immortal night shall come, if so be that even at her bidding the
Trojans will refrain from war; and thereafter might we drag down all
the ships. For in sooth I count it not shame to flee from ruin, nay,
not though it be by night. Better it is if one fleeth from ruin and
escapeth, than if he be taken."
Then with an angry
glance from beneath his brows Odysseus of many wiles addressed him:
"Son of Atreus, what a word hath escaped the barrier of thy teeth! Doomed
man that thou art, would that thou wert in command of some other, inglorious
army, and not king over us, to whom Zeus hath given, from youth right
up to age, to wind the skein of grievous wars till we perish, every
man of us. Art thou in truth thus eager to leave behind thee the broad-
wayed city of the Trojans, for the sake of which we endure many grievous
woes ? Be silent, lest some other of the Achaeans hear this word, that
no man should in any wise suffer to pass through his mouth at all, no
man who hath understanding in his heart to utter things that are right,
and who is a sceptred king to whom hosts so many yield obedience as
are the Argives among whom thou art lord. But now have I altogether
scorn of thy wits, that thou speakest thus, seeing thou biddest us,
when war and battle are afoot, draw down our well-benched ships to the
sea, that so even more than before the Trojans may have their desire,
they that be victors even now, and that on us utter destruction may
fall. For the Achaeans will not maintain their fight once the ships
are drawn down to the sea, but will ever be looking away, and will withdraw
them from battle. Then will thy counsel prove our bane, thou leader
of hosts."
To him then made
answer, Agamemnon, king of men: "Odysseus, in good sooth thou hast stung
my heart with harsh reproof; yet I urge not that against their will
the sons of the Achaeans should drag the well-benched ships down to
the sea. But now I would there were one who might utter counsel better
than this of mine, be he young man or old; right welcome were it unto
me."
Then among them
spake also Diomedes, good at the war-cry: "Near by is that man; not
long shall we seek him, if so be ye are minded to give ear, and be no
wise vexed and wroth, each one of you, for that in years I am the youngest
among you. Nay, but of a goodly father do I too declare that I am come
by lineage, even of Tydeus, whom in Thebe the heaped-up earth covereth.
For to Portheus were born three peerless sons, and they dwelt in Pleuron
and steep Calydon, even Agrius and Melas, and the third was the horseman
Oeneus, that was father to my father, and in valour was pre-eminent
among them. He verily abode there, but my father went wandering to Argos,
and there was settled, for so I ween was the will of Zeus and the other
gods. And he wedded one of the daughters of Adrastus, and dwelt in a
house rich in substance, and abundance was his of wheat-bearing fields,
and many orchards of trees round about, and withal many sheep; and with
his spear he excelled all the Argives. Of these things it must be that
ye have heard, whether I speak sooth. Wherefore ye shall not say that
by lineage I am a coward and a weakling, and so despise my spoken counsel,
whatsoever I may speak aright. Come, let us go down to the battle, wounded
though we be, since needs we must. Thereafter will we hold ourselves
aloof from the fight, beyond the range of missiles, lest haply any take
wound on wound; but the others will we spur on and send into battle,
even them that hitherto have done pleasure to their resentment, and
that stand aloof and fight not."
So spake he, and
they readily hearkened to him and obeyed. So they set out to go, and
the king of men, Agamemnon, led them.
And no blind watch
did the famed Shaker of Earth keep, but went with them in likeness of
an old man, and he laid hold of the right hand of Agamemnon, son of
Atreus, and spake, and addressed him with winged words: "Son of Atreus,
now in sooth, methinks, doth the baneful heart of Achilles rejoice within
his breast, as he beholdeth the slaughter and rout of the Achaeans,
seeing he hath no understanding, no, not a whit. Nay, even so may he
perish, and a god bring him low. But with thee are the blessed gods
in no wise utterly wroth; nay, even yet, I ween, shall the leaders and
rulers of the Trojans raise the dust of the wide plain, and thyself
behold them fleeing to the city from the ships and huts."
So saying, he shouted
mightily, as he sped over the plain. Loud as nine thousand warriors,
or ten thousand, cry in battle when they join in the strife of the War-god,
even so mighty a shout did the lord, the Shaker of Earth, send forth
from his breast, and in the heart of each man of the Achaeans he put
great strength, to war and fight unceasingly.
Now Hera of the
golden throne, standing on a peak of Olympus, therefrom had sight of
him, and forthwith knew him as he went busily about in the battle where
men win glory, her own brother and her lord's withal; and she was glad
at heart. And Zeus she marked seated on the topmost peak of many-fountained
Ida, and hateful was he to her heart. Then she took thought, the ox-eyed,
queenly Hera, how she might beguile the mind of Zeus that beareth the
aegis. And this plan seemed to her mind the bestóto go to Ida, when
she had beauteously adorned her person, if so be he might desire to
lie by her side and embrace her body in love, and she might shed a warm
and gentle sleep upon his eyelids and his cunning mind. So she went
her way to her chamber, that her dear son Hephaestus had fashioned for
her, and had fitted strong doors to the door-posts with a secret bolt,
that no other god might open. Therein she entered, and closed the bright
doors. With ambrosia first did she cleanse from her lovely body every
stain, and anointed her richly with oil, ambrosial, soft, and of rich
fragrance; were this but shaken in the palace of Zeus with threshold
of bronze, even so would the savour thereof reach unto earth and heaven.
Therewith she annointed her lovely body, and she combed her hair, and
with her hands plaited the bright tresses, fair and ambrosial, that
streamed from her immortal head. Then she clothed her about in a robe
ambrosial, which Athene had wrought for her with cunning skill, and
had set thereon broideries full many; and she pinned it upon her breast
with brooches of gold, and she girt about her a girdle set with an hundred
tassels, and in her pierced ears she put ear-rings with three clustering
drops; and abundant grace shone therefrom. And with a veil over all
did the bright goddess veil herself, a fair veil, all glistering, and
white was it as the sun; and beneath her shining feet she bound her
fair sandals. But when she had decked her body with all adornment, she
went forth from her chamber, and calling to her Aphrodite, apart from
the other gods, she spake to her, saying: "Wilt thou now hearken to
me, dear child, in what I shall say? or wilt thou refuse me, being angered
at heart for that I give aid to the Danaans and thou to the Trojans?"
Then made answer
to her Aphrodite, daughter of Zeus: "Hera, queenly goddess, daughter
of great Cronos, speak what is in thy mind; my heart bids me fulfil
it, if fulfil it I can, and it is a thing that hath fulfilment."
Then with crafty
thought spake to her queenly Hera: "Give me now love and desire, wherewith
thou art wont to subdue all immortals and mortal men. For I am faring
to visit the limits of the all nurturing earth, and Oceanus, from whom
the gods are sprung, and mother Tethys, even them that lovingly nursed
and cherished me in their halls, when they had taken me from Rhea, what
time Zeus, whose voice is borne afar, thrust Cronos down to dwell beneath
earth and the unresting sea. Them am I faring to visit, and will loose
for them their endless strife, since now for a long time's space they
hold aloof one from the other from the marriage-bed and from love, for
that wrath hath come upon their hearts. If by words I might but persuade
the hearts of these twain, and bring them back to be joined together
in love, ever should I be called dear by them and worthy of reverence."
To her again spake
in answer laughter-loving Aphrodite: "It may not be that I should say
thee nay, nor were it seemly; for thou sleepest in the arms of mightiest
Zeus."
She spake, and
loosed from her bosom the broidered zone, curiously-wrought, wherein
are fashioned all manner of allurements; therein is love, therein desire,
therein dallianceóbeguilement that steals the wits even of the wise.
This she laid in her hands, and spake, and addressed her: "Take now
and lay in thy bosom this zone, curiously-wrought, wherein all things
are fashioned; I tell thee thou shalt not return with that unaccomplished,
whatsoever in thy heart thou desirest."
So spake she, and
ox-eyed, queenly Hera smiled, and smiling laid the zone in her bosom.
She then went to
her house, the daughter of Zeus, Aphrodite, but Hera darted down and
left the peak of Olympus; on Pieria she stepped and lovely Emathia,
and sped over the snowy mountains of the Thracian horsemen, even over
their topmost peaks, nor grazed she the ground with her feet; and from
Athos she stepped upon the billowy sea, and so came to Lemnos, the city
of godlike Thoas. There she met Sleep, the brother of Death; and she
clasped him by the hand, and spake and addressed him: "Sleep, lord of
all gods and of all men, if ever thou didst hearken to word of mine,
so do thou even now obey, and I will owe thee thanks all my days. Lull
me to sleep the bright eyes of Zeus beneath his brows, so soon as I
shall have lain me by his side in love. And gifts will I give thee,
a fair throne, ever imperishable, wrought of gold, that Hephaestus,
mine own son, the god of the two strong arms, shall fashion thee with
skill, and beneath it shall he set a foot-stool for the feet, whereon
thou mayest rest thy shining feet when thou quaffest thy wine."
Then sweet Sleep
made answer to her, saying: "Hera, queenly goddess, daughter of great
Cronos, another of the gods, that are for ever, might I lightly lull
to sleep, aye, were it even the streams of the river Oceanus, from whom
they all are sprung; but to Zeus, son of Cronos, will I not draw nigh,
neither lull him to slumber, unless of himself he bid me. For ere now
in another matter did a behest of thine teach me a lesson, on the day
when the glorious son of Zeus, high of heart, sailed forth from Ilios,
when he had laid waste the city of the Trojans. I, verily, beguiled
the mind of Zeus, that beareth the aegis, being shed in sweetness round
about him, and thou didst devise evil in thy heart against his son,
when thou hadst roused the blasts of cruel winds over the face of the
deep, and thereafter didst bear him away unto well-peopled Cos, far
from all his kinsfolk. But Zeus, when he awakened, was wroth, and flung
the gods hither and thither about his palace, and me above all he sought,
and would have hurled me from heaven into the deep to be no more seen,
had Night not saved meóNight that bends to her sway both gods and men.
To her I came in my flight, and besought her, and Zeus refrained him,
albeit he was wroth, for he had awe lest he do aught displeasing to
swift Night. And now again thou biddest me fulfil this other task, that
may nowise be done."
To him then spake
again ox-eyed, queenly Hera: "Sleep, wherefore ponderest thou of these
things in thine heart? Deemest thou that Zeus, whose voice is borne
afar, will aid the Trojans, even as he waxed wroth for the sake of Heracles,
his own son? Nay, come, I will give thee one of the youthful Graces
to wed, to be called thy wife, even Pasithea, for whom thou ever longest
all thy days." So spake she, and Sleep waxed glad, and made answer saying:
"Come now, swear to me by the inviolable water of Styx, and with one
hand lay thou hold of the bounteous earth, and with the other of the
shimmering sea, that one and all they may be witnesses betwixt us twain,
even the gods that are below with Cronos, that verily thou wilt give
me one of the youthful Graces, even Pasithea, that myself I long for
all my days."
So spake he, and
the goddess, white-armed Hera, failed not to hearken, but sware as he
bade, and invoked by name all the gods below Tartarus, that are called
Titans. But when she had sworn and made an end of the oath, the twain
left the cities of Lemnos and Imbros, and clothed about in mist went
forth, speeding swiftly on their way. To many-fountained Ida they came,
the mother of wild creatures, even to Lectum, where first they left
the sea; and the twain fared on over the dry land, and the topmost forest
quivered beneath their feet. There Sleep did halt, or ever the eyes
of Zeus beheld him, and mounted up on a fir-tree exceeding tall, the
highest that then grew in Ida; and it reached up through the mists into
heaven. Thereon he perched, thick-hidden by the branches of the fir,
in the likeness of a clear-voiced mountain bird, that the gods call
Chalcis, and men Cymindis.
But Hera swiftly
drew nigh to topmost Gargarus, the peak of lofty Ida, and Zeus, the
cloud-gatherer, beheld her. And when he beheld her, then love encompassed
his wise heart about, even as when at the first they had gone to the
couch and had dalliance together in love, their dear parents knowing
naught thereof. And he stood before her, and spake, and addressed her:
"Hera, with what desire art thou thus come hither down from Olympus?
Lo, thy horses are not at hand, neither thy chariot, whereon thou mightest
mount."
Then with crafty
mind the queenly Hera spake unto him: "I am faring to visit the limits
of the all-nurturing earth, and Oceanus, from whom the gods are sprung,
and mother Tethys, even them that lovingly nursed me and cherished me
in their halls. Them am I faring to visit, and will loose for them their
endless strife, since now for long time's space they hold aloof one
from the other, from the marriage-bed and from love, for that wrath
hath fallen upon their hearts. And my horses stand at the foot of many-fountained
Ida, my horses that shall bear me both over the solid land and the waters
of the sea. But now it is because of thee that I am come hither down
from Olympus, lest haply thou mightest wax wroth with me hereafter,
if without a word I depart to the house of deep-flowing Oceanus."
Then in answer
spake to her Zeus, the cloud-gatherer: "Hera, thither mayest thou go
even hereafter. But for us twain, come, let us take our joy, couched
together in love; for never yet did desire for goddess or mortal woman
so shed itself about me and overmaster the heart within my breastónay,
not when I was seized with love of the wife of Ixion, who bare Peirithous,
the peer of the gods in counsel; nor of DanaÎ of the fair ankles, daughter
of Acrisius, who bare Perseus, pre-eminent above all warriors; nor of
the daughter of far-famed Phoenix that bare me Minos and godlike Rhadamanthys;
nor of Semele, nor of Alcmene in Thebes, and she brought forth Heracles,
her son stout of heart, and Semele bare Dionysus, the joy of mortals;
nor of Demeter, the fair-tressed queen; nor of glorious Leto; nay, nor
yet of thine own self, as now I love thee, and sweet desire layeth hold
of me."
Then with crafty
mind the queenly Hera spake unto him: "Most dread son of Cronos, what
a word hast thou said! If now thou art fain to be couched in love on
the peaks af Ida, where all is plain to view, what and if some one of
the gods that are for ever should behold us twain as we sleep, and should
go and tell it to all the gods? Then verily could not I arise from the
couch and go again to thy house; that were a shameful thing. But if
thou wilt, and it is thy heart's good pleasure, thou hast a chamber,
that thy dear son Hephaestus fashioned for thee, and fitted strong doors
upon the door-posts. Thither let us go and lay us down, since the couch
is thy desire."
Then in answer
to her spake Zeus, the cloud-gatherer: "Hera, fear thou not that any
god or man shall behold the thing, with such a cloud shall I enfold
thee withal, a cloud of gold. Therethrough might not even Helios discern
us twain, albeit his sight is the keenest of all for beholding."
Therewith the son
of Cronos clasped his wife in his arms, and beneath them the divine
earth made fresh-sprung grass to grow, and dewy lotus, and crocus, and
hyacinth, thick and soft, that upbare them from the ground. Therein
lay the twain, and were clothed about with a cloud, fair and golden,
wherefrom fell drops of glistering dew.
Thus in quiet slept
the Father on topmost Gargarus, by sleep and love overmastered, and
clasped in his arms his wife. But sweet Sleep set out to run to the
ships of the Argives to bear word to the Enfolder and Shaker of Earth.
And he came up to him, and spake winged words, saying: "With a ready
heart now, Poseidon, do thou bear aid to the Danaans, and vouchsafe
them glory, though it be for a little space, while yet Zeus sleepeth;
for over him have I shed soft slumber, and Hera hath beguiled him to
couch with her in love."
So spake he and
departed to the glorious tribes of men, but Poseidon he set on yet more
to bear aid to the Danaans. Forthwith then he leapt forth amid the foremost,
and cried aloud: "Argives, are we again in good sooth to yield victory
to Hector, son of Priam, that he may take the ships and win him glory?
Nay, even so he saith, and vaunteth that it shall be, for that Achilles
abideth by the hollow ships, filled with wrath at heart. Howbeit him
shall we in no wise miss overmuch if we others bestir ourselves to bear
aid one to the other. Nay, come, even as I shall bid, let us all obey.
In the shields that are best in the host and largest let us harness
ourselves, and our heads let us cover with helms all-gleaming, and in
our hands take the longest spears, and so go forth. And I will lead
the way, nor, methinks, will Hector, son of Priam, longer abide, how
eager soever he be. And whoso is a man, staunch in fight, but hath a
small shield on his shoulder, let him give it to a worser man, and himself
harness him in a large shield."
So spake he, and
they readily hearkened to him, and obeyed. And the kings themselves,
albeit they were wounded, set them in array, even the son of Tydeus,
and Odysseus, and Atreus' son Agamemnon. And going throughout all the
host, they made exchange of battle-gear. In good armour did the good
warrior harness him, and to the worse they gave the worse. Then when
they had clothed their bodies in gleaming bronze, they set forth, and
Poseidon, the Shaker of Earth, led them, bearing in his strong hand
a dread sword, long of edge, like unto the lightning, wherewith it is
not permitted that any should mingle in dreadful war, but terror holds
men aloof therefrom. But the Trojans over against them was glorious
Hector setting in array. Then verily were strained the cords of war's
most dreadful strife by dark-haired Poseidon and glorious Hector, bearing
aid the one to the Trojans, the other to the Argives. And the sea surged
up to the huts and ships of the Argives, and the two sides clashed with
a mighty din. Not so loudly bellows the wave of the sea upon the shore,
driven up from the deep by the dread blast of the North Wind, nor so
loud is the roar of blazing fire in the glades of a mountain when it
leapeth to burn the forest, nor doth the wind shriek so loud amid the
high crests of the oaksóthe wind that roareth the loudest in its rageóas
then was the cry of Trojans and Achaeans, shouting in terrible wise
as they leapt upon each other.
At Aias did glorious
Hector first cast his spear, as he was turned full toward him, and missed
him not, but smote him where the two baldricsóone of his shield and
one of his silver-studded swordówere stretched across his breast; and
they guarded his tender flesh. And Hector waxed wroth for that the swift
shaft had flown vainly from his hand, and back he shrank into the throng
of his comrades, avoiding fate. But thereupon as he drew back, great
Telamonian Aias smote him with a stone; for many there were, props of
the swift ships, that rolled amid their feet as they fought; of these
he lifted one on high, and smote Hector on the chest over the shield-rim,
hard by the neck, and set him whirling like a top with the blow; and
he spun round and round. And even as when beneath the blast of father
Zeus an oak falleth uprooted, and a dread reek of brimstone ariseth
therefromóthen verily courage no longer possesseth him that looketh
thereon and standeth near by, for dread is the bolt of great Zeusóeven
so fell mighty Hector forthwith to the ground in the dust. And the spear
fell from his hand, but the shield was hurled upon him, and the helm
withal, and round about him rang his armour dight with bronze. Then
with loud shouts they ran up, the sons of the Achaeans, hoping to drag
him off, and they hurled their spears thick and fast; but no one availed
to wound the shepherd of the host with thrust or with cast, for ere
that might be, the bravest stood forth to guard him, even Polydamas,
and Aeneas, and goodly Agenor, and Sarpedon, leader of the Lycians,
and peerless Glaucus withal, and of the rest was no man unheedful of
him, but before him they held their round shields; and his comrades
lifted him up in their arms and bare him forth from the toil of war
until he came to the swift horses that stood waiting for him at the
rear of the battle and the conflict, with their charioteer and chariot
richly dight. These bare him groaning heavily toward the city.
But when they were
now come to the ford of the fair-flowing river, even eddying Xanthus,
that immortal Zeus begat, there they lifted him from the chariot to
the ground and poured water upon him. And he revived, and looked up
with his eyes, and kneeling on his knees he vomited forth black blood.
Then again he sank back upon the ground, and both his eyes were enfolded
in black night; and the blow still overwhelmed his spirit.
But when the Argives
saw Hector withdrawing, they leapt yet the more upon the Trojans, and
bethought them of battle. Then far the first did swift Aias, son of
OÔleus, leap upon Satnius and wound him with a thrust of his sharp spear,
even the son of Enops, whom a peerless Naiad nymph conceived to Enops,
as he tended his herds by the banks of Satnioeis. To him did the son
of OÔleus, famed for his spear, draw nigh, and smite him upon the flank;
and he fell backward, and about him Trojans and Danaans joined in fierce
conflict. To him then came Polydamas, wielder of the spear, to bear
him aid, even the son of Panthous, and he cast and smote upon the right
shoulder ProthoÎnor, son of Areilycus, and through the shoulder the
mighty spear held its way; and he fell in the dust and clutched the
ground with his palm. And Polydamas exulted over him in terrible wise,
and cried aloud: "Hah, methinks, yet again from the strong hand of the
great-souled son of Panthous hath the spear leapt not in vain. Nay,
one of the Argives hath got it in his flesh, and leaning thereon for
a staff, methinks, will he go down into the house of Hades."
So spake he, but
upon the Argives came sorrow by reason of his exulting, and beyond all
did he stir the soul of Aias, wise of heart, the son of Telamon, for
closest to him did the man fall. Swiftly then he cast with his bright
spear at the other, even as he was drawing back. And Polydamas himself
escaped black fate, springing to one side; but Archelochus, son of Antenor,
received the spear; for to him the gods purposed death. Him the spear
smote at the joining of head and neck on the topmost joint of the spine,
and it shore off both the sinews. And far sooner did his head and mouth
and nose reach the earth as he fell, than his legs and knees. Then Aias
in his turn called aloud to peerless Polydamas: "Bethink thee, Polydamas,
and tell me in good sooth, was not this man worthy to be slain in requital
for ProthoÎnor? No mean man seemeth he to me, nor of mean descent, but
a brother of Antenor, tamer of horses, or haply a son; for he is most
like to him in build."
So spake he, knowing
the truth full well, and sorrow seized the hearts of the Trojans. Then
Acamas, as he bestrode his brother, smote with a thrust of his spear
the Boeotian Promachus, who was seeking to drag the body from beneath
him by the feet. And over him Acamas exulted in terrible wise. and cried
aloud: "Ye Argives, that rage with the bow, insatiate of threatenings,
not for us alone, look you, shall there be toil and woe, but even in
like manner shall ye too be slain. Mark how your Promachus sleepeth,
vanquished by my spear, to the end that the blood-price of my brother
be not long unpaid. Aye, and for this reason doth a man pray that a
kinsman be left him in his halls, to be a warder off of ruin."
So spake he, and
upon the Argives came sorrow by reason of his exulting, and beyond all
did he stir the soul of wise-hearted Peneleos. He rushed upon Acamas,
but Acamas abode not the onset of the prince Peneleos. Howbeit Peneleos
thrust and smote Ilioneus, son of Phorbas, rich in herds, whom Hermes
loved above all the Trojans and gave him wealth; and to him the mother
bare Ilioneus, an only child. Him then did Peneleos smite beneath the
brow at the roots of the eyes, and drave out the eyeball, and the shaft
went clean through the eye and through the nape of the neck, and he
sank down stretching out both his hands. But Peneleos drawing his sharp
sword let drive full upon his neck, and smote off to the the ground
the head with the helmet, and still the mighty spear stood in the eye;
and holding it on high like a poppy-head he shewed it to the Trojans,
and spake a word exultingly: "Tell, I pray you, ye Trojans, to the dear
father and the mother of lordly Ilioneus to make wailing in their halls,
for neither will the wife of Promachus, son of Alegenor, rejoice in
the coming of her dear husband, when we youths of the Achaeans return
with our ships from out of Troy-land."
So spake he, and
thereat trembling seized the limbs of them all, and each man gazed about
to see how he might escape utter destruction.
Tell me now, ye
Muses, that have dwellings on Olympus, who was first of the Achaeans
to bear away the bloody spoils of warriors, when once the famed Shaker
of Earth had turned the battle. Aias verily was first, the son of Telamon.
He smote Hyrtius, the son of Gyrtius, leader of the Mysians stalwart
of heart; and Antilochus stripped the spoils from Phalces and Mermerus,
and Meriones slew Morys and Hippotion, and Teucer laid low Protho–n
and Periphetes; thereafter Atreus' son smote with a thrust in the flank
Hyperenor, shepherd of the host, and the bronze let forth the bowels,
as it clove through, and his soul sped hastening through the stricken
wound, and darkness enfolded his eyes. But most men did Aias slay, the
swift son of OÔleus; for there was none other like him to pursue with
speed of foot amid the rout of men, when Zeus turned them to flight.