So fought they like unto blazing fire, but Antilochus, swift of foot,
came to bear tidings to Achilles. Him he found in front of his ships
with upright horns, boding in his heart the thing that even now was
brought to pass; and sore troubled he spake unto his own great-hearted
spirit: "Ah, woe is me, how is it that again the long-haired Achaeans
are being driven toward the ships in rout over the plain? Let it not
be that the gods have brought to pass grievous woes for my soul, even
as on a time my mother declared unto me, and said that while yet I lived
the best man of the Myrmidons should leave the light of the sun beneath
the hands of the Trojans! In good sooth the valiant son of Menoetius
must now be dead, foolhardy one! Surely I bade him come back again to
the ships when he had thrust off the consuming fire, and not to fight
amain with Hector.
While he pondered
thus in mind and heart, there drew nigh unto him the son of lordly Nestor,
shedding hot tears, and spake the grievous tidings: "Woe is me, thou
son of wise-hearted Peleus, full grievous is the tidings thou must hear,
such as I would had never been. Low lies Patroclus, and around his corpse
are they fightingóhis naked corpse; but his armour is held by Hector
of the flashing helm."
So spake he, and
a black cloud of grief enwrapped Achilles, and with both his hands he
took the dark dust and strewed it over his head and defiled his fair
face, and on his fragrant tunic the black ashes fell. And himself in
the dust lay outstretched, mighty in his mightiness, and with his own
hands he tore and marred his hair. And the handmaidens, that Achilles
and Patroclus had got them as booty, shrieked aloud in anguish of heart,
and ran forth around wise-hearted Achilles, and all beat their breasts
with their hands, and the knees of each one were loosed beneath her.
And over against them Antilochus wailed and shed tears, holding the
hands of Achilles, that in his noble heart was moaning mightily; for
he feared lest he should cut his throat asunder with the knife. Then
terribly did Achilles groan aloud, and his queenly mother heard him
as she sat in the depths of the sea beside the old man her father. Thereat
she uttered a shrill cry, and the goddesses thronged about her, even
all the daughters of Nereus that were in the deep of the sea. There
were Glauce and Thaleia and Cymodoce, Nesaea and Speio and Thoe and
ox-eyed HaliÎ, and CymothoÎ and Actaea and Limnoreia, and Melite and
Iaera and AmphithoÎ and Agave, Doto and Proto and Pherousa and Dynamene,
and Dexamene and Amphinone and Callianeira, Doris and Panope and glorious
Galatea, Nemertes and Apseudes and Callianassa, and there were Clymene
and Ianeira and Ianassa, Maera and Orithyia and fair-tressed Amatheia,
and other Nereids that were in the deep of the sea. With these the bright
cave was filled, and they all alike beat their breasts, and Thetis was
leader in their lamenting: "Listen, sister Nereids, that one and all
ye may hear and know all the sorrows that are in my heart. Ah, woe is
me unhappy, woe is me that bare to my sorrow the best of men, for after
I had borne a son peerless and stalwart, pre-eminent among warriors,
and he shot up like a sapling; then when I had reared him as a tree
in a rich orchard plot, I sent him forth in the beaked ships to Ilios
to war with the Trojans; but never again shall I welcome him back to
his home, to the house of Peleus. And while yet he liveth, and beholdeth
the light of the sun, he hath sorrow, neither can I anywise help him,
though I go to him. Howbeit go I will, that I may behold my dear child,
and hear what grief has come upon him while yet he abideth aloof from
the war."
So saying she left
the cave, and the nymphs went with her weeping, and around them the
waves of the sea were cloven asunder. And when they were come to the
deep-soiled land of Troy they stepped forth upon the beach, one after
the other, where the ships of the Myrmidons were drawn up in close lines
round about swift Achilles. Then to his side, as he groaned heavily,
came his queenly mother, and with a shrill cry she clasped the head
of her son, and with wailing spake unto him winged words:
"My child, why
weepest thou? What sorrow hath come upon thy heart. Speak out; hide
it not. Thy wish has verily been brought to pass for thee by Zeus, as
aforetime thou didst pray, stretching forth thy hands, even that one
and all the sons of the Achaeans should be huddled at the sterns of
the ships in sore need of thee, and should suffer cruel things."
Then groaning heavily
swift-footed Achilles answered her: "My mother, these prayers verily
hath the Olympian brought to pass for me; but what pleasure have I therein,
seeing my dear comrade is dead, even Patroclus, whom I honoured above
all my comrades, even as mine own self? Him have I lost, and his armour
Hector that slew him hath stripped from him, that fair armour, huge
of size, a wonder to behold, that the gods gave as a glorious gift to
Peleus on the day when they laid thee in the bed of a mortal man. Would
thou hadst remained where thou wast amid the immortal maidens of the
sea, and that Peleus had taken to his home a mortal bride. But nowóit
was thus that thou too mightest have measureless grief at heart for
thy dead son, whom thou shalt never again welcome to his home; for neither
doth my own heart bid me live on and abide among men, unless Hector
first, smitten by my spear, shall lose his life, and pay back the price
for that he made spoil of Patroclus, son of Menoetius."
Then Thetis again
spake unto him, shedding tears the while: "Doomed then to a speedy death,
my child, shalt thou be, that thou speakest thus; for straightway after
Hector is thine own death ready at hand."
Then, mightily moved,
swift-footed Achilles spake to her: "Straightway may I die, seeing I
was not to bear aid to my comrade at his slaying! Far, far from his
own land hath he fallen, and had need of me to be a warder off of ruin.
Now therefore, seeing I return not to my dear native land, neither proved
anywise a light of deliverance to Patroclus nor to my other comrades,
those many that have been slain by goodly Hector, but abide here by
the ships a profitless burden upon the earthóI that in war am such as
is none other of the brazen-coated Achaeans, albeit in council there
be others betteró so may strife perish from among gods and men, and
anger that setteth a man on to grow wroth, how wise soever he be, and
that sweeter far than trickling honey waxeth like smoke in the breasts
of men; even as but now the king of men, Agamemnon moved me to wrath.
Howbeit these things will we let be as past and done, for all our pain,
curbing the heart in our breasts, because we must. But now will I go
forth that I may light on the slayer of the man I loved, even on Hector;
for my fate, I will accept it whenso Zeus willeth to bring it to pass,
and the other immortal gods. For not even the mighty Heracles escaped
death, albeit he was most dear to Zeus, son of Cronos, the king, but
fate overcame him, and the dread wrath of Hera. So also shall I, if
a like fate hath been fashioned for me, lie low when I am dead. But
now let me win glorious renown, and set many a one among the deep-bosomed
Trojan or Dardanian dames to wipe with both hands the tears from her
tender cheeks, amid ceaseless moaning; and let them know that long in
good sooth have I kept apart from the war. Seek not then to hold me
back from battle, for all thou lovest me; thou shalt not persuade me."
Then answered him
the goddess, silver-footed Thetis: "Aye, verily, as thou sayest, my
child, it is in truth no ill thing to ward utter destruction from thy
comrades, that are hard beset. But thy goodly armour is held among the
Trojans, thine armour of bronze, all gleaming-bright. This doth Hector
of the flashing helm wear on his own shoulders, and exulteth therein.
Yet I deem that not for long shall he glory therein, seeing his own
death is nigh at hand. But do thou not enter into the turmoil of Ares
until thine eyes shall behold me again coming hither. For in the morning
will I return at the rising of the sun, bearing fair armour from the
lord Hephaestus."
So saying she turned
her to go back from her son, and being turned she spake among her sisters
of the sea: "Do ye now plunge beneath the broad bosom of the deep, to
visit the old man of the sea, and the halls of our father, and tell
him all. But I will get me to high Olympus to the house of Hephaestus,
the famed craftsman, if so be he will give to my son glorious shining
armour."
So spake she, and
they forthwith plunged beneath the surge of the sea, while she, the
goddess, silver-footed Thetis, went her way to Olympus, that she might
bring glorious armour for her dear son.
Her then were her
feet bearing to Olympus, but the Achaeans fled with wondrous shouting
from before man-slaying Hector, and came to the ships and the Hellespont.
Howbeit Patroclus, the squire of Achilles, might the well-greaved Achaeans
not draw forth from amid the darts; for now again there overtook him
the host and the chariots of Troy, and Hector, son of Priam, in might
as it were a flame. Thrice from behind did glorious Hector seize him
by the feet, fain to drag him away, and called mightily upon the Trojans,
and thrice did the two Aiantes, clothed in furious valour, hurl him
back from the corpse. But he, ever trusting in his might, would now
charge upon them in the fray, and would now stand and shout aloud; but
backward would he give never a whit. And as shepherds of the steading
avail not in any wise to drive from a carcase a tawny lion when he hungereth
sore, even so the twain warrior Aiantes availed not to affright Hector,
Priam's son, away from the corpse. And now would he have dragged away
the body, and have won glory unspeakable, had not wind-footed, swift
Iris speeding from Olympus with a message that he array him for battle,
come to the son of Peleus, all unknown of Zeus and the other gods, for
Hera sent her forth. And she drew nigh, and spake to him winged words:
"Rouse thee, son of Peleus, of all men most dread! Bear thou aid to
Patroclus, for whose sake is a dread strife afoot before the ships.
And men are slaying one another, these seeking to defend the corpse
of the dead, while the Trojans charge on to drag him to windy Ilios;
and above all glorious Hector is fain to drag him away; and his heart
biddeth him shear the head from the tender neck, and fix it on the stakes
of the wall. Nay, up then, lie here no more! Let awe come upon thy soul
that Patroclus should become the sport of the dogs of Troy. Thine were
the shame, if anywise he come, a corpse despitefully entreated."
Then swift-footed
goodly Achilles answered her: "Goddess Iris, who of the gods sent thee
a messenger to me?"
And to him again
spake wind-footed, swift Iris: "Hera sent me forth, the glorious wife
of Zeus; and the son of Cronos, throned on high, knoweth naught hereof,
neither any other of the immortals that dwell upon snowy Olympus."
Then in answer to
her spake Achilles, swift of foot: "But how shall I enter the fray?
They yonder hold my battle-gear; and my dear mother forbade that I array
me for the fight until such time as mine eyes should behold her again
coming hither; for she pledged her to bring goodly armour from Hephaestus.
No other man know I whose glorious armour I might don, except it were
the shield of Aias, son of Telamon. Howbeit himself, I ween, hath dalliance
amid the foremost fighters, as he maketh havoc with his spear in defence
of dead Patroclus."
And to him again
spake wind-footed, swift Iris: "Well know we of ourselves that thy glorious
armour is held of them; but even as thou art go thou to the trench,
and show thyself to the men of Troy, if so be that, seized with fear
of thee, the Trojans may desist from battle, and the warlike sons of
the Achaeans may take breath, wearied as they are; for scant is the
breathing-space in war."
When she had thus
spoken swift-footed Iris departed; but Achilles, dear to Zeus, roused
him, and round about his mighty shoulders Athene flung her tasselled
aegis, and around his head the fair goddess set thick a golden cloud,
and forth from the man made blaze a gleaming fire. And as when a smoke
goeth up from a city and reacheth to heaven from afar, from an island
that foes beleaguer, and the men thereof contend the whole day through
in hateful war from their city's walls, and then at set of sun flame
forth the beacon-fires one after another and high aloft darteth the
glare thereof for dwellers round about to behold, if so be they may
come in their ships to be warders off of bane; even so from the head
of Achilles went up the gleam toward heaven. Then strode he from the
wall to the trench, and there took his stand, yet joined him not to
the company of the Achaeans, for he had regard to his mother's wise
behest. There stood he and shouted, and from afar Pallas Athene uttered
her voice; but amid the Trojans he roused confusion unspeakable. Clear
as the trumpet's voice when it soundeth aloud beneath the press of murderous
foemen that beleaguer a city, so clear was then the voice of the son
of Aeacus. And when they heard the brazen voice of the son of Aeacus
the hearts of all were dismayed; and the fair-maned horses turned their
cars backward, for their spirits boded bane. And the charioteers were
stricken with terror when they beheld the unwearied fire blaze in fearsome
wise above the head of the great-souled son of Peleus; for the goddess,
flashing-eyed Athene, made it blaze. Thrice over the trench shouted
mightily the goodly Achilles, and thrice the Trojans and their famed
allies were confounded. And there in that hour perished twelve men of
their best amid their own chariots and their own spears. But the Achaeans
with gladness drew Patroclus forth from out the darts and laid him on
a bier, and his dear comrades thronged about him weeping; and amid them
followed swift-footed Achilles, shedding hot tears, for that he beheld
his trusty comrade lying on the bier, mangled by the sharp bronze. Him
verily had he sent forth with horses and chariot into the war, but never
again did he welcome his returning.
Then was the unwearying
sun sent by ox-eyed, queenly Hera to go his way, full loath, to the
stream of Ocean. So the sun set and the goodly Achaeans stayed them
from the fierce strife and the evil war.
And on their side,
the Trojans, when they were come back from the fierce conflict, loosed
from beneath their cars their swift horses, and gathered themselves
in assembly or ever they bethought them to sup. Upon their feet they
stood while the gathering was held, neither had any man heart to sit;
for they all were holden of fear, seeing Achilles was come forth, albeit
he had long kept him aloof from grievous battle. Then among them wise
Polydamas was first to speak, the son of Panthous; for he alone looked
at once before and after. Comrade was he of Hector, and in the one night
were they born: howbeit in speech was one far the best, the other with
the spear. He with good intent addressed their gathering, and spake
among them: "On both sides, my friends, bethink you well. For my own
part I bid you return even now to the city, neither on the plain beside
the ships await bright Dawn, for afar from the wall are we. As long
as this man continued in wrath against goodly Agamemnon, even so long
were the Achaeans easier to fight against; aye, and I too was glad,
when hard by the swift ships I spent the night, in hope that we should
take the curved ships. But now do I wondrously fear the swift-footed
son of Peleus; so masterful is his spirit, he will not be minded to
abide in the plain, where in the midst both Trojans and Achaeans share
in the fury of Ares; but it is for our city that he will fight, and
for our wives. Nay, let us go to the city; hearken ye unto me, for on
this wise shall it be. For this present hath immortal night stayed the
swift-footed son of Peleus, but if on the morrow he shall come forth
in harness and light on us yet abiding here, full well shall many a
one come to know him; for with joy shall he that escapeth win to sacred
Ilios, and many of the Trojans shall the dogs and vultures devourófar
from my ear be the tale thereof. But and if we hearken to my words for
all we be loath, this night shall we keep our forces in the place of
gathering, and the city shall be guarded by the walls and high gates
and by the tall well-polished doors that are set therein, bolted fast.
But in the morning at the coming of Dawn arrayed in our armour will
we take our stand upon the walls; and the worse will it be for him,
if he be minded to come forth from the ships and fight with us to win
the wall. Back again to his ships shall he hie him, when he hath given
his horses, with high-arched necks, surfeit of coursing to and fro,
as he driveth vainly beneath the city. But to force his way within will
his heart not suffer him nor shall he lay it waste; ere that shall the
swift dogs devour him."
Then with an angry
glance from beneath his brows spake to him Hector of the flashing helm:
"Polydamas, this that thou sayest is no longer to my pleasure, seeing
thou biddest us go back and be pent within the city. In good sooth have
ye not yet had your fill of being pent within the walls? Of old all
mortal men were wont to tell of Priam's city, for its wealth of gold,
its wealth of bronze; but now are its goodly treasures perished from
its homes, and lo, possessions full many have been sold away to Phrygia
and lovely Maeonia, since great Zeus waxed wroth. But now, when the
son of crooked-counselling Cronos hath vouchsafed me to win glory at
the ships, and to pen the Achaeans beside the sea, no longer, thou fool,
do thou show forth counsels such as these among the folk. For not a
man of the Trojans will hearken to thee; I will not suffer it. Nay,
come; even as I shall bid, let us all obey: for this present take ye
your supper throughout the host by companies, and take heed to keep
watch, and be wakeful every man. And of the Trojans whoso is distressed
beyond measure for his goods, let him gather them together and give
them to the folk for them to feast thereon in common; better were it
that they have profit thereof than the Achaeans! But in the morning,
at the coming of Dawn, arrayed in our armour, let us arouse sharp battle
at the hollow ships. But if in deed and in truth goodly Achilles is
arisen by the ships, the worse shall it be for him, if he so will it.
I verily will not flee from him out of dolorous war, but face to face
will I stand against him, whether he shall win great victory, or haply
I. Alike to all is the god of war, and lo, he slayeth him that would
slay."
So Hector addressed
their gathering, and thereat the Trojans shouted aloud, fools that they
were for from them Pallas Athene took away their wits. To Hector they
all gave praise in his ill advising, but Polydamas no man praised, albeit
he devised counsel that was good. So then they took supper throughout
the host; but the Achaeans the whole night through made moan in lamentation
for Patroclus. And among them the son of Peleus began the vehement lamentation,
laying his man-slaving hands upon the breast of his comrade and uttering
many a groan, even as a bearded lion whose whelps some hunter of stags
hath snatched away from out the thick wood; and the lion coming back
thereafter grieveth sore, and through many a glen he rangeth on the
track of the footsteps of the man, if so be he may anywhere find him;
for anger exceeding grim layeth hold of him. Even so with heavy groaning
spake Achilles among the Myrmidons:
"Out upon it! Vain
in sooth was the word I uttered on that day, when I sought to hearten
the warrior Menoetius in our halls; and said that when I had sacked
Ilios I would bring back to him unto Opoeis his glorious son with the
share of the spoil that should fall to his lot. But lo, Zeus fulfilleth
not for men all their purposes; for both of us twain are fated to redden
the selfsame earth with our blood here in the land of Troy; since neither
shall I come back to be welcomed of the old knight Peleus in his halls,
nor of my mother Thetis, but even here shall the earth hold me fast.
But now, Patroclus, seeing I shall after thee pass beneath the earth,
I will not give thee burial till I have brought hither the armour and
the head of Hector, the slayer of thee, the great-souled; and of twelve
glorious sons of the Trojans will I cut the throats before thy pyre
in my wrath at thy slaying. Until then beside the beaked ships shalt
thou lie, even as thou art, and round about thee shall deep-bosomed
Trojan and Dardanian women make lament night and day with shedding of
tears, even they that we twain got us through toil by our might and
our long spears, when we wasted rich cities of mortal men."
So saying, goodly
Achilles bade his comrades set upon the fire a great cauldron, that
with speed they might wash from Patroclus the bloody gore. And they
set upon the blazing fire the cauldron for filling the bath, and poured
in water, and took billets of wood and kindled them beneath it. Then
the fire played about the belly of the cauldron, and the water grew
warm. But when the water boiled in the bright bronze, then they washed
him and anointed him richly with oil, filling his wounds with ointment
of nine years old; and they laid him upon his bed, and covered him with
a soft linen cloth from head to foot, and thereover with a white robe.
So the whole night through around Achilles, swift of foot, the Myrmidons
made moan in lamentation for Patroclus; but Zeus spake unto Hera, his
sister and his wife: "Thou hast then had thy way, O ox-eyed, queenly
Hera; thou hast aroused Achilles, swift of foot. In good sooth must
the long-haired Achaeans be children of thine own womb."
Then made answer
to him the ox-eyed, queenly Hera: "Most dread son of Cronos, what a
word hast thou said! Lo, even a man, I ween, is like to accomplish what
he can for another man, one that is but mortal, and knoweth not all
the wisdom that is mine. How then was I, that avow me to be highest
of goddesses in twofold wise, for that I am eldest and am called thy
wife, and thou art king among all the immortalsóhow was I not in my
wrath against the Trojans to devise against them evil?"
On this wise spake
they one to the other; but silver-footed Thetis came unto the house
of Hephaestus, imperishable, decked with stars, pre-eminent among the
houses of immortals, wrought all of bronze, that the crook-foot god
himself had built him. Him she found sweating with toil as he moved
to and fro about his bellows in eager haste; for he was fashioning tripods,
twenty in all, to stand around the wall of his well-builded hall, and
golden wheels had he set beneath the base of each that of themselves
they might enter the gathering of the gods at his wish and again return
to his house, a wonder to behold. Thus much were they fully wrought,
that not yet were the cunningly fashioned ears set thereon; these was
he making ready, and was forging the rivets. And while he laboured thereat
with cunning skill, meanwhile there drew nigh to him the goddess, silver-footed
Thetis. And Charis of the gleaming veil came forward and marked herófair
Charis, whom the famed god of the two strong arms had wedded. And she
clasped her by the hand, and spake, and addressed her: "Wherefore, long-robed
Thetis, art thou come to our house, an honoured guest, and a welcome?
Heretofore thou hast not been wont to come. But follow me further, that
I may set before thee entertainment."
So saying the bright
goddess led her on. Then she made her to sit on a silver-studded chair,
a beautiful chair, richly-wrought, and beneath was a footstool for the
feet; and she called to Hephaestus, the famed craftsman, and spake to
him, saying: "Hephaestus, come forth hither; Thetis hath need of thee."
And the famous god of the two strong arms answered her: "Verily then
a dread and honoured goddess is within my halls, even she that saved
me when pain was come upon me after I had fallen afar through the will
of my shameless mother, that was fain to hide me away by reason of my
lameness. Then had I suffered woes in heart, had not Eurynome and Thetis
received me into their bosomóEurynome, daughter of backward-flowing
Oceanus. With them then for nine years' space I forged much cunning
handiwork, brooches, and spiral arm-bands, and rosettes and necklaces,
within their hollow cave; and round about me flowed, murmuring with
foam, the stream of Oceanus, a flood unspeakable. Neither did any other
know thereof, either of gods or of mortal men, but Thetis knew and Eurynome,
even they that saved me. And now is Thetis come to my house; wherefore
it verily behoveth me to pay unto fair-tressed Thetis the full price
for the saving of my life. But do thou set before her fair entertainment,
while I put aside my bellows and all my tools."
He spake, and from
the anvil rose, a huge, panting bulk, halting the while, but beneath
him his slender legs moved nimbly. The bellows he set away from the
fire, and gathered all the tools wherewith he wrought into a silver
chest; and with a sponge wiped he his face and his two hands withal,
and his mighty neck and shaggy breast, and put upon him a tunic, and
grasped a stout staff, and went forth halting; but there moved swiftly
to support their lord hand-maidens wrought of gold in the semblance
of living maids. In them is understanding in their hearts, and in them
speech and strength, and they know cunning handiwork by gift of the
immortal gods. These busily moved to support their lord, and he, limping
nigh to where Thetis was, sat him down upon a shining chair; and he
clasped her by the hand, and spake, and addressed her: "Wherefore, long-robed
Thetis, art thou come to our house, an honoured guest and a welcome?
Heretofore thou hast not been wont to come. 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."
And Thetis made
answer to him, shedding tears the while: "Hephaestus, is there now any
goddess, of all those that are in Olympus, that hath endured so many
grievous woes in her heart as are the sorrows that Zeus, son of Cronos,
hath given me beyond all others? 0f all the daughters of the sea he
subdued me alone to a mortal, even to Peleus, son of Aeacus, and I endured
the bed of a mortal albeit sore against my will. And lo, he lieth in
his halls fordone with grievous old age, but now other griefs are mine.
A son he gave me to bear and to rear, pre-eminent among warriors, and
he shot up like a sapling; then when I had reared him as a tree in a
rich orchard plot, I sent him forth in the beaked ships to Ilios to
war with the Trojans; but never again shall I welcome him back to his
home, to the house of Peleus. And while yet he liveth, and beholdeth
the light of the sun, he hath sorrow, nor can I any wise help him, though
I go to him. The girl that the sons of the Achaeans chose out for him
as a prize, her hath the lord Agamemnon taken back from out his arms.
Verily in grief for her was he wasting his heart; but the Achaeans were
the Trojans penning at the sterns of the ships, and would not suffer
them to go forth. And to him the elders of the Argives made prayer,
and named many glorious gifts. Then albeit he refused himself to ward
from them ruin, yet clad he Patroclus in his own armour and sent him
into the war, and added therewithal much people. All day long they fought
around the Scaean gates, and on that selfsame day had laid the city
waste, but that, after the valiant son of Menoetius had wrought sore
harm, Apollo slew him amid the foremost fighters and gave glory to Hector.
Therefore am I now come to thy knees, if so be thou wilt be minded to
give my son, that is doomed to a speedy death, shield and helmet, and
goodly greaves fitted with ankle-pieces, and corselet. For the harness
that was his aforetime his trusty comrade lost, when he was slain by
the Trojans; and my son lieth on the ground in anguish of heart."
Then the famous
god of the two strong arms answered her: "Be of good cheer, neither
let these things distress thy heart. Would that I might so surely avail
to hide him afar from dolorous death, when dread fate cometh upon him,
as verily goodly armour shall be his, such that in aftertime many a
one among the multitude of men shall marvel, whosoever shall behold
it."
So saying he left
her there and went unto his bellows, and he turned these toward the
fire and bade them work. And the bellows, twenty in all, blew upon the
melting vats, sending forth a ready blast of every force, now to further
him as he laboured hard, and again in whatsoever way Hephaestus might
wish and his work go on. And on the fire he put stubborn bronze and
tin and precious gold and silver; and thereafter he set on the anvil-block
a great anvil, and took in one hand a massive hammer, and in the other
took he the tongs.
First fashioned
he a shield, great and sturdy, adorning it cunningly in every part,
and round about it set a bright rim, threefold and glittering, and therefrom
made fast a silver baldric. Five were the layers of the shield itself;
and on it he wrought many curious devices with cunning skill.
Therein he wrought
the earth, therein the heavens therein the sea, and the unwearied sun,
and the moon at the full, and therein all the constellations wherewith
heaven is crownedóthe Pleiades, and the Hyades and the mighty Orion,
and the Bear, that men call also the Wain, that circleth ever in her
place, and watcheth Orion, and alone hath no part in the baths of Ocean.
Therein fashioned
he also two cities of mortal men exceeding fair. In the one there were
marriages and feastings, and by the light of the blazing torches they
were leading the brides from their bowers through the city, and loud
rose the bridal song. And young men were whirling in the dance, and
in their midst flutes and lyres sounded continually; and there the women
stood each before her door and marvelled. But the folk were gathered
in the place of assembly; for there a strife had arisen, and two men
were striving about the blood-price of a man slain; the one avowed that
he had paid all, declaring his cause to the people, but the other refused
to accept aught; and each was fain to win the issue on the word of a
daysman. Moreover, the folk were cheering both, shewing favour to this
side and to that. And heralds held back the folk, and the elders were
sitting upon polished stones in the sacred circle, holding in their
hands the staves of the loud-voiced heralds. Therewith then would they
spring up and give judgment, each in turn. And in the midst lay two
talents of gold, to be given to him whoso among them should utter the
most righteous judgment.
But around the other
city lay in leaguer two hosts of warriors gleaming in armour. And twofold
plans found favour with them, either to lay waste the town or to divide
in portions twain all the substance that the lovely city contained within.
Howbeit the besieged would nowise hearken thereto, but were arming to
meet the foe in an ambush. The wall were their dear wives and little
children guarding, as they stood thereon, and therewithal the men that
were holden of old age; but the rest were faring forth, led of Ares
and Pallas Athene, both fashioned in gold, and of gold was the raiment
wherewith they were clad. Goodly were they and tall in their harness,
as beseemeth gods, clear to view amid the rest, and the folk at their
feet were smaller. But when they were come to the place where it seemed
good unto them to set their ambush, in a river-bed where was a watering-place
for all herds alike, there they sate them down, clothed about with flaming
bronze. Thereafter were two scouts set by them apart from the host,
waiting till they should have sight of the sheep and sleek cattle. And
these came presently, and two herdsmen followed with them playing upon
pipes; and of the guile wist they not at all. But the liers-in-wait,
when they saw these coming on, rushed forth against them and speedily
cut off the herds of cattle and fair flocks of white-fleeced sheep,
and slew the herdsmen withal. But the besiegers, as they sat before
the places of gathering and heard much tumult among the kine, mounted
forthwith behind their high-stepping horses, and set out thitherward,
and speedily came upon them. Then set they their battle in array and
fought beside the river banks, and were ever smiting one another with
bronze-tipped spears. And amid them Strife and Tumult joined in the
fray, and deadly Fate, grasping one man alive, fresh-wounded, another
without a wound, and another she dragged dead through the mellay by
the feet; and the raiment that she had about her shoulders was red with
the blood of men. Even as living mortals joined they in the fray and
fought; and they were haling away each the bodies of the others' slain.
Therein he set
also soft fallow-land, rich tilth and wide, that was three times ploughed;
and ploughers full many therein were wheeling their yokes and driving
them this way and that. And whensoever after turning they came to the
headland of the field, then would a man come forth to each and give
into his hands a cup of honey-sweet wine; and the ploughmen would turn
them in the furrows, eager to reach the headland of the deep tilth.
And the field grew black behind and seemed verily as it had been ploughed,
for all that it was of gold; herein was the great marvel of the work.
Therein he set
also a king's demesne-land, wherein labourers were reaping, bearing
sharp sickles in their hands. Some handfuls were falling in rows to
the ground along the swathe, while others the binders of sheaves were
binding with twisted ropes of straw. Three binders stood hard by them,
while behind them boys would gather the handfuls, and bearing them in
their arms would busily give them to the binders; and among them the
king, staff in hand, was standing in silence at the swathe, joying in
his heart. And heralds apart beneath an oak were making ready a feast,
and were dressing a great ox they had slain for sacrifice; and the women
sprinkled the flesh with white barley in abundance, for the workers'
mid-day meal.
Therein he set also
a vineyard heavily laden with clusters, a vineyard fair and wrought
of gold; black were the grapes, and the vines were set up throughout
on silver poles. And around it he drave a trench of cyanus, and about
that a fence of tin; and one single path led thereto, whereby the vintagers
went and came, whensoever they gathered the vintage. And maidens and
youths in childish glee were bearing the honey-sweet fruit in wicker
baskets. And in their midst a boy made pleasant music with a clear-toned
lyre, and thereto sang sweetly the Linos-song with his delicate voice;
and his fellows beating the earth in unison therewith followed on with
bounding feet mid dance and shoutings.
And therein he wrought
a herd of straight-horned kine: the kine were fashioned of gold and
tin, and with lowing hasted they forth from byre to pasture beside the
sounding river, beside the waving reed. And golden were the herdsmen
that walked beside the kine, four in number, and nine dogs swift of
foot followed after them. But two dread lions amid the foremost kine
were holding a loud-lowing bull and he, bellowing mightily, was haled
of them, while after him pursued the dogs and young men. The lions twain
had rent the hide of the great bull, and were devouring the inward parts
and the black blood, while the herdsmen vainly sought to fright them,
tarring on the swift hounds. Howbeit these shrank from fastening on
the lions, but stood hard by and barked and sprang aside.
Therein also the
famed god of the two strong arms wrought a pasture in a fair dell, a
great pasture of white-fleeced sheep, and folds, and roofed huts, and
pens. Therein furthermore the famed god of the two strong arms cunningly
wrought a dancing-floor like unto that which in wide Cnosus Daedalus
fashioned of old for fair-tressed Ariadne. There were youths dancing
and maidens of the price of many cattle, holding their hands upon the
wrists one of the other. Of these the maidens were clad in fine linen,
while the youths wore well-woven tunics faintly glistening with oil;
and the maidens had fair chaplets, and the youths had daggers of gold
hanging from silver baldrics. Now would they run round with cunning
feet exceeding lightly, as when a potter sitteth by his wheel that is
fitted between his hands and maketh trial of it whether it will run;
and now again would they run in rows toward each other. And a great
company stood around the lovely dance, taking joy therein; and two tumblers
whirled up and down through the midst of them as leaders in the dance.
Therein he set also
the great might of the river Oceanus, around the uttermost rim of the
strongly-wrought shield.
But when he had
wrought the shield, great and sturdy, then wrought he for him a corselet
brighter than the blaze of fire, and he wrought for him a heavy helmet,
fitted to his temples, a fair helm, richly-dight, and set thereon a
crest of gold; and he wrought him greaves of pliant tin.
But when the glorious
god of the two strong arms had fashioned all the armour, he took and
laid it before the mother of Achilles. And like a falcon she sprang
down from snowy Olympus, bearing the flashing armour from Hephaestus.