So by the beaked ships around thee, O son of Peleus, insatiate of fight,
the Achaeans arrayed them for battle; and likewise the Trojans over
against them on the rising ground of the plain. But Zeus bade Themis
summon the gods to the place of gathering from the brow of many-ridged
Olympus; and she sped everywhither, and bade them come to the house
of Zeus. There was no river that came not, save only Oceanus, nor any
nymph, of all that haunt the fair copses, the springs that feed the
rivers, and the grassy meadows. And being come to the house of Zeus
they sate them down within the polished colonnades which for father
Zeus Hephaestus had builded with cunning skill.
Thus were they gathered
within the house of Zeus; nor did the Shaker of Earth fail to heed the
call of the goddess, but came forth from the sea to join their company;
and he sate him in the midst, and made question concerning the purpose
of Zeus: "Wherefore, thou lord of the bright lightning, hast thou called
the gods to the place of gathering? Is it that thou art pondering on
somewhat concerning the Trojans and Achaeans? for now is their battle
and fighting kindled hard at hand."
Then Zeus, the cloud-gatherer,
answered him, and said: "Thou knowest, O Shaker of Earth, the purpose
in my breast, for the which I gathered you hither; I have regard unto
them, even though they die. Yet verily, for myself will I abide here
sitting in a fold of Olympus, wherefrom I will gaze and make glad my
heart; but do ye others all go forth till ye be come among the Trojans
and Achaeans, and bear aid to this side or that, even as the mind of
each may be. For if Achilles shall fight alone against the Trojans,
not even for a little space will they hold back the swift-footed son
of Peleus. Nay, even aforetime were they wont to tremble as they looked
upon him, and now when verily his heart is grievously in wrath for his
friend, I fear me lest even beyond what is ordained he lay waste the
wall."
So spake the son
of Cronos, and roused war unabating. And the gods went their way into
the battle, being divided in counsel: Hera gat her to the gathering
of the ships, and with her Pallas Athene, and Poseidon, the Shaker of
Earth, and the helper Hermes, that was beyond all in the cunning of
his mind; and together with these went Hephaestus, exulting in his might,
halting, but beneath him his slender legs moved nimbly; but unto the
Trojans went Ares, of the flashing helm, and with him Phoebus, of the
unshorn locks, and Artemis, the archer, and Leto and Xanthus and laughter-loving
Aphrodite.
Now as long as the
gods were afar from the mortal men, even for so long triumphed the Achaeans
mightily, seeing Achilles was come forth, albeit he had long kept him
aloof from grievous battle; but upon the Trojans came dread trembling
on the limbs of every man in their terror, when they beheld the swift-footed
son of Peleus, flaming in his harness, the peer of Ares, the bane of
men. But when the Olympians were come into the midst of the throng of
men, then up leapt mighty Strife, the rouser of hosts, and Athene cried
aloud,ónow would she stand beside the digged trench without the wall,
and now upon the loud-sounding shores would she utter her loud cry.
And over against her shouted Ares, dread as a dark whirlwind, calling
with shrill tones to the Trojans from the topmost citadel and now again
as he sped by the shore of Simois over Callicolone.
Thus did the blessed
gods urge on the two hosts to clash in battle, and amid them made grievous
strife to burst forth. Then terribly thundered the father of gods and
men from on high; and from beneath did Poseidon cause the vast earth
to quake, and the steep crests of the mountains. All the roots of many-fountained
Ida were shaken, and all her peaks, and the city of the Trojans, and
the ships of the Achaeans. And seized with fear in the world below was
Aidoneus, lord of the shades, and in fear leapt he from his throne and
cried aloud, lest above him the earth be cloven by Poseidon, the Shaker
of Earth, and his abode be made plain to view for mortals and immortalsóthe
dread and dank abode, wherefor the very gods have loathing: so great
was the din that arose when the gods clashed in strife. For against
king Poseidon stood Phoebus Apollo with his winged arrows, and against
Enyalius the goddess, flashing-eyed Athene; against Hera stood forth
the huntress of the golden arrows, and the echoing chase, even the archer
Artemis, sister of the god that smiteth afar; against Leto stood forth
the strong helper, Hermes, and against Hephaestus the great, deep-eddying
river, that gods call Xanthus, and men Scamander.
Thus gods went
forth to meet with gods. But Achilles was fain to meet with Hector,
Priam's son, above all others in the throng, for with his blood as with
that of none other did his spirit bid him glut Ares, the warrior with
tough shield of hide. Howbeit Aeneas did Apollo, rouser of hosts, make
to go forth to face the son of Peleus, and he put into him great might:
and he likened his own voice to that of Lycaon, son of Priam. In his
likeness spake unto Aeneas the son of Zeus, Apollo: "Aeneas, counsellor
of the Trojans, where be now thy threats, wherewith thou wast wont to
declare unto the princes of the Trojans over thy wine, that thou wouldst
do battle man to man against Achilles, son of Peleus?"
Then Aeneas answered
him, and said: "Son of Priam, why on this wise dost thou bid me face
in fight the son of Peleus, high of heart, though I be not minded thereto?
Not now for the first time shall I stand forth against swift-footed
Achilles; nay, once ere now he drave me with his spear from Ida, when
he had come forth against our kine, and laid Lyrnessus waste and Pedasus
withal; howbeit Zeus saved me, who roused my strength and made swift
my knees. Else had I been slain beneath the hands of Achilles and of
Athene, who ever went before him and set there a light of deliverance,
and bade him slay Leleges and Trojans with spear of bronze. Wherefore
may it not be that any man face Achilles in fight, for that ever by
his side is some god, that wardeth from him ruin. Aye, and of itself
his spear flieth straight, and ceaseth not till it have pierced through
the flesh of man. Howbeit were a god to stretch with even hand the issue
of war, then not lightly should he vanquish me, nay, not though he vaunt
him to be wholly wrought of bronze."
Then in answer
to him spake the prince Apollo, son of Zeus: "Nay, warrior, come, pray
thou also to the gods that are for ever; for of thee too men say that
thou wast born of Aphrodite, daughter of Zeus, while he is sprung from
a lesser goddess. For thy mother is daughter of Zeus, and his of the
old man of the sea. Nay, bear thou straight against him thy stubborn
bronze, nor let him anywise turn thee back with words of contempt and
with threatenings."
So saying he breathed
great might into the shepherd of the host, and he strode amid the foremost
fighters, harnessed in flaming bronze. Nor was the son of Anchises unseen
of white-armed Hera, as he went forth to face the son of Peleus amid
the throng of men, but she gathered the gods together, and spake among
them, saying: "Consider within your hearts, ye twain, O Poseidon and
Athene, how these things are to be. Lo, here is Aeneas, gone forth,
harnessed in flaming bronze, to face the son of Peleus, and it is Phoebus
Apollo that hath set him on. Come ye then, let us turn him back forthwith;
or else thereafter let one of us stand likewise by Achilles' side, and
give him great might, and suffer not the heart in his breast anywise
to fail; to the end that he may know that they that love him are the
best of the immortals, and those are worthless as wind, that hitherto
have warded from the Trojans war and battle. All we are come down from
Olympus to mingle in this battle, that Achilles take no hurt among the
Trojans for this day's space; but thereafter shall he suffer whatever
Fate spun for him with her thread at his birth, when his mother bare
him. But if Achilles learn not this from some voice of the gods, he
shall have dread hereafter when some god shall come against him in battle;
for hard are the gods to look upon when they appear in manifest presence
."
Then Poseidon,
the Shaker of Earth, answered her: "Hera, be not thou wroth beyond what
is wise; thou needest not at all. I verily were not fain to make gods
clash with gods in strife. Nay, for our part let us rather go apart
from the track unto some place of outlook, and sit us there, and war
shall be for men. But if so be Ares or Phoebus Apollo shall make beginning
of fight, or shall keep Achilles in check and suffer him not to do battle,
then forthwith from us likewise shall the strife of war arise; and right
soon, methinks, shall they separate them from the battle and hie them
back to Olympus, to the gathering of the other gods, vanquished beneath
our hands perforce."
So saying, the
dark-haired god led the way to the heaped-up wall of godlike Heracles,
the high wall that the Trojans and Pallas Athene had builded for him,
to the end that he might flee thither and escape from the monster of
the deep, whenso the monster drave him from the seashore to the plain.
There Poseidon and the other gods sate them down, and clothed their
shoulders round about with a cloud that might not be rent; and they
of the other part sat over against them on the brows of Callicolone,
round about thee, O archer Phoebus, and Ares, sacker of cities.
So sat they on either
side devising counsels, but to make beginning of grievous war both sides
were loath, albeit Zeus, that sitteth on high, had bidden them.
Howbeit the whole
plain was filled with men and horses, and aflame with bronze, and the
earth resounded beneath their feet as they rushed together; and two
warriors best by far of all came one against the other into the space
between the two hosts, eager to do battle, even Aeneas, Anchises' son,
and goodly Achilles. Aeneas first strode forth with threatening mien,
his heavy helm nodding above him; his valorous shield he held before
his breast, and he brandished a spear of bronze. And on the other side
the son of Peleus rushed against him like a lion, a ravening lion that
men are fain to slay, even a whole folk that be gathered together; and
he at the first recking naught of them goeth his way, but when one of
the youths swift in battle hath smitten him with a spear-cast, then
he gathereth himself open-mouthed, and foam cometh forth about his teeth,
and in his heart his valiant spirit groaneth, and with his tail he lasheth
his ribs and his flanks on this side and on that, and rouseth himself
to fight, and with glaring eyes he rusheth straight on in his fury,
whether he slay some man or himself be slain in the foremost throng;
even so was Achilles driven by his fury, and his lordly spirit to go
forth to face great-hearted Aeneas. And when they were come near, as
they advanced one against the other, then first unto Aeneas spake swift-footed
goodly Achilles:
"Aeneas, wherefore
hast thou sallied thus far forth from the throng to stand and face me?
Is it that thy heart biddeth thee fight with me in hope that thou shalt
be master of Priam's sovereignty amid the horse-taming Trojans? Nay,
but though thou slay me, not for that shall Priam place his kingship
in thy hands, for he hath sons, and withal is sound and nowise flighty
of mind. Or have the Trojans meted out for thee a demesne pre-eminent
above all, a fair tract of orchard and of plough-land, that thou mayest
possess it, if so be thou slayest me? Hard, methinks, wilt thou find
that deed. Aye, for on another day ere now methinks I drave thee before
my spear. Dost thou not remember when thou wast alone, and I made thee
run from the kine down with swift steps from Ida's hills in headlong
haste? On that day didst thou not once look behind thee in thy flight.
Thence thou fleddest forth to Lyrnessus, but I laid it waste, assailing
it with the aid of Athene and father Zeus, and the women I led captive
and took from them the day of freedom; but thyself thou wast saved by
Zeus and the other gods. Howbeit not this day, methinks, shall he save
thee, as thou deemest in thy heart; nay, of myself I bid thee get thee
back into the throng and stand not forth to face me, ere yet some evil
befall thee; when it is wrought even a fool getteth understanding."
Then Aeneas answered
hirn and said: "Son of Peleus, think not with words to affright me,
as I were a child, seeing I know well of myself to utter taunts and
withal speech that is seemly. We know each other's lineage, and each
other's parents, for we have heard the tales told in olden days by mortal
men; but with sight of eyes hast thou never seen my parents nor I thine.
Men say that thou art son of peerless Peleus, and that thy mother was
fair-tressed Thetis, a daughter of the sea; but for me, I declare that
I am son of great-hearted Anchises, and my mother is Aphrodite. Of these
shall one pair or the other mourn a dear son this day; for verily not
with childish words, I deem, shall we twain thus part one from the other
and return from out the battle. Howbeit, if thou wilt, hear this also,
that thou mayest know well my lineage, and many there be that know it
:at the first Zeus, the cloud-gatherer, begat Dardanus, and he founded
Dardania, for not yet was sacred Ilios builded in the plain to be a
city of mortal men, but they still dwelt upon the slopes of many-fountained
Ida. And Dardanus in turn begat a son, king Erichthonius, who became
richest of mortal men. Three thousand steeds had he that pastured in
the marsh-land; mares were they, rejoicing in their tender foals. Of
these as they grazed the North Wind became enamoured, and he likened
himself to a dark-maned stallion and covered them; and they conceived,
and bare twelve fillies. These, when they bounded over the earth, the
giver of grain, would course over the topmost ears of ripened corn and
break them not, and whenso they bounded over the broad back of the sea,
would course over the topmost breakers of the hoary brine. And Erichthonius
begat Tros to be king among the Trojans, and from Tros again three peerless
sons were born, Ilus, and Assaracus, and godlike Ganymedes that was
born the fairest of mortal men; wherefore the gods caught him up on
high to be cupbearer to Zeus by reason of his beauty, that he might
dwell with the immortals. And Ilus again begat a son, peerless Laomedon,
and Laomedon begat Tithonus and Priam and Clytius, and Hicetaon, scion
of Ares. And Assaracus begat Capys, and he Anchises; but Anchises begat
me and Priam goodly Hector. This then is the lineage and the blood wherefrom
I avow me sprung. But as for valour, it is Zeus that increaseth it for
men or minisheth it, even as himself willeth, seeing he is mightiest
of all. But come, no longer let us talk thus like children, as we twain
stand in the midst of the strife of battle. Revilings are there for
both of us to utter, revilings full many; a ship of an hundred benches
would not bear the load thereof. Glib is the tongue of mortals, and
words there be therein many and manifold, and of speech the range is
wide on this side and on that. Whatsoever word thou speakest, such shalt
thou also hear. But what need have we twain to bandy strifes and wranglings
one with the other like women, that when they have waxed wroth in soul-devouring
strife go forth into the midst of the street and wrangle one against
the other with words true and false; for even these wrath biddeth them
speak. But from battle, seeing I am eager therefor, shalt thou not by
words turn me till we have fought with the bronze man to man; nay, come,
let us forthwith make trial each of the other with bronze-tipped spears."
He spake, and let
drive his mighty spear against the other's dread and wondrous shield,
and loud rang the shield about the spear-point. And the son of Peleus
held the shield from him with his stout hand, being seized with dread;
for he deemed that the far-shadowing spear of great-hearted Aeneas would
lightly pierce it throughófool that he was, nor knew in his mind and
heart that not easy are the glorious gifts of the gods for mortal men
to master or that they give place withal. Nor did the mighty spear of
wise-hearted Aeneas then break through the shield, for the gold stayed
it, the gift of the god. Howbeit through two folds he drave it, yet
were there still three, for five layers had the crook-foot god welded,
two of bronze, and two within of tin, and one of gold, in the which
the spear of ash was stayed.
Then Achilles in
his turn hurled his far-shadowing spear and smote upon Aeneas' shield
that was well-balanced upon every side, beneath the outermost rim where
the bronze ran thinnest, and thinnest was the backing of bull's-hide;
and straight through sped the spear of Pelian ash, and the shield rang
beneath the blow. And Aeneas cringed and held from him the shield, being
seized with fear; and the spear passed over his back and was stayed
in the ground for all its fury, albeit it tore asunder two circles of
the sheltering shield. And having escaped the long spear he stood up,
and over his eyes measureless grief was shed, and fear came over him
for that the spear was planted so nigh. But Achilles drew his sharp
sword and leapt upon him furiously, crying a terrible cry; and Aeneas
grasped in his hand a stoneóa mighty deedóone that not two mortals could
bear, such as men are now; yet lightly did he wield it even alone. Then
would Aeneas have smitten him with the stone, as he rushed upon him,
either on helm or on the shield that had warded from him woeful destruction,
and the son of Peleus in close combat would with his sword have robbed
Aeneas of life, had not Poseidon, the Shaker of Earth, been quick to
see. And forthwith he spake among the immortal gods, saying: "Now look
you, verily have I grief for great-hearted Aeneas, who anon shall go
down to the house of Hades, slain by the son of Peleus, for that he
listened to the bidding of Apollo that smiteth afarófool that he was!
nor will the god in any wise ward from him woeful destruction. But wherefore
should he, a guiltless man, suffer woes vainly by reason of sorrows
that are not his own? whereas he ever giveth acceptable gifts to the
gods that hold broad heaven. Nay, come, let us lead him forth from out
of death, lest the son of Cronos be anywise wroth, if so be Achilles
slay him; for it is ordained unto him to escape, that the race of Dardanus
perish not without seed and be seen no moreóof Dardanus whom the son
of Cronos loved above all the children born to him from mortal women.
For at length hath the son of Cronos come to hate the race of Priam;
and now verily shall the mighty Aeneas be king among the Trojans, and
his sons' sons that shall be born in days to come."
Then made answer
to him the ox-eyed, queenly Hera: "Shaker of Earth, of thine own self
take counsel in thine heart as touching Aeneas, whether thou wilt save
him or suffer him to be slain for all his valour by Achilles, Peleus'
son. We twain verily, even Pallas Athene and I, have sworn oaths full
many among all the immortals never to ward off from the Trojans the
day of evil, nay, not when all Troy shall burn in the burning of consuming
fire, and the warlike sons of the Achaeans shall be the burners thereof."
Now when Poseidon,
the Shaker of Earth, heard this, he went his way amid the battle and
the hurtling of spears, and came to the place where Aeneas was and glorious
Achilles. Forthwith then he shed a mist over the eyes of Achilles, Peleus'
son, and the ashen spear, well-shod with bronze, he drew forth from
the shield of the great-hearted Aeneas and set it before the feet of
Achilles, but Aeneas he lifted up and swung him on high from off the
ground. Over many ranks of warriors and many of chariots sprang Aeneas,
soaring from the hand of the god, and came to the uttermost verge of
the furious battle, where the Caucones were arraying them for the fight.
Then close to his side came Poseidon, the Shaker of Earth, and he spake,
and addressed him with winged words:
"Aeneas, what god
is it that thus biddeth thee in blindness of heart do battle man to
man with the high-hearted son of Peleus, seeing he is a better man than
thou, and therewithal dearer to the immortals? Nay, draw thou back,
whensoever thou fallest in with him, lest even beyond thy doom thou
enter the house of Hades. But when it shall be that Achilles hath met
his death and fate, then take thou courage to fight among the foremost,
for there is none other of the Achaeans that shall slay thee."
So saying he left
him there, when he had told him all. Then quickly from Achilles' eyes
he scattered the wondrous mist; and he stared hard with his eyes, and
mightily moved spake unto his own great-hearted spirit: "Now look you,
verily a great marvel is this that mine eyes behold. My spear lieth
here upon the ground, yet the man may I nowise see at whom I hurled
it, eager to slay him. Verily, it seemeth, Aeneas likewise is dear to
the immortal gods, albeit I deemed that his boasting was idle and vain.
Let him go his way! no heart shall he find to make trial of me again,
seeing that now he is glad to have escaped from death. But come, I will
call to the war-loving Danaans and go forth against the other Trojans
to make trial of them."
He spake, and leapt
along the ranks, and called to each man: "No longer now stand ye afar
from the Trojans, ye goodly Achaeans, but come, let man go forth against
man and be eager for the fray. Hard is it for me, how mighty soever
I be, to deal with men so many, and to fight them all; not even Ares,
for all he is an immortal god, nor Athene could control by dint of toil
the jaws of such a fray. Howbeit so far as I avail with hands and feet
and might, in no wise, methinks, shall I be slack, nay, not a whit;
but straight through their line will I go, nor deem I that any of the
Trojans will be glad, whosoever shall draw nigh my spear."
So spake he, urging
them on; and to the Trojans glorious Hector called with a shout, and
declared that he would go forth to face Achilles: "Ye Trojans, high
of heart, fear not the son of Peleus. I too with words could fight even
the immortals, but with the spear it were hard, for they are mightier
far. Neither shall Achilles bring to fulfilment all his words, but a
part thereof will he fulfil, and a part leave incomplete. Against him
will I go forth, though his hands be even as fire, though his hands
be as fire and his fury as the flashing steel."
So spake he, urging
them on; and the Trojans with their faces toward the foe lifted their
spears on high, and the fury of both sides clashed confusedly, and the
battle cry arose. Then Phoebus Apollo drew nigh to Hector, and spake,
saying: "Hector, no longer do thou anywise stand forth as a champion
against Achilles, but in the throng await thou him and from amid the
din of conflict, lest so be he smite thee with a cast of his spear or
with his sword in close combat."
So spake he, and
Hector fell back again into the throng of men, seized with fear, when
he heard the voice of the god as he spoke.
But Achilles leapt
among the Trojans, his heart clothed about in might, crying a terrible
cry, and first he slew Iphition, the valiant son of Otrynteus, the leader
of a great host, whom a NaÔad nymph bare to Otrynteus, sacker of cities,
beneath snowy Timolus in the rich land of Hyde. Him, as he rushed straight
upon him, goodly Achilles smote with a cast of his spear full upon the
head, and his head was wholly cloven asunder. And he fell with a thud,
and goodly Achilles exulted over him: "Low thou liest, Otrynteus, of
all men most dread; here is thy death, albeit thy birth was by the Gygaean
lake, where is the demesne of thy fathers, even by Hyllus, that teems
with fish, and eddying Hermus."
So spake he vauntingly,
but darkness enfolded the other's eyes. Him the chariots of the Achaeans
tore asunder with their tires in the forefront of the fray, and over
him Demoleon, Antenor's son, a valiant warder of battle, did Achilles
pierce in the temple through the helmet with cheek-pieces of bronze.
Nor did the bronze helm stay the spear, but through it sped the spear-point
and brake asunder the bone; and all the brain was scattered about within;
so stayed he him in his fury. Hippodamas thereafter, as he leapt down
from his car and fled before him, he smote upon the back with a thrust
of his spear. And as he breathed forth his spirit he gave a bellowing
cry, even as a bull that is dragged belloweth, when young men drag him
about the altar of the lord of Helice; for in such doth the Shaker of
Earth delight; even so bellowed Hippodamas, as his lordly spirit left
his bones. But Achilles with his spear went on after godlike Polydorus,
son of Priam. Him would his father nowise suffer to fight, for that
among his children he was the youngest born and was dearest in his eyes;
and in swiftness of foot he surpassed all. And lo, now in his folly,
making show of his fleetness of foot, he was rushing through the foremost
fighters, until he lost his life. Him swift-footed goodly Achilles smote
full upon the back with a cast of his spear, as he darted past, even
where the golden clasps of the belt were fastened, and the corselet
overlapped; through this straight on its way beside the navel passed
the spear-point, and he fell to his knees with a groan and a cloud of
darkness enfolded him, and as he sank he clasped his bowels to him with
his hands.
But when Hector
beheld his brother Polydorus, clasping his bowels in his hand and sinking
to earth, down over his eyes a mist was shed, nor might he longer endure
to range apart, but strode against Achilles, brandishing his sharp spear,
in fashion like a flame. But when Achilles beheld him, even then sprang
he up and spake vauntingly: "Lo, nigh is the man, that above all hath
stricken me to the heart, for that he slew the comrade I honoured. Not
for long shall we any more shrink one from the other along the dykes
of war."
He said, and with
an angry glance from beneath his brows spake unto goodly Hector: "Draw
nigh, that thou mayest the sooner enter the toils of destruction."
But with no touch
of fear, spake to him Hector of the flashing helm: "Son of Peleus, think
not with words to affright me, as I were a child, seeing I know well
of myself to utter taunts and withal speech that is seemly. I know that
thou art valiant, and I am weaker far than thou. Yet these things verily
upon the knees of the gods, whether I, albeit the weaker, shall rob
thee of life with a cast of my spear; for my missile too hath been found
keen ere now."
He spake, and poised
his spear and hurled it, but Athene with a breath turned it back from
glorious Achilles, breathing full lightly; and it came back to goodly
Hector, and fell there before his feet. But Achilles leapt upon him
furiously, fain to slay him, crying a terrible cry. But Apollo snatched
up Hector full easily, as a god may, and shrouded him in thick mist.
Thrice then did swift-footed, goodly Achilles leap upon him with spear
of bronze, and thrice he smote the thick mist. But when for the fourth
time he rushed upon him like a god, then with a terrible cry he spake
to him winged words: "Now again, thou dog, art thou escaped from death,
though verily thy bane came nigh thee; but once more hath Phoebus Apollo
saved thee, to whom of a surety thou must make prayer, whenso thou goest
amid the hurtling of spears. Verily I will yet make an end of thee,
when I meet thee hereafter, if so be any god is helper to me likewise.
But now will I make after others, whomsoever I may light upon."
So saying he smote
Dryops full upon the neck with a thrust of his spear, and he fell down
before his feet. But he left him there, and stayed from fight Demuchus,
Philetor's son, a valiant man and tall, striking him upon the knee with
a cast of his spear; and thereafter he smote him with his great sword,
and took away his life. Then setting upon Laogonus and Dardanus, sons
twain of Bias, he thrust them both from their chariot to the ground,
smiting the one with a cast of his spear and the other with his sword
in close fight. Then Tros, Alastor's sonóhe came to clasp his knees,
if so be he would spare him, by taking him captive, and let him go alive,
and slay him not, having pity on one of like age, fool that he was!
nor knew he this, that with him was to be no hearkening; for nowise
soft of heart or gentle of mind was the man, but exceeding fierceó he
sought to clasp Achilles' knees with his hands, fain to make his prayer;
but he smote him upon the liver with his sword, and forth the liver
slipped, and the dark blood welling forth therefrom filled his bosom;
and darkness enfolded his eyes, as he swooned. Then with his spear Achilles
drew nigh unto Mulius and smote him upon the ear, and clean through
the other ear passed the spear-point of bronze. Then smote he Agenor's
son Echeclus full upon the head with his hilted sword, and all the blade
grew warm with his blood, and down over his eyes came dark death and
mighty fate. Thereafter Deucalion, at the point where the sinews of
the elbow join, even there pierced he him through the arm with spear-point
of bronze; and he abode his oncoming with arm weighed down, beholding
death before him but Achilles, smiting him with the sword upon his neck,
hurled afar his head and therewithal his helmet; and the marrow spurted
forth from the spine, and the corpse lay stretched upon the ground.
Then went he on after the peerless son of Peires, even Rhigmus, that
had come from deep-soiled Thrace. Him he smote in the middle with a
cast of his spear, and the bronze was fixed in his belly; and he fell
forth from out his car. And Areithous, his squire, as he was turning
round the horses, did Achilles pierce in the back with his sharp spear,
and thrust him from the car; and the horses ran wild.
As through the deep
glens of a parched mountain- side rageth wondrous-blazing fire, and
the deep forest burneth, and the wind as it driveth it on whirleth the
flame everywhither, even so raged he everywhither with his spear, like
some god, ever pressing hard upon them that he slew; and the black earth
ran with blood. And as a man yoketh bulls broad of brow to tread white
barley in a well-ordered threshing-floor, and quickly is the grain trodden
out beneath the feet of the loud-bellowing bulls; even so beneath great-souled
Achilles his single-hooved horses trampled alike on the dead and on
the shields; and with blood was all the axle sprinkled beneath, and
the rims round about the car, for drops smote upon them from the horses'
hooves and from the tires. But the son of Peleus pressed on to win him
glory, and with gore were his invincible hands bespattered.