NOW when Jove had thus
brought Hector and the Trojans to the ships, he left them to their
never-ending toil, and turned his keen eyes away, looking elsewhither
towards the horse-breeders of Thrace, the Mysians, fighters at close
quarters, the noble Hippemolgi, who live on milk, and the Abians,
justest of mankind. He no longer turned so much as a glance towards
Troy, for he did not think that any of the immortals would go and help
either Trojans or Danaans. But King Neptune had kept no blind
look-out; he had been looking admiringly on the battle from his seat
on the topmost crests of wooded Samothrace, whence he could see all
Ida, with the city of Priam and the ships of the Achaeans. He had come
from under the sea and taken his place here, for he pitied the
Achaeans who were being overcome by the Trojans; and he was furiously
angry with Jove. Presently he came down from his post on the mountain
top, and as he strode swiftly onwards the high hills and the forest
quaked beneath the tread of his immortal feet. Three strides he took,
and with the fourth he reached his goal- Aegae, where is his
glittering golden palace, imperishable, in the depths of the sea. When
he got there, he yoked his fleet brazen-footed steeds with their manes
of gold all flying in the wind; he clothed himself in raiment of gold,
grasped his gold whip, and took his stand upon his chariot. As he went
his way over the waves the sea-monsters left their lairs, for they
knew their lord, and came gambolling round him from every quarter of
the deep, while the sea in her gladness opened a path before his
chariot. So lightly did the horses fly that the bronze axle of the car
was not even wet beneath it; and thus his bounding steeds took him to
the ships of the Achaeans.
Now there is a certain huge
cavern in the depths of the sea midway between Tenedos and rocky
Imbrus; here Neptune lord of the earthquake stayed his horses, unyoked
them, and set before them their ambrosial forage. He hobbled their
feet with hobbles of gold which none could either unloose or break, so
that they might stay there in that place until their lord should
return. This done he went his way to the host of the Achaeans.
Now the Trojans followed
Hector son of Priam in close array like a storm-cloud or flame of
fire, fighting with might and main and raising the cry battle; for
they deemed that they should take the ships of the Achaeans and kill
all their chiefest heroes then and there. Meanwhile earth-encircling
Neptune lord of the earthquake cheered on the Argives, for he had come
up out of the sea and had assumed the form and voice of Calchas.
First he spoke to the two
Ajaxes, who were doing their best already, and said, "Ajaxes, you
two can be the saving of the Achaeans if you will put out all your
strength and not let yourselves be daunted. I am not afraid that the
Trojans, who have got over the wall in force, will be victorious in
any other part, for the Achaeans can hold all of them in check, but I
much fear that some evil will befall us here where furious Hector, who
boasts himself the son of great Jove himself, is leading them on like
a pillar of flame. May some god, then, put it into your hearts to make
a firm stand here, and to incite others to do the like. In this case
you will drive him from the ships even though he be inspired by Jove
himself."
As he spoke the
earth-encircling lord of the earthquake struck both of them with his
sceptre and filled their hearts with daring. He made their legs light
and active, as also their hands and their feet. Then, as the soaring
falcon poises on the wing high above some sheer rock, and presently
swoops down to chase some bird over the plain, even so did Neptune
lord of the earthquake wing his flight into the air and leave them. Of
the two, swift Ajax son of Oileus was the first to know who it was
that had been speaking with them, and said to Ajax son of Telamon,
"Ajax, this is one of the gods that dwell on Olympus, who in the
likeness of the prophet is bidding us fight hard by our ships. It was
not Calchas the seer and diviner of omens; I knew him at once by his
feet and knees as he turned away, for the gods are soon recognised.
Moreover I feel the lust of battle burn more fiercely within me, while
my hands and my feet under me are more eager for the fray."
And Ajax son of Telamon
answered, "I too feel my hands grasp my spear more firmly; my
strength is greater, and my feet more nimble;
I long, moreover, to meet
furious Hector son of Priam, even in single combat."
Thus did they converse,
exulting in the hunger after battle with which the god had filled
them. Meanwhile the earth-encircler roused the Achaeans, who were
resting in the rear by the ships overcome at once by hard fighting and
by grief at seeing that the Trojans had got over the wall in force.
Tears began falling from their eyes as they beheld them, for they made
sure that they should not escape destruction; but the lord of the
earthquake passed lightly about among them and urged their battalions
to the front.
First he went up to Teucer
and Leitus, the hero Peneleos, and Thoas and Deipyrus; Meriones also
and Antilochus, valiant warriors; all did he exhort. "Shame on
you young Argives," he cried, "it was on your prowess I
relied for the saving of our ships; if you fight not with might and
main, this very day will see us overcome by the Trojans. Of a truth my
eyes behold a great and terrible portent which I had never thought to
see- the Trojans at our ships- they, who were heretofore like
panic-stricken hinds, the prey of jackals and wolves in a forest, with
no strength but in flight for they cannot defend themselves. Hitherto
the Trojans dared not for one moment face the attack of the Achaeans,
but now they have sallied far from their city and are fighting at our
very ships through the cowardice of our leader and the disaffection of
the people themselves, who in their discontent care not to fight in
defence of the ships but are being slaughtered near them. True, King
Agamemnon son of Atreus is the cause of our disaster by having
insulted the son of Peleus, still this is no reason why we should
leave off fighting. Let us be quick to heal, for the hearts of the
brave heal quickly. You do ill to be thus remiss, you, who are the
finest soldiers in our whole army. I blame no man for keeping out of
battle if he is a weakling, but I am indignant with such men as you
are. My good friends, matters will soon become even worse through this
slackness; think, each one of you, of his own honour and credit, for
the hazard of the fight is extreme. Great Hector is now fighting at
our ships; he has broken through the gates and the strong bolt that
held them."
Thus did the earth-encircler
address the Achaeans and urge them on. Thereon round the two Ajaxes
there gathered strong bands of men, of whom not even Mars nor Minerva,
marshaller of hosts could make light if they went among them, for they
were the picked men of all those who were now awaiting the onset of
Hector and the Trojans. They made a living fence, spear to spear,
shield to shield, buckler to buckler, helmet to helmet, and man to
man. The horse-hair crests on their gleaming helmets touched one
another as they nodded forward, so closely seffied were they; the
spears they brandished in their strong hands were interlaced, and
their hearts were set on battle. The Trojans advanced in a dense body,
with Hector at their head pressing right on as a rock that comes
thundering down the side of some mountain from whose brow the winter
torrents have torn it; the foundations of the dull thing have been
loosened by floods of rain, and as it bounds headlong on its way it
sets the whole forest in an uproar; it swerves neither to right nor
left till it reaches level ground, but then for all its fury it can go
no further- even so easily did Hector for a while seem as though he
would career through the tents and ships of the Achaeans till he had
reached the sea in his murderous course; but the closely serried
battalions stayed him when he reached them, for the sons of the
Achaeans thrust at him with swords and spears pointed at both ends,
and drove him from them so that he staggered and gave ground; thereon
he shouted to the Trojans, "Trojans, Lycians, and Dardanians,
fighters in close combat, stand firm: the Achaeans have set themselves
as a wall against me, but they will not check me for long; they will
give ground before me if the mightiest of the gods, the thundering
spouse of Juno, has indeed inspired my onset."
With these words he put
heart and soul into them all. Deiphobus son of Priam went about among
them intent on deeds of daring with his round shield before him, under
cover of which he strode quickly forward. Meriones took aim at him
with a spear, nor did he fail to hit the broad orb of ox-hide; but he
was far from piercing it for the spear broke in two pieces long ere he
could do so; moreover Deiphobus had seen it coming and had held his
shield well away from him. Meriones drew back under cover of his
comrades, angry alike at having failed to vanquish Deiphobus, and
having broken his spear. He turned therefore towards the ships and
tents to fetch a spear which he had left behind in his tent.
The others continued
fighting, and the cry of battle rose up into the heavens. Teucer son
of Telamon was the first to kill his man, to wit, the warrior Imbrius
son of Mentor rich in horses. Until the Achaeans came he had lived in
Pedaeum, and had married Medesicaste a bastard daughter of Priam; but
on the arrival of the Danaan fleet he had gone back to Ilius, and was
a great man among the Trojans, dwelling near Priam himself, who gave
him like honour with his own sons. The son of Telamon now struck him
under the ear with a spear which he then drew back again, and Imbrius
fell headlong as an ash-tree when it is felled on the crest of some
high mountain beacon, and its delicate green foliage comes toppling
down to the ground. Thus did he fall with his bronze-dight armour
ringing harshly round him, and Teucer sprang forward with intent to
strip him of his armour; but as he was doing so, Hector took aim at
him with a spear. Teucer saw the spear coming and swerved aside,
whereon it hit Amphimachus, son of Cteatus son of Actor, in the chest
as he was coming into battle, and his armour rang rattling round him
as he fell heavily to the ground. Hector sprang forward to take
Amphimachus’s helmet from off his temples, and in a moment Ajax
threw a spear at him, but did not wound him, for he was encased all
over in his terrible armour; nevertheless the spear struck the boss of
his shield with such force as to drive him back from the two corpses,
which the Achaeans then drew off. Stichius and Menestheus, captains of
the Athenians, bore away Amphimachus to the host of the Achaeans,
while the two brave and impetuous Ajaxes did the like by Imbrius. As
two lions snatch a goat from the hounds that have it in their fangs,
and bear it through thick brushwood high above the ground in their
jaws, thus did the Ajaxes bear aloft the body of Imbrius, and strip it
of its armour. Then the son of Oileus severed the head from the neck
in revenge for the death of Amphimachus, and sent it whirling over the
crowd as though it had been a ball, till fell in the dust at Hector’s
feet.
Neptune was exceedingly
angry that his grandson Amphimachus should have fallen; he therefore
went to the tents and ships of the Achaeans to urge the Danaans still
further, and to devise evil for the Trojans. Idomeneus met him, as he
was taking leave of a comrade, who had just come to him from the
fight, wounded in the knee. His fellow-soldiers bore him off the
field, and Idomeneus having given orders to the physicians went on to
his tent, for he was still thirsting for battle. Neptune spoke in the
likeness and with the voice of Thoas son of Andraemon who ruled the
Aetolians of all Pleuron and high Calydon, and was honoured among his
people as though he were a god. "Idomeneus," said he,
"lawgiver to the Cretans, what has now become of the threats with
which the sons of the Achaeans used to threaten the Trojans?"
And Idomeneus chief among
the Cretans answered, "Thoas, no one, so far as I know, is in
fault, for we can all fight. None are held back neither by fear nor
slackness, but it seems to be the of almighty Jove that the Achaeans
should perish ingloriously here far from Argos: you, Thoas, have been
always staunch, and you keep others in heart if you see any fail in
duty; be not then remiss now, but exhort all to do their utmost."
To this Neptune lord of the
earthquake made answer, "Idomeneus, may he never return from
Troy, but remain here for dogs to batten upon, who is this day
wilfully slack in fighting. Get your armour and go, we must make all
haste together if we may be of any use, though we are only two. Even
cowards gain courage from companionship, and we two can hold our own
with the bravest." Therewith the god went back into the thick of
the fight, and Idomeneus when he had reached his tent donned his
armour, grasped his two spears, and sallied forth. As the lightning
which the son of Saturn brandishes from bright Olympus when he would
show a sign to mortals, and its gleam flashes far and wide- even so
did his armour gleam about him as he ran. Meriones his sturdy squire
met him while he was still near his tent (for he was going to fetch
his spear) and Idomeneus said "Meriones, fleet son of Molus, best
of comrades, why have you left the field? Are you wounded, and is the
point of the weapon hurting you? or have you been sent to fetch me? I
want no fetching; I had far rather fight than stay in my tent."
"Idomeneus,"
answered Meriones, "I come for a spear, if I can find one in my
tent; I have broken the one I had, in throwing it at the shield of
Deiphobus."
And Idomeneus captain of the
Cretans answered, "You will find one spear, or twenty if you so
please, standing up against the end wall of my tent. I have taken them
from Trojans whom I have killed, for I am not one to keep my enemy at
arm’s length; therefore I have spears, bossed shields, helmets, and
burnished corslets." Then Meriones said, "I too in my tent
and at my ship have spoils taken from the Trojans, but they are not at
hand. I have been at all times valorous, and wherever there has been
hard fighting have held my own among the foremost. There may be those
among the Achaeans who do not know how I fight, but you know it well
enough yourself." Idomeneus answered, "I know you for a
brave man: you need not tell me. If the best men at the ships were
being chosen to go on an ambush-and there is nothing like this for
showing what a man is made of; it comes out then who is cowardly and
who brave; the coward will change colour at every touch and turn; he
is full of fears, and keeps shifting his weight first on one knee and
then on the other; his heart beats fast as he thinks of death, and one
can hear the chattering of his teeth; whereas the brave man will not
change colour nor be on finding himself in ambush, but is all the time
longing to go into action- if the best men were being chosen for such
a service, no one could make light of your courage nor feats of arms.
If you were struck by a dart or smitten in close combat, it would not
be from behind, in your neck nor back, but the weapon would hit you in
the chest or belly as you were pressing forward to a place in the
front ranks. But let us no longer stay here talking like children,
lest we be ill spoken of; go, fetch your spear from the tent at
once." On this Meriones, peer of Mars, went to the tent and got
himself a spear of bronze. He then followed after Idomeneus, big with
great deeds of valour. As when baneful Mars sallies forth to battle,
and his son Panic so strong and dauntless goes with him, to strike
terror even into the heart of a hero- the pair have gone from Thrace
to arm themselves among the Ephyri or the brave Phlegyans, but they
will not listen to both the contending hosts, and will give victory to
one side or to the other- even so did Meriones and Idomeneus, captains
of men, go out to battle clad in their bronze armour. Meriones was
first to speak. "Son of Deucalion," said he, "where
would you have us begin fighting? On the right wing of the host, in
the centre, or on the left wing, where I take it the Achaeans will be
weakest?" Idomeneus answered, "There are others to defend
the centre- the two Ajaxes and Teucer, who is the finest archer of all
the Achaeans, and is good also in a hand-to-hand fight. These will
give Hector son of Priam enough to do; fight as he may, he will find
it hard to vanquish their indomitable fury, and fire the ships, unless
the son of Saturn fling a firebrand upon them with his own hand. Great
Ajax son of Telamon will yield to no man who is in mortal mould and
eats the grain of Ceres, if bronze and great stones can overthrow him.
He would not yield even to Achilles in hand-to-hand fight, and in
fleetness of foot there is none to beat him; let us turn therefore
towards the left wing, that we may know forthwith whether we are to
give glory to some other, or he to us."
Meriones, peer of fleet
Mars, then led the way till they came to the part of the host which
Idomeneus had named. Now when the Trojans saw Idomeneus coming on like
a flame of fire, him and his squire clad in their richly wrought
armour, they shouted and made towards him all in a body, and a furious
hand-to-hand fight raged under the ships’ sterns. Fierce as the
shrill winds that whistle upon a day when dust lies deep on the roads,
and the gusts raise it into a thick cloud- even such was the fury of
the combat, and might and main did they hack at each other with spear
and sword throughout the host. The field bristled with the long and
deadly spears which they bore. Dazzling was the sheen of their
gleaming helmets, their fresh-burnished breastplates, and glittering
shields as they joined battle with one another. Iron indeed must be
his courage who could take pleasure in the sight of such a turmoil,
and look on it without being dismayed.
Thus did the two mighty sons
of Saturn devise evil for mortal heroes. Jove was minded to give
victory to the Trojans and to Hector, so as to do honour to fleet
Achilles, nevertheless he did not mean to utterly overthrow the
Achaean host before Ilius, and only wanted to glorify Thetis and her
valiant son. Neptune on the other hand went about among the Argives to
incite them, having come up from the grey sea in secret, for he was
grieved at seeing them vanquished by the Trojans, and was furiously
angry with Jove. Both were of the same race and country, but Jove was
elder born and knew more, therefore Neptune feared to defend the
Argives openly, but in the likeness of man, he kept on encouraging
them throughout their host. Thus, then, did these two devise a knot of
war and battle, that none could unloose or break, and set both sides
tugging at it, to the failing of men’s knees beneath them.
And now Idomeneus, though
his hair was already flecked with grey, called loud on the Danaans and
spread panic among the Trojans as he leaped in among them. He slew
Othryoneus from Cabesus, a sojourner, who had but lately come to take
part in the war. He sought Cassandra the fairest of Priam’s
daughters in marriage, but offered no gifts of wooing, for he promised
a great thing, to wit, that he would drive the sons of the Achaeans
willy nilly from Troy; old King Priam had given his consent and
promised her to him, whereon he fought on the strength of the promises
thus made to him. Idomeneus aimed a spear, and hit him as he came
striding on. His cuirass of bronze did not protect him, and the spear
stuck in his belly, so that he fell heavily to the ground. Then
Idomeneus vaunted over him saying, "Othryoneus, there is no one
in the world whom I shall admire more than I do you, if you indeed
perform what you have promised Priam son of Dardanus in return for his
daughter. We too will make you an offer; we will give you the
loveliest daughter of the son of Atreus, and will bring her from Argos
for you to marry, if you will sack the goodly city of Ilius in company
with ourselves; so come along with me, that we may make a covenant at
the ships about the marriage, and we will not be hard upon you about
gifts of wooing." With this Idomeneus began dragging him by the
foot through the thick of the fight, but Asius came up to protect the
body, on foot, in front of his horses which his esquire drove so close
behind him that he could feel their ‘breath upon his shoulder. He
was longing to strike down Idomeneus, but ere he could do so Idomeneus
smote him with his spear in the throat under the chin, and the bronze
point went clean through it. He fell as an oak, or poplar, or pine
which shipwrights have felled for ship’s timber upon the mountains
with whetted axes-even thus did he lie full length in front of his
chariot and horses, grinding his teeth and clutching at the
bloodstained just. His charioteer was struck with panic and did not
dare turn his horses round and escape: thereupon Antilochus hit him in
the middle of his body with a spear; his cuirass of bronze did not
protect him, and the spear stuck in his belly. He fell gasping from
his chariot and Antilochus great Nestor’s son, drove his horses from
the Trojans to the Achaeans.
Deiphobus then came close up
to Idomeneus to avenge Asius, and took aim at him with a spear, but
Idomeneus was on the look-out and avoided it, for he was covered by
the round shield he always bore- a shield of oxhide and bronze with
two arm-rods on the inside. He crouched under cover of this, and the
spear flew over him, but the shield rang out as the spear grazed it,
and the weapon sped not in vain from the strong hand of Deiphobus, for
it struck Hypsenor son of Hippasus, shepherd of his people, in the
liver under the midriff, and his limbs failed beneath him. Deiphobus
vaunted over him and cried with a loud voice saying, "Of a truth
Asius has not fallen unavenied; he will be glad even while passing
into the house of Hades, strong warden of the gate, that I have sent
some one to escort him." Thus did he vaunt, and the Argives were
stung by his saying. Noble Antilochus was more angry than any one, but
grief did not make him forget his friend and comrade. He ran up to
him, bestrode him, and covered him with his shield; then two of his
staunch comrades, Mecisteus son of Echius, and Alastor stooped down,
and bore him away groaning heavily to the ships. But Idomeneus ceased
not his fury. He kept on striving continually either to enshroud some
Trojan in the darkness of death, or himself to fall while warding off
the evil day from the Achaeans. Then fell Alcathous son of noble
Aesyetes: he was son-in-law to Anchises, having married his eldest
daughter Hippodameia who was the darling of her father and mother, and
excelled all her generation in beauty, accomplishments, and
understanding, wherefore the bravest man in all Troy had taken her to
wife- him did Neptune lay low by the hand of Idomeneus, blinding his
bright eyes and binding his strong limbs in fetters so that he could
neither go back nor to one side, but stood stock still like pillar or
lofty tree when Idomeneus struck him with a spear in the middle of his
chest. The coat of mail that had hitherto protected his body was now
broken, and rang harshly as the spear tore through it. He fell heavily
to the ground, and the spear stuck in his heart, which still beat, and
made the butt-end of the spear quiver till dread Mars put an end to
his life. Idomeneus vaunted over him and cried with a loud voice
saying, "Deiphobus, since you are in a mood to vaunt, shall we
cry quits now that we have killed three men to your one? Nay, sir,
stand in fight with me yourself, that you may learn what manner of
Jove-begotten man am I that have come hither. Jove first begot Minos
chief ruler in Crete, and Minos in his turn begot a son, noble
Deucalion;
Deucalion begot me to be a
ruler over many men in Crete, and my ships have now brought me hither,
to be the bane of yourself, your father, and the Trojans."
Thus did he speak, and
Deiphobus was in two minds, whether to go back and fetch some other
Trojan to help him, or to take up the challenge single-handed. In the
end, he deemed it best to go and fetch Aeneas, whom he found standing
in the rear, for he had long been aggrieved with Priam because in
spite his brave deeds he did not give him his due share of honour.
Deiphobus went up to him and said, "Aeneas, prince among the
Trojans, if you know any ties of kinship, help me now to defend the
body of your sister’s husband; come with me to the rescue of
Alcathous, who being husband to your sister brought you up when you
were a child in his house, and now Idomeneus has slain him."
With these words he moved
the heart of Aeneas, and he went in pursuit of Idomeneus, big with
great deeds of valour; but Idomeneus was not to be thus daunted as
though he were a mere child; he held his ground as a wild boar at bay
upon the mountains, who abides the coming of a great crowd of men in
some lonely place- the bristles stand upright on his back, his eyes
flash fire, and he whets his tusks in his eagerness to defend himself
against hounds and men- even so did famed Idomeneus hold his ground
and budge not at the coming of Aeneas. He cried aloud to his comrades
looking towards Ascalaphus, Aphareus, Deipyrus, Meriones, and
Antilochus, all of them brave soldiers-"Hither my friends,"
he cried, "and leave me not single-handed- I go in great fear by
fleet Aeneas, who is coming against me, and is a redoubtable dispenser
of death battle. Moreover he is in the flower of youth when a man’s
strength is greatest; if I was of the same age as he is and in my
present mind, either he or I should soon bear away the prize of
victory On this, all of them as one man stood near him, shield on
shoulder. Aeneas on the other side called to his comrades, looking
towards Deiphobus, Paris, and Agenor, who were leaders of the Trojans
along with himself, and the people followed them as sheep follow the
ram when they go down to drink after they have been feeding, and the
heart of the shepherd is glad- even so was the heart of Aeneas
gladdened when he saw his people follow him. Then they fought
furiously in close combat about the body of Alcathous, wielding their
long spears; and the bronze armour about their bodies rang fearfully
as they took aim at one another in the press of the fight, while the
two heroes Aeneas and Idomeneus, peers of Mars, outxied every one in
their desire to hack at each other with sword and spear. Aeneas took
aim first, but Idomeneus was on the lookout and avoided the spear, so
that it sped from Aeneas’ strong hand in vain, and fell quivering in
the ground. Idomeneus meanwhile smote Oenomaus in the middle of his
belly, and broke the plate of his corslet, whereon his bowels came
gushing out and he clutched the earth in the palms of his hands as he
fell sprawling in the dust. Idomeneus drew his spear out of the body,
but could not strip him of the rest of his armour for the rain of
darts that were showered upon him: moreover his strength was now
beginning to fail him so that he could no longer charge, and could
neither spring forward to recover his own weapon nor swerve aside to
avoid one that was aimed at him; therefore, though he still defended
himself in hand-to-hand fight, his heavy feet could not bear him
swiftly out of the battle. Deiphobus aimed a spear at him as he was
retreating slowly from the field, for his bitterness against him was
as fierce as ever, but again he missed him, and hit Ascalaphus, the
son of Mars; the spear went through his shoulder, and he clutched the
earth in the palms of his hands as he fell sprawling in the dust.
Grim Mars of awful voice did
not yet know that his son had fallen, for he was sitting on the
summits of Olympus under the golden clouds, by command of Jove, where
the other gods were also sitting, forbidden to take part in the
battle. Meanwhile men fought furiously about the body. Deiphobus tore
the helmet from off his head, but Meriones sprang upon him, and struck
him on the arm with a spear so that the visored helmet fell from his
hand and came ringing down upon the ground. Thereon Meriones sprang
upon him like a vulture, drew the spear from his shoulder, and fell
back under cover of his men. Then Polites, own brother of Deiphobus
passed his arms around his waist, and bore him away from the battle
till he got to his horses that were standing in the rear of the fight
with the chariot and their driver. These took him towards the city
groaning and in great pain, with the blood flowing from his arm.
The others still fought on,
and the battle-cry rose to heaven without ceasing. Aeneas sprang on
Aphareus son of Caletor, and struck him with a spear in his throat
which was turned towards him; his head fell on one side, his helmet
and shield came down along with him, and death, life’s foe, was shed
around him. Antilochus spied his chance, flew forward towards Thoon,
and wounded him as he was turning round. He laid open the vein that
runs all the way up the back to the neck; he cut this vein clean away
throughout its whole course, and Thoon fell in the dust face upwards,
stretching out his hands imploringly towards his comrades. Antilochus
sprang upon him and stripped the armour from his shoulders, glaring
round him fearfully as he did so. The Trojans came about him on every
side and struck his broad and gleaming shield, but could not wound his
body, for Neptune stood guard over the son of Nestor, though the darts
fell thickly round him. He was never clear of the foe, but was always
in the thick of the fight; his spear was never idle; he poised and
aimed it in every direction, so eager was he to hit some one from a
distance or to fight him hand to hand.
As he was thus aiming among
the crowd, he was seen by Adamas son of Asius, who rushed towards him
and struck him with a spear in the middle of his shield, but Neptune
made its point without effect, for he grudged him the life of
Antilochus. One half, therefore, of the spear stuck fast like a
charred stake in Antilochus’s shield, while the other lay on the
ground. Adamas then sought shelter under cover of his men, but
Meriones followed after and hit him with a spear midway between the
private parts and the navel, where a wound is particualrly painful to
wretched mortals. There did Meriones transfix him, and he writhed
convulsively about the spear as some bull whom mountain herdsmen have
bound with ropes of withes and are taking away perforce. Even so did
he move convulsively for a while, but not for very long, till Meriones
came up and drew the spear out of his body, and his eyes were veiled
in darkness.
Helenus then struck Deipyrus
with a great Thracian sword, hitting him on the temple in close combat
and tearing the helmet from his head; the helmet fell to the ground,
and one of those who were fighting on the Achaean side took charge of
it as it rolled at his feet, but the eyes of Deipyrus were closed in
the darkness of death. On this Menelaus was grieved, and made
menacingly towards Helenus, brandishing his spear; but Helenus drew
his bow, and the two attacked one another at one and the same moment,
the one with his spear, and the other with his bow and arrow. The son
of Priam hit the breastplate of Menelaus’s corslet, but the arrow
glanced from off it. As black beans or pulse come pattering down on to
a threshing-floor from the broad winnowing-shovel, blown by shrill
winds and shaken by the shovel- even so did the arrow glance off and
recoil from the shield of Menelaus, who in his turn wounded the hand
with which Helenus carried his bow; the spear went right through his
hand and stuck in the bow itself, so that to his life he retreated
under cover of his men, with his hand dragging by his side- for the
spear weighed it down till Agenor drew it out and bound the hand
carefully up in a woollen sling which his esquire had with him.
Pisander then made straight at Menelaus- his evil destiny luring him
on to his doom, for he was to fall in fight with you, O Menelaus. When
the two were hard by one another the spear of the son of Atreus turned
aside and he missed his aim; Pisander then struck the shield of brave
Menelaus but could not pierce it, for the shield stayed the spear and
broke the shaft; nevertheless he was glad and made sure of victory;
forthwith, however, the son of Atreus drew his sword and sprang upon
him. Pisander then seized the bronze battle-axe, with its long and
polished handle of olive wood that hung by his side under his shield,
and the two made at one another. Pisander struck the peak of Menelaus’s
crested helmet just under the crest itself, and Menelaus hit Pisander
as he was coming towards him, on the forehead, just at the rise of his
nose; the bones cracked and his two gore-bedrabbled eyes fell by his
feet in the dust. He fell backwards to the ground, and Menelaus set
his heel upon him, stripped him of his armour, and vaunted over him
saying, "Even thus shall you Trojans leave the ships of the
Achaeans, proud and insatiate of battle though you be: nor shall you
lack any of the disgrace and shame which you have heaped upon myself.
Cowardly she-wolves that you are, you feared not the anger of dread
Jove, avenger of violated hospitality, who will one day destroy your
city; you stole my wedded wife and wickedly carried off much treasure
when you were her guest, and now you would fling fire upon our ships,
and kill our heroes. A day will come when, rage as you may, you shall
be stayed. O father Jove, you, who they say art above all both gods
and men in wisdom, and from whom all things that befall us do proceed,
how can you thus favour the Trojans- men so proud and overweening,
that they are never tired of fighting? All things pall after a while-
sleep, love, sweet song, and stately dance- still these are things of
which a man would surely have his fill rather than of battle, whereas
it is of battle that the Trojans are insatiate."
So saying Menelaus stripped
the blood-stained armour from the body of Pisander, and handed it over
to his men; then he again ranged himself among those who were in the
front of the fight. Harpalion son of King Pylaemenes then sprang upon
him; he had come to fight at Troy along with his father, but he did
not go home again. He struck the middle of Menelaus’s shield with
his spear but could not pierce it, and to save his life drew back
under cover of his men, looking round him on every side lest he should
be wounded. But Meriones aimed a bronze-tipped arrow at him as he was
leaving the field, and hit him on the right buttock; the arrow pierced
the bone through and through, and penetrated the bladder, so he sat
down where he was and breathed his last in the arms of his comrades,
stretched like a worm upon the ground and watering the earth with the
blood that flowed from his wound. The brave Paphlagonians tended him
with all due care; they raised him into his chariot, and bore him
sadly off to the city of Troy; his father went also with him weeping
bitterly, but there was no ransom that could bring his dead son to
life again.
Paris was deeply grieved by
the death of Harpalion, who was his host when he went among the
Paphlagonians; he aimed an arrow, therefore, in order to avenge him.
Now there was a certain man named Euchenor, son of Polyidus the
prophet, a brave man and wealthy, whose home was in Corinth. This
Euchenor had set sail for Troy well knowing that it would be the death
of him, for his good old father Polyidus had often told him that he
must either stay at home and die of a terrible disease, or go with the
Achaeans and perish at the hands of the Trojans; he chose, therefore,
to avoid incurring the heavy fine the Achaeans would have laid upon
him, and at the same time to escape the pain and suffering of disease.
Paris now smote him on the jaw under his ear, whereon the life went
out of him and he was enshrouded in the darkness of death.
Thus then did they fight as
it were a flaming fire. But Hector had not yet heard, and did not know
that the Argives were making havoc of his men on the left wing of the
battle, where the Achaeans ere long would have triumphed over them, so
vigorously did Neptune cheer them on and help them. He therefore held
on at the point where he had first forced his way through the gates
and the wall, after breaking through the serried ranks of Danaan
warriors. It was here that the ships of Ajax and Protesilaus were
drawn up by the sea-shore; here the wall was at its lowest, and the
fight both of man and horse raged most fiercely. The Boeotians and the
Ionians with their long tunics, the Locrians, the men of Phthia, and
the famous force of the Epeans could hardly stay Hector as he rushed
on towards the ships, nor could they drive him from them, for he was
as a wall of fire. The chosen men of the Athenians were in the van,
led by Menestheus son of Peteos, with whom were also Pheidas, Stichius,
and stalwart Bias:
Meges son of Phyleus,
Amphion, and Dracius commanded the Epeans, while Medon and staunch
Podarces led the men of Phthia. Of these, Medon was bastard son to
Oileus and brother of Ajax, but he lived in Phylace away from his own
country, for he had killed the brother of his stepmother Eriopis, the
wife of Oileus; the other, Podarces, was the son of Iphiclus son of
Phylacus. These two stood in the van of the Phthians, and defended the
ships along with the Boeotians. Ajax son of Oileus never for a moment
left the side of Ajax son of Telamon, but as two swart oxen both
strain their utmost at the plough which they are drawing in a fallow
field, and the sweat steams upwards from about the roots of their
horns- nothing but the yoke divides them as they break up the ground
till they reach the end of the field- even so did the two Ajaxes stand
shoulder to shoulder by one another. Many and brave comrades followed
the son of Telamon, to relieve him of his shield when he was overcome
with sweat and toil, but the Locrians did not follow so close after
the son of Oileus, for they could not hold their own in a hand-to-hand
fight. They had no bronze helmets with plumes of horse-hair, neither
had they shields nor ashen spears, but they had come to Troy armed
with bows, and with slings of twisted wool from which they showered
their missiles to break the ranks of the Trojans. The others,
therefore, with their heavy armour bore the brunt of the fight with
the Trojans and with Hector, while the Locrians shot from behind,
under their cover; and thus the Trojans began to lose heart, for the
arrows threw them into confusion.
The Trojans would now have
been driven in sorry plight from the ships and tents back to windy
Ilius, had not Polydamas presently said to Hector, "Hector, there
is no persuading you to take advice. Because heaven has so richly
endowed you with the arts of war, you think that you must therefore
excel others in counsel; but you cannot thus claim preeminence in all
things. Heaven has made one man an excellent soldier; of another it
has made a dancer or a singer and player on the lyre; while yet in
another Jove has implanted a wise understanding of which men reap
fruit to the saving of many, and he himself knows more about it than
any one; therefore I will say what I think will be best. The fight has
hemmed you in as with a circle of fire, and even now that the Trojans
are within the wall some of them stand aloof in full armour, while
others are fighting scattered and outnumbered near the ships. Draw
back, therefore, and call your chieftains round you, that we may
advise together whether to fall now upon the ships in the hope that
heaven may vouchsafe us victory, or to beat a retreat while we can yet
safely do so. I greatly fear that the Achaeans will pay us their debt
of yesterday in full, for there is one abiding at their ships who is
never weary of battle, and who will not hold aloof much longer."
Thus spoke Polydamas, and
his words pleased Hector well. He sprang in full armour from his
chariot and said, "Polydamas, gather the chieftains here; I will
go yonder into the fight, but will return at once when I have given
them their orders."
He then sped onward,
towering like a snowy mountain, and with a loud cry flew through the
ranks of the Trojans and their allies. When they heard his voice they
all hastened to gather round Polydamas the excellent son of Panthous,
but Hector kept on among the foremost, looking everywhere to find
Deiphobus and prince Helenus, Adamas son of Asius, and Asius son of
Hyrtacus; living, indeed, and scatheless he could no longer find them,
for the two last were lying by the sterns of the Achaean ships, slain
by the Argives, while the others had been also stricken and wounded by
them; but upon the left wing of the dread battle he found Alexandrus,
husband of lovely Helen, cheering his men and urging them on to fight.
He went up to him and upbraided him. "Paris," said he,
"evil-hearted Paris, fair to see but woman-mad and false of
tongue, where are Deiphobus and King Helenus? Where are Adamas son of
Asius, and Asius son of Hyrtacus? Where too is Othryoneus? Ilius is
undone and will now surely fall!" Alexandrus answered,
"Hector, why find fault when there is no one to find fault with?
I should hold aloof from battle on any day rather than this, for my
mother bore me with nothing of the coward about me. From the moment
when you set our men fighting about the ships we have been staying
here and doing battle with the Danaans. Our comrades about whom you
ask me are dead; Deiphobus and King Helenus alone have left the field,
wounded both of them in the hand, but the son of Saturn saved them
alive. Now, therefore, lead on where you would have us go, and we will
follow with right goodwill; you shall not find us fail you in so far
as our strength holds out, but no man can do more than in him lies, no
matter how willing he may be." With these words he satisfied his
brother, and the two went towards the part of the battle where the
fight was thickest, about Cebriones, brave Polydamas, Phalces,
Orthaeus, godlike Polyphetes, Palmys, Ascanius, and Morys son of
Hippotion, who had come from fertile Ascania on the preceding day to
relieve other troops. Then Jove urged them on to fight. They flew
forth like the blasts of some fierce wind that strike earth in the van
of a thunderstorm- they buffet the salt sea into an uproar; many and
mighty are the great waves that come crashing in one after the other
upon the shore with their arching heads all crested with foam- even so
did rank behind rank of Trojans arrayed in gleaming armour follow
their leaders onward. The way was led by Hector son of Priam, peer of
murderous Mars, with his round shield before him- his shield of
ox-hides covered with plates of bronze- and his gleaming helmet upon
his temples. He kept stepping forward under cover of his shield in
every direction, making trial of the ranks to see if they would give
way be him, but he could not daunt the courage of the Achaeans. Ajax
was the first to stride out and challenge him. "Sir," he
cried, "draw near; why do you think thus vainly to dismay the
Argives? We Achaeans are excellent soldiers, but the scourge of Jove
has fallen heavily upon us. Your heart, forsooth, is set on destroying
our ships, but we too have bands that can keep you at bay, and your
own fair town shall be sooner taken and sacked by ourselves. The time
is near when you shall pray Jove and all the gods in your flight, that
your steeds may be swifter than hawks as they raise the dust on the
plain and bear you back to your city."
As he was thus speaking a
bird flew by upon his right hand, and the host of the Achaeans
shouted, for they took heart at the omen. But Hector answered,
"Ajax, braggart and false of tongue, would that I were as sure of
being son for evermore to aegis-bearing Jove, with Queen Juno for my
mother, and of being held in like honour with Minerva and Apollo, as I
am that this day is big with the destruction of the Achaeans; and you
shall fall among them if you dare abide my spear; it shall rend your
fair body and bid you glut our hounds and birds of prey with your fat
and your flesh, as you fall by the ships of the Achaeans."
With these words he led the
way and the others followed after with a cry that rent the air, while
the host shouted behind them. The Argives on their part raised a shout
likewise, nor did they forget their prowess, but stood firm against
the onslaught of the Trojan chieftains, and the cry from both the
hosts rose up to heaven and to the brightness of Jove’s presence.