THUS then did they
fight as it were a flaming fire. Meanwhile the fleet runner
Antilochus, who had been sent as messenger, reached Achilles,
and found him sitting by his tall ships and boding that
which was indeed too surely true. "Alas," said
he to himself in the heaviness of his heart, "why are
the Achaeans again scouring the plain and flocking towards
the ships? Heaven grant the gods be not now bringing that
sorrow upon me of which my mother Thetis spoke, saying that
while I was yet alive the bravest of the Myrmidons should
fall before the Trojans, and see the light of the sun no
longer. I fear the brave son of Menoetius has fallen through
his own daring and yet I bade him return to the ships as
soon as he had driven back those that were bringing fire
against them, and not join battle with Hector."
As he was thus pondering, the son of Nestor came up to him
and told his sad tale, weeping bitterly the while. "Alas,"
he cried, "son of noble Peleus, I bring you bad tidings,
would indeed that they were untrue. Patroclus has fallen,
and a fight is raging about his naked body- for Hector holds
his armour." A dark cloud of grief fell upon Achilles
as he listened. He filled both hands with dust from off
the ground, and poured it over his head, disfiguring his
comely face, and letting the refuse settle over his shirt
so fair and new. He flung himself down all huge and hugely
at full length, and tore his hair with his hands. The bondswomen
whom Achilles and Patroclus had taken captive screamed aloud
for grief, beating their breasts, and with their limbs failing
them for sorrow. Antilochus bent over him the while, weeping
and holding both his hands as he lay groaning for he feared
that he might plunge a knife into his own throat. Then Achilles
gave a loud cry and his mother heard him as she was sitting
in the depths of the sea by the old man her father, whereon
she screamed, and all the goddesses daughters of Nereus
that dwelt at the bottom of the sea, came gathering round
her. There were Glauce, Thalia and Cymodoce, Nesaia, Speo,
thoe and dark-eyed Halie, Cymothoe, Actaea and Limnorea,
Melite, Iaera, Amphithoe and Agave, Doto and Proto, Pherusa
and Dynamene, Dexamene, Amphinome and Callianeira, Doris,
Panope, and the famous sea-nymph Galatea, Nemertes, Apseudes
and Callianassa. There were also Clymene, Ianeira and Ianassa,
Maera, Oreithuia and Amatheia of the lovely locks, with
other Nereids who dwell in the depths of the sea. The crystal
cave was filled with their multitude and they all beat their
breasts while Thetis led them in their lament.
"Listen," she cried, "sisters, daughters
of Nereus, that you may hear the burden of my sorrows. Alas,
woe is me, woe in that I have borne the most glorious of
offspring. I bore him fair and strong, hero among heroes,
and he shot up as a sapling; I tended him as a plant in
a goodly garden, and sent him with his ships to Ilius to
fight the Trojans, but never shall I welcome him back to
the house of Peleus. So long as he lives to look upon the
light of the sun he is in heaviness, and though I go to
him I cannot help him. Nevertheless I will go, that I may
see my dear son and learn what sorrow has befallen him though
he is still holding aloof from battle." She left the
cave as she spoke, while the others followed weeping after,
and the waves opened a path before them. When they reached
the rich plain of Troy, they came up out of the sea in a
long line on to the sands, at the place where the ships
of the Myrmidons were drawn up in close order round the
tents of Achilles. His mother went up to him as he lay groaning;
she laid her hand upon his head and spoke piteously, saying,
"My son, why are you thus weeping? What sorrow has
now befallen you? Tell me; hide it not from me. Surely Jove
has granted you the prayer you made him, when you lifted
up your hands and besought him that the Achaeans might all
of them be pent up at their ships, and rue it bitterly in
that you were no longer with them."
Achilles groaned and answered, "Mother, Olympian Jove
has indeed vouchsafed me the fulfilment of my prayer, but
what boots it to me, seeing that my dear comrade Patroclus
has fallen- he whom I valued more than all others, and loved
as dearly as my own life? I have lost him; aye, and Hector
when he had killed him stripped the wondrous armour, so
glorious to behold, which the gods gave to Peleus when they
laid you in the couch of a mortal man. Would that you were
still dwelling among the immortal sea-nymphs, and that Peleus
had taken to himself some mortal bride. For now you shall
have grief infinite by reason of the death of that son whom
you can never welcome home-nay, I will not live nor go about
among mankind unless Hector fall by my spear, and thus pay
me for having slain Patroclus son of Menoetius."
Thetis wept and answered, "Then, my son, is your end
near at hand-for your own death awaits you full soon after
that of Hector." Then said Achilles in his great grief,
"I would die here and now, in that I could not save
my comrade. He has fallen far from home, and in his hour
of need my hand was not there to help him. What is there
for me? Return to my own land I shall not, and I have brought
no saving neither to Patroclus nor to my other comrades
of whom so many have been slain by mighty Hector; I stay
here by my ships a bootless burden upon the earth, I, who
in fight have no peer among the Achaeans, though in council
there are better than I. Therefore, perish strife both from
among gods and men, and anger, wherein even a righteous
man will harden his heart- which rises up in the soul of
a man like smoke, and the taste thereof is sweeter than
drops of honey. Even so has Agamemnon angered me. And yet-
so be it, for it is over; I will force my soul into subjection
as I needs must; I will go; I will pursue Hector who has
slain him whom I loved so dearly, and will then abide my
doom when it may please Jove and the other gods to send
it. Even Hercules, the best beloved of Jove- even he could
not escape the hand of death, but fate and Juno's fierce
anger laid him low, as I too shall lie when I am dead if
a like doom awaits me. Till then I will win fame, and will
bid Trojan and Dardanian women wring tears from their tender
cheeks with both their hands in the grievousness of their
great sorrow; thus shall they know that he who has held
aloof so long will hold aloof no longer. Hold me not back,
therefore, in the love you bear me, for you shall not move
me."
Then silver-footed Thetis answered, "My son, what you
have said is true. It is well to save your comrades from
destruction, but your armour is in the hands of the Trojans;
Hector bears it in triumph upon his own shoulders. Full
well I know that his vaunt shall not be lasting, for his
end is close at hand; go not, however, into the press of
battle till you see me return hither; to-morrow at break
of day I shall be here, and will bring you goodly armour
from King Vulcan." On this she left her brave son,
and as she turned away she said to the sea-nymphs her sisters,
"Dive into the bosom of the sea and go to the house
of the old sea-god my father. Tell him everything; as for
me, I will go to the cunning workman Vulcan on high Olympus,
and ask him to provide my son with a suit of splendid armour."
When she had so said, they dived forthwith beneath the waves,
while silver-footed Thetis went her way that she might bring
the armour for her son.
Thus, then, did her feet bear the goddess to Olympus, and
meanwhile the Achaeans were flying with loud cries before
murderous Hector till they reached the ships and the Hellespont,
and they could not draw the body of Mars's servant Patroclus
out of reach of the weapons that were showered upon him,
for Hector son of Priam with his host and horsemen had again
caught up to him like the flame of a fiery furnace; thrice
did brave Hector seize him by the feet, striving with might
and main to draw him away and calling loudly on the Trojans,
and thrice did the two Ajaxes, clothed in valour as with
a garment, beat him from off the body; but all undaunted
he would now charge into the thick of the fight, and now
again he would stand still and cry aloud, but he would give
no ground. As upland shepherds that cannot chase some famished
lion from a carcase, even so could not the two Ajaxes scare
Hector son of Priam from the body of Patroclus.
And now he would even have dragged it off and have won imperishable
glory, had not Iris fleet as the wind, winged her way as
messenger from Olympus to the son of Peleus and bidden him
arm. She came secretly without the knowledge of Jove and
of the other gods, for Juno sent her, and when she had got
close to him she said, "Up, son of Peleus, mightiest
of all mankind; rescue Patroclus about whom this fearful
fight is now raging by the ships. Men are killing one another,
the Danaans in defence of the dead body, while the Trojans
are trying to hale it away, and take it to wind Ilius: Hector
is the most furious of them all; he is for cutting the head
from the body and fixing it on the stakes of the wall. Up,
then, and bide here no longer; shrink from the thought that
Patroclus may become meat for the dogs of Troy. Shame on
you, should his body suffer any kind of outrage."
And Achilles said, "Iris, which of the gods was it
that sent you to me?"
Iris answered, "It was Juno the royal spouse of Jove,
but the son of Saturn does not know of my coming, nor yet
does any other of the immortals who dwell on the snowy summits
of Olympus." Then fleet Achilles answered her saying,
"How can I go up into the battle? They have my armour.
My mother forbade me to arm till I should see her come,
for she promised to bring me goodly armour from Vulcan;
I know no man whose arms I can put on, save only the shield
of Ajax son of Telamon, and he surely must be fighting in
the front rank and wielding his spear about the body of
dead Patroclus." Iris said, 'We know that your armour
has been taken, but go as you are; go to the deep trench
and show yourelf before the Trojans, that they may fear
you and cease fighting. Thus will the fainting sons of the
Achaeans gain some brief breathing-time, which in battle
may hardly be."
Iris left him when she had so spoken. But Achilles dear
to Jove arose, and Minerva flung her tasselled aegis round
his strong shoulders; she crowned his head with a halo of
golden cloud from which she kindled a glow of gleaming fire.
As the smoke that goes up into heaven from some city that
is being beleaguered on an island far out at sea- all day
long do men sally from the city and fight their hardest,
and at the going down of the sun the line of beacon-fires
blazes forth, flaring high for those that dwell near them
to behold, if so be that they may come with their ships
and succour them- even so did the light flare from the head
of Achilles, as he stood by the trench, going beyond the
wall- but he aid not join the Achaeans for he heeded the
charge which his mother laid upon him. There did he stand
and shout aloud. Minerva also raised her voice from afar,
and spread terror unspeakable among the Trojans. Ringing
as the note of a trumpet that sounds alarm then the foe
is at the gates of a city, even so brazen was the voice
of the son of Aeacus, and when the Trojans heard its clarion
tones they were dismayed; the horses turned back with their
chariots for they boded mischief, and their drivers were
awe-struck by the steady flame which the grey-eyed goddess
had kindled above the head of the great son of Peleus. Thrice
did Achilles raise his loud cry as he stood by the trench,
and thrice were the Trojans and their brave allies thrown
into confusion; whereon twelve of their noblest champions
fell beneath the wheels of their chariots and perished by
their own spears. The Achaeans to their great joy then drew
Patroclus out of reach of the weapons, and laid him on a
litter: his comrades stood mourning round him, and among
them fleet Achilles who wept bitterly as he saw his true
comrade lying dead upon his bier. He had sent him out with
horses and chariots into battle, but his return he was not
to welcome. Then Juno sent the busy sun, loth though he
was, into the waters of Oceanus; so he set, and the Achaeans
had rest from the tug and turmoil of war.
Now the Trojans when they had come out of the fight, unyoked
their horses and gathered in assembly before preparing their
supper. They kept their feet, nor would any dare to sit
down, for fear had fallen upon them all because Achilles
had shown himself after having held aloof so long from battle.
Polydamas son of Panthous was first to speak, a man of judgement,
who alone among them could look both before and after. He
was comrade to Hector, and they had been born upon the same
night; with all sincerity and goodwill, therefore, he addressed
them thus:-"Look to it well, my friends; I would urge
you to go back now to your city and not wait here by the
ships till morning, for we are far from our walls. So long
as this man was at enmity with Agamemnon the Achaeans were
easier to deal with, and I would have gladly camped by the
ships in the hope of taking them; but now I go in great
fear of the fleet son of Peleus; he is so daring that he
will never bide here on the plain whereon the Trojans and
Achaeans fight with equal valour, but he will try to storm
our city and carry off our women. Do then as I say, and
let us retreat. For this is what will happen. The darkness
of night will for a time stay the son of Peleus, but if
he find us here in the morning when he sallies forth in
full armour, we shall have knowledge of him in good earnest.
Glad indeed will he be who can escape and get back to Ilius,
and many a Trojan will become meat for dogs and vultures
may I never live to hear it. If we do as I say, little though
we may like it, we shall have strength in counsel during
the night, and the great gates with the doors that close
them will protect the city. At dawn we can arm and take
our stand on the walls; he will then rue it if he sallies
from the ships to fight us. He will go back when he has
given his horses their fill of being driven all whithers
under our walls, and will be in no mind to try and force
his way into the city. Neither will he ever sack it, dogs
shall devour him ere he do so." Hector looked fiercely
at him and answered, "Polydamas, your words are not
to my liking in that you bid us go back and be pent within
the city. Have you not had enough of being cooped up behind
walls? In the old-days the city of Priam was famous the
whole world over for its wealth of gold and bronze, but
our treasures are wasted out of our houses, and much goods
have been sold away to Phrygia and fair Meonia, for the
hand of Jove has been laid heavily upon us. Now, therefore,
that the son of scheming Saturn has vouchsafed me to win
glory here and to hem the Achaeans in at their ships, prate
no more in this fool's wise among the people. You will have
no man with you; it shall not be; do all of you as I now
say;- take your suppers in your companies throughout the
host, and keep your watches and be wakeful every man of
you. If any Trojan is uneasy about his possessions, let
him gather them and give them out among the people. Better
let these, rather than the Achaeans, have them. At daybreak
we will arm and fight about the ships; granted that Achilles
has again come forward to defend them, let it be as he will,
but it shall go hard with him. I shall not shun him, but
will fight him, to fall or conquer. The god of war deals
out like measure to all, and the slayer may yet be slain."
Thus spoke Hector; and the Trojans, fools that they were,
shouted in applause, for Pallas Minerva had robbed them
of their understanding. They gave ear to Hector with his
evil counsel, but the wise words of Polydamas no man would
heed. They took their supper throughout the host, and meanwhile
through the whole night the Achaeans mourned Patroclus,
and the son of Peleus led them in their lament. He laid
his murderous hands upon the breast of his comrade, groaning
again and again as a bearded lion when a man who was chasing
deer has robbed him of his young in some dense forest; when
the lion comes back he is furious, and searches dingle and
dell to track the hunter if he can find him, for he is mad
with rage- even so with many a sigh did Achilles speak among
the Myrmidons saying, "Alas! vain were the words with
which I cheered the hero Menoetius in his own house; I said
that I would bring his brave son back again to Opoeis after
he had sacked Ilius and taken his share of the spoils- but
Jove does not give all men their heart's desire. The same
soil shall be reddened here at Troy by the blood of us both,
for I too shall never be welcomed home by the old knight
Peleus, nor by my mother Thetis, but even in this place
shall the earth cover me.
Nevertheless, O
Patroclus, now that I am left behind you, I will not bury
you, till I have brought hither the head and armour of mighty
Hector who has slain you. Twelve noble sons of Trojans will
I behead before your bier to avenge you; till I have done
so you shall lie as you are by the ships, and fair women
of Troy and Dardanus, whom we have taken with spear and
strength of arm when we sacked men's goodly cities, shall
weep over you both night and day."
Then Achilles told his men to set a large tripod upon the
fire that they might wash the clotted gore from off Patroclus.
Thereon they set a tripod full of bath water on to a clear
fire: they threw sticks on to it to make it blaze, and the
water became hot as the flame played about the belly of
the tripod. When the water in the cauldron was boiling they
washed the body, anointed it with oil, and closed its wounds
with ointment that had been kept nine years. Then they laid
it on a bier and covered it with a linen cloth from head
to foot, and over this they laid a fair white robe. Thus
all night long did the Myrmidons gather round Achilles to
mourn Patroclus. Then Jove said to Juno his sister-wife,
"So, Queen Juno, you have gained your end, and have
roused fleet Achilles. One would think that the Achaeans
were of your own flesh and blood." And Juno answered,
"Dread son of Saturn, why should you say this thing?
May not a man though he be only mortal and knows less than
we do, do what he can for another person? And shall not
I- foremost of all goddesses both by descent and as wife
to you who reign in heaven- devise evil for the Trojans
if I am angry with them?" Thus did they converse. Meanwhile
Thetis came to the house of Vulcan, imperishable, star-bespangled,
fairest of the abodes in heaven, a house of bronze wrought
by the lame god's own hands. She found him busy with his
bellows, sweating and hard at work, for he was making twenty
tripods that were to stand by the wall of his house, and
he set wheels of gold under them all that they might go
of their own selves to the assemblies of the gods, and come
back again- marvels indeed to see.
They were finished
all but the ears of cunning workmanship which yet remained
to be fixed to them: these he was now fixing, and he was
hammering at the rivets. While he was thus at work silver-footed
Thetis came to the house. Charis, of graceful head-dress,
wife to the far-famed lame god, came towards her as soon
as she saw her, and took her hand in her own, saying, "Why
have you come to our house, Thetis, honoured and ever welcome-
for you do not visit us often? Come inside and let me set
refreshment before you." The goddess led the way as
she spoke, and bade Thetis sit on a richly decorated seat
inlaid with silver; there was a footstool also under her
feet. Then she called Vulcan and said, "Vulcan, come
here, Thetis wants you"; and the far-famed lame god
answered, "Then it is indeed an august and honoured
goddess who has come here; she it was that took care of
me when I was suffering from the heavy fall which I had
through my cruel mother's anger- for she would have got
rid of me because I was lame. It would have gone hardly
with me had not Eurynome, daughter of the ever-encircling
waters of Oceanus, and Thetis, taken me to their bosom.
Nine years did I stay with them, and many beautiful works
in bronze, brooches, spiral armlets, cups, and chains, did
I make for them in their cave, with the roaring waters of
Oceanus foaming as they rushed ever past it; and no one
knew, neither of gods nor men, save only Thetis and Eurynome
who took care of me. If, then, Thetis has come to my house
I must make her due requital for having saved me; entertain
her, therefore, with all hospitality, while I put by my
bellows and all my tools." On this the mighty monster
hobbled off from his anvil, his thin legs plying lustily
under him. He set the bellows away from the fire, and gathered
his tools into a silver chest. Then he took a sponge and
washed his face and hands, his shaggy chest and brawny neck;
he donned his shirt, grasped his strong staff, and limped
towards the door. There were golden handmaids also who worked
for him, and were like real young women, with sense and
reason, voice also and strength, and all the learning of
the immortals; these busied themselves as the king bade
them, while he drew near to Thetis, seated her upon a goodly
seat, and took her hand in his own, saying, "Why have
you come to our house, Thetis honoured and ever welcome-
for you do not visit us often? Say what you want, and I
will do it for you at once if I can, and if it can be done
at all."
Thetis wept and answered, "Vulcan, is there another
goddess in Olympus whom the son of Saturn has been pleased
to try with so much affliction as he has me? Me alone of
the marine goddesses did he make subject to a mortal husband,
Peleus son of Aeacus, and sorely against my will did I submit
to the embraces of one who was but mortal, and who now stays
at home worn out with age. Neither is this all. Heaven vouchsafed
me a son, hero among heroes, and he shot up as a sapling.
I tended him as a plant in a goodly garden and sent him
with his ships to Ilius to fight the Trojans, but never
shall I welcome him back to the house of Peleus. So long
as he lives to look upon the light of the sun, he is in
heaviness, and though I go to him I cannot help him; King
Agamemnon has made him give up the maiden whom the sons
of the Achaeans had awarded him, and he wastes with sorrow
for her sake. Then the Trojans hemmed the Achaeans in at
their ships' sterns and would not let them come forth; the
elders, therefore, of the Argives besought Achilles and
offered him great treasure, whereon he refused to bring
deliverance to them himself, but put his own armour on Patroclus
and sent him into the fight with much people after him.
All day long they fought by the Scaean gates and would have
taken the city there and then, had not Apollo vouchsafed
glory to Hector and slain the valiant son of Menoetius after
he had done the Trojans much evil. Therefore I am suppliant
at your knees if haply you may be pleased to provide my
son, whose end is near at hand, with helmet and shield,
with goodly greaves fitted with ancle-clasps, and with a
breastplate, for he lost his own when his true comrade fell
at the hands of the Trojans, and he now lies stretched on
earth in the bitterness of his soul." And Vulcan answered,
"Take heart, and be no more disquieted about this matter;
would that I could hide him from death's sight when his
hour is come, so surely as I can find him armour that shall
amaze the eyes of all who behold it."
When he had so said he left her and went to his bellows,
turning them towards the fire and bidding them do their
office. Twenty bellows blew upon the melting-pots, and they
blew blasts of every kind, some fierce to help him when
he had need of them, and others less strong as Vulcan willed
it in the course of his work. He threw tough copper into
the fire, and tin, with silver and gold; he set his great
anvil on its block, and with one hand grasped his mighty
hammer while he took the tongs in the other.
First he shaped the shield so great and strong, adorning
it all over and binding it round with a gleaming circuit
in three layers; and the baldric was made of silver. He
made the shield in five thicknesses, and with many a wonder
did his cunning hand enrich it. He wrought the earth, the
heavens, and the sea; the moon also at her full and the
untiring sun, with all the signs that glorify the face of
heaven- the Pleiads, the Hyads, huge Orion, and the Bear,
which men also call the Wain and which turns round ever
in one place, facing. Orion, and alone never dips into the
stream of Oceanus. He wrought also two cities, fair to see
and busy with the hum of men. In the one were weddings and
wedding-feasts, and they were going about the city with
brides whom they were escorting by torchlight from their
chambers. Loud rose the cry of Hymen, and the youths danced
to the music of flute and lyre, while the women stood each
at her house door to see them.
Meanwhile the people were gathered in assembly, for there
was a quarrel, and two men were wrangling about the blood-money
for a man who had been killed, the one saying before the
people that he had paid damages in full, and the other that
he had not been paid. Each was trying to make his own case
good, and the people took sides, each man backing the side
that he had taken; but the heralds kept them back, and the
elders sate on their seats of stone in a solemn circle,
holding the staves which the heralds had put into their
hands. Then they rose and each in his turn gave judgement,
and there were two talents laid down, to be given to him
whose judgement should be deemed the fairest.
About the other city there lay encamped two hosts in gleaming
armour, and they were divided whether to sack it, or to
spare it and accept the half of what it contained. But the
men of the city would not yet consent, and armed themselves
for a surprise; their wives and little children kept guard
upon the walls, and with them were the men who were past
fighting through age; but the others sallied forth with
Mars and Pallas Minerva at their head- both of them wrought
in gold and clad in golden raiment, great and fair with
their armour as befitting gods, while they that followed
were smaller. When they reached the place where they would
lay their ambush, it was on a riverbed to which live stock
of all kinds would come from far and near to water; here,
then, they lay concealed, clad in full armour. Some way
off them there were two scouts who were on the look-out
for the coming of sheep or cattle, which presently came,
followed by two shepherds who were playing on their pipes,
and had not so much as a thought of danger. When those who
were in ambush saw this, they cut off the flocks and herds
and killed the shepherds. Meanwhile the besiegers, when
they heard much noise among the cattle as they sat in council,
sprang to their horses, and made with all speed towards
them; when they reached them they set battle in array by
the banks of the river, and the hosts aimed their bronze-shod
spears at one another. With them were Strife and Riot, and
fell Fate who was dragging three men after her, one with
a fresh wound, and the other unwounded, while the third
was dead, and she was dragging him along by his heel: and
her robe was bedrabbled in men's blood. They went in and
out with one another and fought as though they were living
people haling away one another's dead.
He wrought also a fair fallow field, large and thrice ploughed
already. Many men were working at the plough within it,
turning their oxen to and fro, furrow after furrow. Each
time that they turned on reaching the headland a man would
come up to them and give them a cup of wine, and they would
go back to their furrows looking forward to the time when
they should again reach the headland. The part that they
had ploughed was dark behind them, so that the field, though
it was of gold, still looked as if it were being ploughed-
very curious to behold.
He wrought also a field of harvest corn, and the reapers
were reaping with sharp sickles in their hands. Swathe after
swathe fell to the ground in a straight line behind them,
and the binders bound them in bands of twisted straw. There
were three binders, and behind them there were boys who
gathered the cut corn in armfuls and kept on bringing them
to be bound: among them all the owner of the land stood
by in silence and was glad. The servants were getting a
meal ready under an oak, for they had sacrificed a great
ox, and were busy cutting him up, while the women were making
a porridge of much white barley for the labourers' dinner.
He wrought also a vineyard, golden and fair to see, and
the vines were loaded with grapes. The bunches overhead
were black, but the vines were trained on poles of silver.
He ran a ditch of dark metal all round it, and fenced it
with a fence of tin; there was only one path to it, and
by this the vintagers went when they would gather the vintage.
Youths and maidens all blithe and full of glee, carried
the luscious fruit in plaited baskets; and with them there
went a boy who made sweet music with his lyre, and sang
the Linus-song with his clear boyish voice.
He wrought also a herd of homed cattle. He made the cows
of gold and tin, and they lowed as they came full speed
out of the yards to go and feed among the waving reeds that
grow by the banks of the river. Along with the cattle there
went four shepherds, all of them in gold, and their nine
fleet dogs went with them. Two terrible lions had fastened
on a bellowing bull that was with the foremost cows, and
bellow as he might they haled him, while the dogs and men
gave chase: the lions tore through the bull's thick hide
and were gorging on his blood and bowels, but the herdsmen
were afraid to do anything, and only hounded on their dogs;
the dogs dared not fasten on the lions but stood by barking
and keeping out of harm's way. The god wrought also a pasture
in a fair mountain dell, and large flock of sheep, with
a homestead and huts, and sheltered sheepfolds. Furthermore
he wrought a green, like that which Daedalus once made in
Cnossus for lovely Ariadne. Hereon there danced youths and
maidens whom all would woo, with their hands on one another's
wrists. The maidens wore robes of light linen, and the youths
well woven shirts that were slightly oiled. The girls were
crowned with garlands, while the young men had daggers of
gold that hung by silver baldrics; sometimes they would
dance deftly in a ring with merry twinkling feet, as it
were a potter sitting at his work and making trial of his
wheel to see whether it will run, and sometimes they would
go all in line with one another, and much people was gathered
joyously about the green. There was a bard also to sing
to them and play his lyre, while two tumblers went about
performing in the midst of them when the man struck up with
his tune. All round the outermost rim of the shield he set
the mighty stream of the river Oceanus.
Then when he had fashioned the shield so great and strong,
he made a breastplate also that shone brighter than fire.
He made helmet, close fitting to the brow, and richly worked,
with a golden plume overhanging it; and he made greaves
also of beaten tin. Lastly, when the famed lame god had
made all the armour, he took it and set it before the mother
of Achilles; whereon she darted like a falcon from the snowy
summits of Olympus and bore away the gleaming armour from
the house of Vulcan.