|
|
 |
The Iliad by Homer 1899 |
|
|
| The
Iliad by Homer
1899
About the
Author:
Homer
|
ARGUMENT(40)
-
THE CONTENTION OF
ACHILLES AND AGAMEMNON
In the war of Troy, the
Greeks having sacked
some of the neighbouring
towns, and taken from
thence two beautiful
captives, Chryseis and
Briseis,
allotted the first to
Agamemnon, and the last
to Achilles. Chryses,
the
father of Chryseis, and
priest of Apollo, comes
to the Grecian camp to
ransom her; with which
the action of the poem
opens, in the tenth year
of
the siege. The priest
being refused, and
insolently dismissed by
Agamemnon, entreats for
vengeance from his god;
who inflicts a
pestilence
on the Greeks. Achilles
calls a council, and
encourages Chalcas to
declare
the cause of it; who
attributes it to the
refusal of Chryseis. The
king,
being obliged to send
back his captive, enters
into a furious contest
with
Achilles, which Nestor
pacifies; however, as he
had the absolute command
of the army, he seizes
on Briseis in revenge.
Achilles in discontent
withdraws himself and
his forces from the rest
of the Greeks; and
complaining to Thetis,
she supplicates Jupiter
to render them sensible
of
the wrong done to her
son, by giving victory
to the Trojans. Jupiter,
granting her suit,
incenses Juno: between
whom the debate runs
high, till
they are reconciled by
the address of Vulcan.
The time of
two-and-twenty days is
taken up in this book:
nine during the
plague, one in the
council and quarrel of
the princes, and twelve
for
Jupiter's stay with the
Ęthiopians, at whose
return Thetis prefers
her
petition. The scene lies
in the Grecian camp,
then changes to Chrysa,
and
lastly to Olympus.
Achilles'
wrath, to
Greece the
direful
spring
Of woes
unnumber'd,
heavenly
goddess,
sing!
That wrath
which hurl'd
to Pluto's
gloomy reign
The souls of
mighty
chiefs
untimely
slain;
Whose limbs
unburied on
the naked
shore,
Devouring
dogs and
hungry
vultures
tore.(41)
Since great
Achilles and
Atrides
strove,
Such was the
sovereign
doom, and
such the
will of
Jove!(42)
Declare, O
Muse! in
what
ill-fated
hour(43)
Sprung the
fierce
strife, from
what
offended
power
Latona's son
a dire
contagion
spread,(44)
And heap'd
the camp
with
mountains of
the dead;
The king of
men his
reverent
priest
defied,(45)
And for the
king's
offence the
people died.
For Chryses
sought with
costly gifts
to gain
His captive
daughter
from the
victor's
chain.
Suppliant
the
venerable
father
stands;
Apollo's
awful
ensigns
grace his
hands
By these he
begs; and
lowly
bending
down,
Extends the
sceptre and
the laurel
crown
He sued to
all, but
chief
implored for
grace
The
brother-kings,
of Atreus'
royal race(46)
"Ye kings
and
warriors!
may your
vows be
crown'd,
And Troy's
proud walls
lie level
with the
ground.
May Jove
restore you
when your
toils are
o'er
Safe to the
pleasures of
your native
shore.
But, oh!
relieve a
wretched
parent's
pain,
And give
Chryseis to
these arms
again;
If mercy
fail, yet
let my
presents
move,
And dread
avenging
Phoebus, son
of Jove."
The Greeks
in shouts
their joint
assent
declare,
The priest
to
reverence,
and release
the fair.
Not so
Atrides; he,
with kingly
pride,
Repulsed the
sacred sire,
and thus
replied:
"Hence on
thy life,
and fly
these
hostile
plains,
Nor ask,
presumptuous,
what the
king detains
Hence, with
thy laurel
crown, and
golden rod,
Nor trust
too far
those
ensigns of
thy god.
Mine is thy
daughter,
priest, and
shall
remain;
And prayers,
and tears,
and bribes,
shall plead
in vain;
Till time
shall rifle
every
youthful
grace,
And age
dismiss her
from my cold
embrace,
In daily
labours of
the loom
employ'd,
Or doom'd to
deck the bed
she once
enjoy'd
Hence then;
to Argos
shall the
maid retire,
Far from her
native soil
and weeping
sire."
The
trembling
priest along
the shore
return'd,
And in the
anguish of a
father
mourn'd.
Disconsolate,
not daring
to complain,
Silent he
wander'd by
the sounding
main;
Till, safe
at distance,
to his god
he prays,
The god who
darts around
the world
his rays.
"O
Smintheus!
sprung from
fair
Latona's
line,(47)
Thou
guardian
power of
Cilla the
divine,(48)
Thou source
of light!
whom Tenedos
adores,
And whose
bright
presence
gilds thy
Chrysa's
shores.
If e'er with
wreaths I
hung thy
sacred
fane,(49)
Or fed the
flames with
fat of oxen
slain;
God of the
silver bow!
thy shafts
employ,
Avenge thy
servant, and
the Greeks
destroy."
Thus Chryses
pray'd.--the
favouring
power
attends,
And from
Olympus'
lofty tops
descends.
Bent was his
bow, the
Grecian
hearts to
wound;(50)
Fierce as he
moved, his
silver
shafts
resound.
Breathing
revenge, a
sudden night
he spread,
And gloomy
darkness
roll'd about
his head.
The fleet in
view, he
twang'd his
deadly bow,
And hissing
fly the
feather'd
fates below.
On mules and
dogs the
infection
first
began;(51)
And last,
the vengeful
arrows fix'd
in man.
For nine
long nights,
through all
the dusky
air,
The pyres,
thick-flaming,
shot a
dismal
glare.
But ere the
tenth
revolving
day was run,
Inspired by
Juno,
Thetis'
godlike son
Convened to
council all
the Grecian
train;
For much the
goddess
mourn'd her
heroes
slain.(52)
The assembly
seated,
rising o'er
the rest,
Achilles
thus the
king of men
address'd:
"Why leave
we not the
fatal Trojan
shore,
And measure
back the
seas we
cross'd
before?
The plague
destroying
whom the
sword would
spare,
'Tis time to
save the few
remains of
war.
But let some
prophet, or
some sacred
sage,
Explore the
cause of
great
Apollo's
rage;
Or learn the
wasteful
vengeance to
remove
By mystic
dreams, for
dreams
descend from
Jove.(53)
If broken
vows this
heavy curse
have laid,
Let altars
smoke, and
hecatombs be
paid.
So Heaven,
atoned,
shall dying
Greece
restore,
And Phoebus
dart his
burning
shafts no
more."
He said, and
sat: when
Chalcas thus
replied;
Chalcas the
wise, the
Grecian
priest and
guide,
That sacred
seer, whose
comprehensive
view,
The past,
the present,
and the
future knew:
Uprising
slow, the
venerable
sage
Thus spoke
the prudence
and the
fears of
age:
"Beloved of
Jove,
Achilles!
would'st
thou know
Why angry
Phoebus
bends his
fatal bow?
First give
thy faith,
and plight a
prince's
word
Of sure
protection,
by thy power
and sword:
For I must
speak what
wisdom would
conceal,
And truths,
invidious to
the great,
reveal,
Bold is the
task, when
subjects,
grown too
wise,
Instruct a
monarch
where his
error lies;
For though
we deem the
short-lived
fury past,
'Tis sure
the mighty
will revenge
at last."
To whom
Pelides:--"From
thy inmost
soul
Speak what
thou
know'st, and
speak
without
control.
E'en by that
god I swear
who rules
the day,
To whom thy
hands the
vows of
Greece
convey.
And whose
bless'd
oracles thy
lips
declare;
Long as
Achilles
breathes
this vital
air,
No daring
Greek, of
all the
numerous
band,
Against his
priest shall
lift an
impious
hand;
Not e'en the
chief by
whom our
hosts are
led,
The king of
kings, shall
touch that
sacred
head."
Encouraged
thus, the
blameless
man replies:
"Nor vows
unpaid, nor
slighted
sacrifice,
But he, our
chief,
provoked the
raging pest,
Apollo's
vengeance
for his
injured
priest.
Nor will the
god's
awaken'd
fury cease,
But plagues
shall
spread, and
funeral
fires
increase,
Till the
great king,
without a
ransom paid,
To her own
Chrysa send
the
black-eyed
maid.(54)
Perhaps,
with added
sacrifice
and prayer,
The priest
may pardon,
and the god
may spare."
The prophet
spoke: when
with a
gloomy frown
The monarch
started from
his shining
throne;
Black choler
fill'd his
breast that
boil'd with
ire,
And from his
eye-balls
flash'd the
living fire:
"Augur
accursed!
denouncing
mischief
still,
Prophet of
plagues, for
ever boding
ill!
Still must
that tongue
some
wounding
message
bring,
And still
thy priestly
pride
provoke thy
king?
For this are
Phoebus'
oracles
explored,
To teach the
Greeks to
murmur at
their lord?
For this
with
falsehood is
my honour
stain'd,
Is heaven
offended,
and a priest
profaned;
Because my
prize, my
beauteous
maid, I
hold,
And heavenly
charms
prefer to
proffer'd
gold?
A maid,
unmatch'd in
manners as
in face,
Skill'd in
each art,
and crown'd
with every
grace;
Not half so
dear were
Clytaemnestra's
charms,
When first
her blooming
beauties
bless'd my
arms.
Yet, if the
gods demand
her, let her
sail;
Our cares
are only for
the public
weal:
Let me be
deem'd the
hateful
cause of
all,
And suffer,
rather than
my people
fall.
The prize,
the
beauteous
prize, I
will resign,
So dearly
valued, and
so justly
mine.
But since
for common
good I yield
the fair,
My private
loss let
grateful
Greece
repair;
Nor
unrewarded
let your
prince
complain,
That he
alone has
fought and
bled in
vain."
"Insatiate
king
(Achilles
thus
replies),
Fond of the
power, but
fonder of
the prize!
Would'st
thou the
Greeks their
lawful prey
should
yield,
The due
reward of
many a
well-fought
field?
The spoils
of cities
razed and
warriors
slain,
We share
with
justice, as
with toil we
gain;
But to
resume
whate'er thy
avarice
craves
(That trick
of tyrants)
may be borne
by slaves.
Yet if our
chief for
plunder only
fight,
The spoils
of Ilion
shall thy
loss
requite,
Whene'er, by
Jove's
decree, our
conquering
powers
Shall humble
to the dust
her lofty
towers."
Then thus
the king:
"Shall I my
prize resign
With tame
content, and
thou
possess'd of
thine?
Great as
thou art,
and like a
god in
fight,
Think not to
rob me of a
soldier's
right.
At thy
demand shall
I restore
the maid?
First let
the just
equivalent
be paid;
Such as a
king might
ask; and let
it be
A treasure
worthy her,
and worthy
me.
Or grant me
this, or
with a
monarch's
claim
This hand
shall seize
some other
captive
dame.
The mighty
Ajax shall
his prize
resign;(55)
Ulysses'
spoils, or
even thy
own, be
mine.
The man who
suffers,
loudly may
complain;
And rage he
may, but he
shall rage
in vain.
But this
when time
requires.--It
now remains
We launch a
bark to
plough the
watery
plains,
And waft the
sacrifice to
Chrysa's
shores,
With chosen
pilots, and
with
labouring
oars.
Soon shall
the fair the
sable ship
ascend,
And some
deputed
prince the
charge
attend:
This Creta's
king, or
Ajax shall
fulfil,
Or wise
Ulysses see
perform'd
our will;
Or, if our
royal
pleasure
shall
ordain,
Achilles'
self conduct
her o'er the
main;
Let fierce
Achilles,
dreadful in
his rage,
The god
propitiate,
and the pest
assuage."
At this,
Pelides,
frowning
stern,
replied:
"O tyrant,
arm'd with
insolence
and pride!
Inglorious
slave to
interest,
ever join'd
With fraud,
unworthy of
a royal
mind!
What
generous
Greek,
obedient to
thy word,
Shall form
an ambush,
or shall
lift the
sword?
What cause
have I to
war at thy
decree?
The distant
Trojans
never
injured me;
To Phthia's
realms no
hostile
troops they
led:
Safe in her
vales my
warlike
coursers
fed;
Far hence
removed, the
hoarse-resounding
main,
And walls of
rocks,
secure my
native
reign,
Whose
fruitful
soil
luxuriant
harvests
grace,
Rich in her
fruits, and
in her
martial
race.
Hither we
sail'd, a
voluntary
throng,
To avenge a
private, not
a public
wrong:
What else to
Troy the
assembled
nations
draws,
But thine,
ungrateful,
and thy
brother's
cause?
Is this the
pay our
blood and
toils
deserve;
Disgraced
and injured
by the man
we serve?
And darest
thou threat
to snatch my
prize away,
Due to the
deeds of
many a
dreadful
day?
A prize as
small, O
tyrant!
match'd with
thine,
As thy own
actions if
compared to
mine.
Thine in
each
conquest is
the wealthy
prey,
Though mine
the sweat
and danger
of the day.
Some trivial
present to
my ships I
bear:
Or barren
praises pay
the wounds
of war.
But know,
proud
monarch, I'm
thy slave no
more;
My fleet
shall waft
me to
Thessalia's
shore:
Left by
Achilles on
the Trojan
plain,
What spoils,
what
conquests,
shall
Atrides
gain?"
To this the
king: "Fly,
mighty
warrior!
fly;
Thy aid we
need not,
and thy
threats
defy.
There want
not chiefs
in such a
cause to
fight,
And Jove
himself
shall guard
a monarch's
right.
Of all the
kings (the
god's
distinguish'd
care)
To power
superior
none such
hatred bear:
Strife and
debate thy
restless
soul employ,
And wars and
horrors are
thy savage
joy,
If thou hast
strength,
'twas Heaven
that
strength
bestow'd;
For know,
vain man!
thy valour
is from God.
Haste,
launch thy
vessels, fly
with speed
away;
Rule thy own
realms with
arbitrary
sway;
I heed thee
not, but
prize at
equal rate
Thy
short-lived
friendship,
and thy
groundless
hate.
Go, threat
thy
earth-born
Myrmidons:--but
here(56)
'Tis mine to
threaten,
prince, and
thine to
fear.
Know, if the
god the
beauteous
dame demand,
My bark
shall waft
her to her
native land;
But then
prepare,
imperious
prince!
prepare,
Fierce as
thou art, to
yield thy
captive
fair:
Even in thy
tent I'll
seize the
blooming
prize,
Thy loved
Briseis with
the radiant
eyes.
Hence shalt
thou prove
my might,
and curse
the hour
Thou
stood'st a
rival of
imperial
power;
And hence,
to all our
hosts it
shall be
known,
That kings
are subject
to the gods
alone."
Achilles
heard, with
grief and
rage
oppress'd,
His heart
swell'd
high, and
labour'd in
his breast;
Distracting
thoughts by
turns his
bosom ruled;
Now fired by
wrath, and
now by
reason
cool'd:
That prompts
his hand to
draw the
deadly
sword,
Force
through the
Greeks, and
pierce their
haughty
lord;
This
whispers
soft his
vengeance to
control,
And calm the
rising
tempest of
his soul.
Just as in
anguish of
suspense he
stay'd,
While half
unsheathed
appear'd the
glittering
blade,(57)
Minerva
swift
descended
from above,
Sent by the
sister and
the wife of
Jove
(For both
the princes
claim'd her
equal care);
Behind she
stood, and
by the
golden hair
Achilles
seized; to
him alone
confess'd;
A sable
cloud
conceal'd
her from the
rest.
He sees, and
sudden to
the goddess
cries,
Known by the
flames that
sparkle from
her eyes:
"Descends
Minerva, in
her guardian
care,
A heavenly
witness of
the wrongs I
bear
From Atreus'
son?--Then
let those
eyes that
view
The daring
crime,
behold the
vengeance
too."
"Forbear
(the progeny
of Jove
replies)
To calm thy
fury I
forsake the
skies:
Let great
Achilles, to
the gods
resign'd,
To reason
yield the
empire o'er
his mind.
By awful
Juno this
command is
given;
The king and
you are both
the care of
heaven.
The force of
keen
reproaches
let him
feel;
But sheathe,
obedient,
thy
revenging
steel.
For I
pronounce
(and trust a
heavenly
power)
Thy injured
honour has
its fated
hour,
When the
proud
monarch
shall thy
arms
implores
And bribe
thy
friendship
with a
boundless
store.
Then let
revenge no
longer bear
the sway;
Command thy
passions,
and the gods
obey."
To her
Pelides:--"With
regardful
ear,
'Tis just, O
goddess! I
thy dictates
hear.
Hard as it
is, my
vengeance I
suppress:
Those who
revere the
gods the
gods will
bless."
He said,
observant of
the
blue-eyed
maid;
Then in the
sheath
return'd the
shining
blade.
The goddess
swift to
high Olympus
flies,
And joins
the sacred
senate of
the skies.
Nor yet the
rage his
boiling
breast
forsook,
Which thus
redoubling
on Atrides
broke:
"O monster!
mix'd of
insolence
and fear,
Thou dog in
forehead,
but in heart
a deer!
When wert
thou known
in ambush'd
fights to
dare,
Or nobly
face the
horrid front
of war?
'Tis ours,
the chance
of fighting
fields to
try;
Thine to
look on, and
bid the
valiant die:
So much 'tis
safer
through the
camp to go,
And rob a
subject,
than despoil
a foe.
Scourge of
thy people,
violent and
base!
Sent in
Jove's anger
on a slavish
race;
Who, lost to
sense of
generous
freedom
past,
Are tamed to
wrongs;--or
this had
been thy
last.
Now by this
sacred
sceptre hear
me swear,
Which never
more shall
leaves or
blossoms
bear,
Which
sever'd from
the trunk
(as I from
thee)
On the bare
mountains
left its
parent tree;
This
sceptre,
form'd by
temper'd
steel to
prove
An ensign of
the
delegates of
Jove,
From whom
the power of
laws and
justice
springs
(Tremendous
oath!
inviolate to
kings);
By this I
swear:--when
bleeding
Greece again
Shall call
Achilles,
she shall
call in
vain.
When,
flush'd with
slaughter,
Hector comes
to spread
The purpled
shore with
mountains of
the dead,
Then shall
thou mourn
the affront
thy madness
gave,
Forced to
deplore when
impotent to
save:
Then rage in
bitterness
of soul to
know
This act has
made the
bravest
Greek thy
foe."
He spoke;
and furious
hurl'd
against the
ground
His sceptre
starr'd with
golden studs
around:
Then sternly
silent sat.
With like
disdain
The raging
king
return'd his
frowns
again.
To calm
their
passion with
the words of
age,
Slow from
his seat
arose the
Pylian sage,
Experienced
Nestor, in
persuasion
skill'd;
Words, sweet
as honey,
from his
lips
distill'd:(58)
Two
generations
now had
pass'd away,
Wise by his
rules, and
happy by his
sway;
Two ages
o'er his
native realm
he reign'd,
And now the
example of
the third
remain'd.
All view'd
with awe the
venerable
man;
Who thus
with mild
benevolence
began:--
"What shame,
what woe is
this to
Greece! what
joy
To Troy's
proud
monarch, and
the friends
of Troy!
That adverse
gods commit
to stern
debate
The best,
the bravest,
of the
Grecian
state.
Young as ye
are, this
youthful
heat
restrain,
Nor think
your
Nestor's
years and
wisdom vain.
A godlike
race of
heroes once
I knew,
Such as no
more these
aged eyes
shall view!
Lives there
a chief to
match
Pirithous'
fame,
Dryas the
bold, or
Ceneus'
deathless
name;
Theseus,
endued with
more than
mortal
might,
Or
Polyphemus,
like the
gods in
fight?
With these
of old, to
toils of
battle bred,
In early
youth my
hardy days I
led;
Fired with
the thirst
which
virtuous
envy breeds,
And smit
with love of
honourable
deeds,
Strongest of
men, they
pierced the
mountain
boar,
Ranged the
wild deserts
red with
monsters'
gore,
And from
their hills
the shaggy
Centaurs
tore:
Yet these
with soft
persuasive
arts I
sway'd;
When Nestor
spoke, they
listen'd and
obey'd.
If in my
youth, even
these
esteem'd me
wise;
Do you,
young
warriors,
hear my age
advise.
Atrides,
seize not on
the
beauteous
slave;
That prize
the Greeks
by common
suffrage
gave:
Nor thou,
Achilles,
treat our
prince with
pride;
Let kings be
just, and
sovereign
power
preside.
Thee, the
first
honours of
the war
adorn,
Like gods in
strength,
and of a
goddess
born;
Him, awful
majesty
exalts above
The powers
of earth,
and sceptred
sons of
Jove.
Let both
unite with
well-consenting
mind,
So shall
authority
with
strength be
join'd.
Leave me, O
king! to
calm
Achilles'
rage;
Rule thou
thyself, as
more
advanced in
age.
Forbid it,
gods!
Achilles
should be
lost,
The pride of
Greece, and
bulwark of
our host."
This said,
he ceased.
The king of
men replies:
"Thy years
are awful,
and thy
words are
wise.
But that
imperious,
that
unconquer'd
soul,
No laws can
limit, no
respect
control.
Before his
pride must
his
superiors
fall;
His word the
law, and he
the lord of
all?
Him must our
hosts, our
chiefs,
ourself
obey?
What king
can bear a
rival in his
sway?
Grant that
the gods his
matchless
force have
given;
Has foul
reproach a
privilege
from
heaven?"
Here on the
monarch's
speech
Achilles
broke,
And furious,
thus, and
interrupting
spoke:
"Tyrant, I
well
deserved thy
galling
chain,
To live thy
slave, and
still to
serve in
vain,
Should I
submit to
each unjust
decree:--
Command thy
vassals, but
command not
me.
Seize on
Briseis,
whom the
Grecians
doom'd
My prize of
war, yet
tamely see
resumed;
And seize
secure; no
more
Achilles
draws
His
conquering
sword in any
woman's
cause.
The gods
command me
to forgive
the past:
But let this
first
invasion be
the last:
For know,
thy blood,
when next
thou darest
invade,
Shall stream
in vengeance
on my
reeking
blade."
At this they
ceased: the
stern debate
expired:
The chiefs
in sullen
majesty
retired.
Achilles
with
Patroclus
took his way
Where near
his tents
his hollow
vessels lay.
Meantime
Atrides
launch'd
with
numerous
oars
A
well-rigg'd
ship for
Chrysa's
sacred
shores:
High on the
deck was
fair
Chryseis
placed,
And sage
Ulysses with
the conduct
graced:
Safe in her
sides the
hecatomb
they stow'd,
Then swiftly
sailing, cut
the liquid
road.
The host to
expiate next
the king
prepares,
With pure
lustrations,
and with
solemn
prayers.
Wash'd by
the briny
wave, the
pious train(59)
Are
cleansed;
and cast the
ablutions in
the main.
Along the
shore whole
hecatombs
were laid,
And bulls
and goats to
Phoebus'
altars paid;
The sable
fumes in
curling
spires
arise,
And waft
their
grateful
odours to
the skies.
The army
thus in
sacred rites
engaged,
Atrides
still with
deep
resentment
raged.
To wait his
will two
sacred
heralds
stood,
Talthybius
and
Eurybates
the good.
"Haste to
the fierce
Achilles'
tent (he
cries),
Thence bear
Briseis as
our royal
prize:
Submit he
must; or if
they will
not part,
Ourself in
arms shall
tear her
from his
heart."
The
unwilling
heralds act
their lord's
commands;
Pensive they
walk along
the barren
sands:
Arrived, the
hero in his
tent they
find,
With gloomy
aspect on
his arm
reclined.
At awful
distance
long they
silent
stand,
Loth to
advance, and
speak their
hard
command;
Decent
confusion!
This the
godlike man
Perceived,
and thus
with accent
mild began:
"With leave
and honour
enter our
abodes,
Ye sacred
ministers of
men and
gods!(60)
I know your
message; by
constraint
you came;
Not you, but
your
imperious
lord I
blame.
Patroclus,
haste, the
fair Briseis
bring;
Conduct my
captive to
the haughty
king.
But witness,
heralds, and
proclaim my
vow,
Witness to
gods above,
and men
below!
But first,
and loudest,
to your
prince
declare
(That
lawless
tyrant whose
commands you
bear),
Unmoved as
death
Achilles
shall
remain,
Though
prostrate
Greece shall
bleed at
every vein:
The raging
chief in
frantic
passion
lost,
Blind to
himself, and
useless to
his host,
Unskill'd to
judge the
future by
the past,
In blood and
slaughter
shall repent
at last."
Patroclus
now the
unwilling
beauty
brought;
She, in soft
sorrows, and
in pensive
thought,
Pass'd
silent, as
the heralds
held her
hand,
And of
look'd back,
slow-moving
o'er the
strand.
Not so his
loss the
fierce
Achilles
bore;
But sad,
retiring to
the sounding
shore,
O'er the
wild margin
of the deep
he hung,
That kindred
deep from
whence his
mother
sprung:(61)
There bathed
in tears of
anger and
disdain,
Thus loud
lamented to
the stormy
main:
"O parent
goddess!
since in
early bloom
Thy son must
fall, by too
severe a
doom;
Sure to so
short a race
of glory
born,
Great Jove
in justice
should this
span adorn:
Honour and
fame at
least the
thunderer
owed;
And ill he
pays the
promise of a
god,
If yon proud
monarch thus
thy son
defies,
Obscures my
glories, and
resumes my
prize."
Far from the
deep
recesses of
the main,
Where aged
Ocean holds
his watery
reign,
The
goddess-mother
heard. The
waves
divide;
And like a
mist she
rose above
the tide;
Beheld him
mourning on
the naked
shores,
And thus the
sorrows of
his soul
explores.
"Why grieves
my son? Thy
anguish let
me share;
Reveal the
cause, and
trust a
parent's
care."
He deeply
sighing
said: "To
tell my woe
Is but to
mention what
too well you
know.
From Thebe,
sacred to
Apollo's
name(62)
(Aetion's
realm), our
conquering
army came,
With
treasure
loaded and
triumphant
spoils,
Whose just
division
crown'd the
soldier's
toils;
But bright
Chryseis,
heavenly
prize! was
led,
By vote
selected, to
the
general's
bed.
The priest
of Phoebus
sought by
gifts to
gain
His
beauteous
daughter
from the
victor's
chain;
The fleet he
reach'd,
and, lowly
bending
down,
Held forth
the sceptre
and the
laurel
crown,
Intreating
all; but
chief
implored for
grace
The
brother-kings
of Atreus'
royal race:
The generous
Greeks their
joint
consent
declare,
The priest
to
reverence,
and release
the fair;
Not so
Atrides: he,
with wonted
pride,
The sire
insulted,
and his
gifts
denied:
The insulted
sire (his
god's
peculiar
care)
To Phoebus
pray'd, and
Phoebus
heard the
prayer:
A dreadful
plague
ensues: the
avenging
darts
Incessant
fly, and
pierce the
Grecian
hearts.
A prophet
then,
inspired by
heaven,
arose,
And points
the crime,
and thence
derives the
woes:
Myself the
first the
assembled
chiefs
incline
To avert the
vengeance of
the power
divine;
Then rising
in his
wrath, the
monarch
storm'd;
Incensed he
threaten'd,
and his
threats
perform'd:
The fair
Chryseis to
her sire was
sent,
With offer'd
gifts to
make the god
relent;
But now he
seized
Briseis'
heavenly
charms,
And of my
valour's
prize
defrauds my
arms,
Defrauds the
votes of all
the Grecian
train;(63)
And service,
faith, and
justice,
plead in
vain.
But,
goddess!
thou thy
suppliant
son attend.
To high
Olympus'
shining
court
ascend,
Urge all the
ties to
former
service
owed,
And sue for
vengeance to
the
thundering
god.
Oft hast
thou
triumph'd in
the glorious
boast,
That thou
stood'st
forth of all
the ethereal
host,
When bold
rebellion
shook the
realms
above,
The
undaunted
guard of
cloud-compelling
Jove:
When the
bright
partner of
his awful
reign,
The warlike
maid, and
monarch of
the main,
The
traitor-gods,
by mad
ambition
driven,
Durst threat
with chains
the
omnipotence
of Heaven.
Then, call'd
by thee, the
monster
Titan came
(Whom gods
Briareus,
men Ęgeon
name),
Through
wondering
skies
enormous
stalk'd
along;
Not he that
shakes the
solid earth
so strong:
With
giant-pride
at Jove's
high throne
he stands,
And
brandish'd
round him
all his
hundred
hands:
The
affrighted
gods
confess'd
their awful
lord,
They dropp'd
the fetters,
trembled,
and adored.(64)
This,
goddess,
this to his
remembrance
call,
Embrace his
knees, at
his tribunal
fall;
Conjure him
far to drive
the Grecian
train,
To hurl them
headlong to
their fleet
and main,
To heap the
shores with
copious
death, and
bring
The Greeks
to know the
curse of
such a king.
Let
Agamemnon
lift his
haughty head
O'er all his
wide
dominion of
the dead,
And mourn in
blood that
e'er he
durst
disgrace
The boldest
warrior of
the Grecian
race."
"Unhappy
son! (fair
Thetis thus
replies,
While tears
celestial
trickle from
her eyes)
Why have I
borne thee
with a
mother's
throes,
To Fates
averse, and
nursed for
future
woes?(65)
So short a
space the
light of
heaven to
view!
So short a
space! and
fill'd with
sorrow too!
O might a
parent's
careful wish
prevail,
Far, far
from Ilion
should thy
vessels
sail,
And thou,
from camps
remote, the
danger shun
Which now,
alas! too
nearly
threats my
son.
Yet (what I
can) to move
thy suit
I'll go
To great
Olympus
crown'd with
fleecy snow.
Meantime,
secure
within thy
ships, from
far
Behold the
field, not
mingle in
the war.
The sire of
gods and all
the ethereal
train,
On the warm
limits of
the farthest
main,
Now mix with
mortals, nor
disdain to
grace
The feasts
of
Ęthiopia's
blameless
race,(66)
Twelve days
the powers
indulge the
genial rite,
Returning
with the
twelfth
revolving
light.
Then will I
mount the
brazen dome,
and move
The high
tribunal of
immortal
Jove."
The goddess
spoke: the
rolling
waves
unclose;
Then down
the steep
she plunged
from whence
she rose,
And left him
sorrowing on
the lonely
coast,
In wild
resentment
for the fair
he lost.
In Chrysa's
port now
sage Ulysses
rode;
Beneath the
deck the
destined
victims
stow'd:
The sails
they furl'd,
they lash
the mast
aside,
And dropp'd
their
anchors, and
the pinnace
tied.
Next on the
shore their
hecatomb
they land;
Chryseis
last
descending
on the
strand.
Her, thus
returning
from the
furrow'd
main,
Ulysses led
to Phoebus'
sacred fane;
Where at his
solemn
altar, as
the maid
He gave to
Chryses,
thus the
hero said:
"Hail,
reverend
priest! to
Phoebus'
awful dome
A suppliant
I from great
Atrides
come:
Unransom'd,
here receive
the spotless
fair;
Accept the
hecatomb the
Greeks
prepare;
And may thy
god who
scatters
darts
around,
Atoned by
sacrifice,
desist to
wound."(67)
At this, the
sire
embraced the
maid again,
So sadly
lost, so
lately
sought in
vain.
Then near
the altar of
the darting
king,
Disposed in
rank their
hecatomb
they bring;
With water
purify their
hands, and
take
The sacred
offering of
the salted
cake;
While thus
with arms
devoutly
raised in
air,
And solemn
voice, the
priest
directs his
prayer:
"God of the
silver bow,
thy ear
incline,
Whose power
incircles
Cilla the
divine;
Whose sacred
eye thy
Tenedos
surveys,
And gilds
fair Chrysa
with
distinguish'd
rays!
If, fired to
vengeance at
thy priest's
request,
Thy direful
darts
inflict the
raging pest:
Once more
attend!
avert the
wasteful
woe,
And smile
propitious,
and unbend
thy bow."
So Chryses
pray'd.
Apollo heard
his prayer:
And now the
Greeks their
hecatomb
prepare;
Between
their horns
the salted
barley
threw,
And, with
their heads
to heaven,
the victims
slew:(68)
The limbs
they sever
from the
inclosing
hide;
The thighs,
selected to
the gods,
divide:
On these, in
double cauls
involved
with art,
The choicest
morsels lay
from every
part.
The priest
himself
before his
altar
stands,
And burns
the offering
with his
holy hands.
Pours the
black wine,
and sees the
flames
aspire;
The youth
with
instruments
surround the
fire:
The thighs
thus
sacrificed,
and entrails
dress'd,
The
assistants
part,
transfix,
and roast
the rest:
Then spread
the tables,
the repast
prepare;
Each takes
his seat,
and each
receives his
share.
When now the
rage of
hunger was
repress'd,
With pure
libations
they
conclude the
feast;
The youths
with wine
the copious
goblets
crown'd,
And,
pleased,
dispense the
flowing
bowls
around;(69)
With hymns
divine the
joyous
banquet
ends,
The paeans
lengthen'd
till the sun
descends:
The Greeks,
restored,
the grateful
notes
prolong;
Apollo
listens, and
approves the
song.
'Twas night;
the chiefs
beside their
vessel lie,
Till rosy
morn had
purpled o'er
the sky:
Then launch,
and hoist
the mast:
indulgent
gales,
Supplied by
Phoebus,
fill the
swelling
sails;
The
milk-white
canvas
bellying as
they blow,
The parted
ocean foams
and roars
below:
Above the
bounding
billows
swift they
flew,
Till now the
Grecian camp
appear'd in
view.
Far on the
beach they
haul their
bark to
land,
(The crooked
keel divides
the yellow
sand,)
Then part,
where
stretch'd
along the
winding bay,
The ships
and tents in
mingled
prospect
lay.
But raging
still,
amidst his
navy sat
The stern
Achilles,
stedfast in
his hate;
Nor mix'd in
combat, nor
in council
join'd;
But wasting
cares lay
heavy on his
mind:
In his black
thoughts
revenge and
slaughter
roll,
And scenes
of blood
rise
dreadful in
his soul.
Twelve days
were past,
and now the
dawning
light
The gods had
summon'd to
the Olympian
height:
Jove, first
ascending
from the
watery
bowers,
Leads the
long order
of ethereal
powers.
When, like
the
morning-mist
in early
day,
Rose from
the flood
the daughter
of the sea:
And to the
seats divine
her flight
address'd.
There, far
apart, and
high above
the rest,
The
thunderer
sat; where
old Olympus
shrouds
His hundred
heads in
heaven, and
props the
clouds.
Suppliant
the goddess
stood: one
hand she
placed
Beneath his
beard, and
one his
knees
embraced.
"If e'er, O
father of
the gods!
(she said)
My words
could please
thee, or my
actions aid,
Some marks
of honour on
my son
bestow,
And pay in
glory what
in life you
owe.
Fame is at
least by
heavenly
promise due
To life so
short, and
now
dishonour'd
too.
Avenge this
wrong, O
ever just
and wise!
Let Greece
be humbled,
and the
Trojans
rise;
Till the
proud king
and all the
Achaian race
Shall heap
with honours
him they now
disgrace."
Thus Thetis
spoke; but
Jove in
silence held
The sacred
counsels of
his breast
conceal'd.
Not so
repulsed,
the goddess
closer
press'd,
Still
grasp'd his
knees, and
urged the
dear
request.
"O sire of
gods and
men! thy
suppliant
hear;
Refuse, or
grant; for
what has
Jove to
fear?
Or oh!
declare, of
all the
powers
above,
Is wretched
Thetis least
the care of
Jove?"
She said;
and,
sighing,
thus the god
replies,
Who rolls
the thunder
o'er the
vaulted
skies:
"What hast
thou ask'd?
ah, why
should Jove
engage
In foreign
contests and
domestic
rage,
The gods'
complaints,
and Juno's
fierce
alarms,
While I, too
partial, aid
the Trojan
arms?
Go, lest the
haughty
partner of
my sway
With jealous
eyes thy
close access
survey;
But part in
peace,
secure thy
prayer is
sped:
Witness the
sacred
honours of
our head,
The nod that
ratifies the
will divine,
The
faithful,
fix'd,
irrevocable
sign;
This seals
thy suit,
and this
fulfils thy
vows--"
He spoke,
and awful
bends his
sable
brows,(70)
Shakes his
ambrosial
curls, and
gives the
nod,
The stamp of
fate and
sanction of
the god:
High heaven
with
trembling
the dread
signal took,
And all
Olympus to
the centre
shook.(71)
Swift to the
seas
profound the
goddess
flies,
Jove to his
starry
mansions in
the skies.
The shining
synod of the
immortals
wait
The coming
god, and
from their
thrones of
state
Arising
silent,
wrapp'd in
holy fear,
Before the
majesty of
heaven
appear.
Trembling
they stand,
while Jove
assumes the
throne,
All, but the
god's
imperious
queen alone:
Late had she
view'd the
silver-footed
dame,
And all her
passions
kindled into
flame.
"Say, artful
manager of
heaven (she
cries),
Who now
partakes the
secrets of
the skies?
Thy Juno
knows not
the decrees
of fate,
In vain the
partner of
imperial
state.
What
favourite
goddess then
those cares
divides,
Which Jove
in prudence
from his
consort
hides?"
To this the
thunderer:
"Seek not
thou to find
The sacred
counsels of
almighty
mind:
Involved in
darkness
likes the
great
decree,
Nor can the
depths of
fate be
pierced by
thee.
What fits
thy
knowledge,
thou the
first shalt
know;
The first of
gods above,
and men
below;
But thou,
nor they,
shall search
the thoughts
that roll
Deep in the
close
recesses of
my soul."
Full on the
sire the
goddess of
the skies
Roll'd the
large orbs
of her
majestic
eyes,
And thus
return'd:--"Austere
Saturnius,
say,
From whence
this wrath,
or who
controls thy
sway?
Thy
boundless
will, for
me, remains
in force,
And all thy
counsels
take the
destined
course.
But 'tis for
Greece I
fear: for
late was
seen,
In close
consult, the
silver-footed
queen.
Jove to his
Thetis
nothing
could deny,
Nor was the
signal vain
that shook
the sky.
What fatal
favour has
the goddess
won,
To grace her
fierce,
inexorable
son?
Perhaps in
Grecian
blood to
drench the
plain,
And glut his
vengeance
with my
people
slain."
Then thus
the god: "O
restless
fate of
pride,
That strives
to learn
what heaven
resolves to
hide;
Vain is the
search,
presumptuous
and
abhorr'd,
Anxious to
thee, and
odious to
thy lord.
Let this
suffice: the
immutable
decree
No force can
shake: what
is, that
ought to be.
Goddess,
submit; nor
dare our
will
withstand,
But dread
the power of
this
avenging
hand:
The united
strength of
all the gods
above
In vain
resists the
omnipotence
of Jove."
The
thunderer
spoke, nor
durst the
queen reply;
A reverent
horror
silenced all
the sky.
The feast
disturb'd,
with sorrow
Vulcan saw
His mother
menaced, and
the gods in
awe;
Peace at his
heart, and
pleasure his
design,
Thus
interposed
the
architect
divine:
"The
wretched
quarrels of
the mortal
state
Are far
unworthy,
gods! of
your debate:
Let men
their days
in senseless
strife
employ,
We, in
eternal
peace and
constant
joy.
Thou,
goddess-mother,
with our
sire comply,
Nor break
the sacred
union of the
sky:
Lest, roused
to rage, he
shake the
bless'd
abodes,
Launch the
red
lightning,
and dethrone
the gods.
If you
submit, the
thunderer
stands
appeased;
The gracious
power is
willing to
be pleased."
Thus Vulcan
spoke: and
rising with
a bound,
The double
bowl with
sparkling
nectar
crown'd,(72)
Which held
to Juno in a
cheerful
way,
"Goddess (he
cried), be
patient and
obey.
Dear as you
are, if Jove
his arm
extend,
I can but
grieve,
unable to
defend
What god so
daring in
your aid to
move,
Or lift his
hand against
the force of
Jove?
Once in your
cause I felt
his
matchless
might,
Hurl'd
headlong
down from
the ethereal
height;(73)
Toss'd all
the day in
rapid
circles
round,
Nor till the
sun
descended
touch'd the
ground.
Breathless I
fell, in
giddy motion
lost;
The
Sinthians
raised me on
the Lemnian
coast;(74)
He said, and
to her hands
the goblet
heaved,
Which, with
a smile, the
white-arm'd
queen
received
Then, to the
rest he
fill'd; and
in his turn,
Each to his
lips applied
the nectar'd
urn,
Vulcan with
awkward
grace his
office
plies,
And
unextinguish'd
laughter
shakes the
skies.
Thus the
blest gods
the genial
day prolong,
In feasts
ambrosial,
and
celestial
song.(75)
Apollo tuned
the lyre;
the Muses
round
With voice
alternate
aid the
silver
sound.
Meantime the
radiant sun
to mortal
sight
Descending
swift,
roll'd down
the rapid
light:
Then to
their starry
domes the
gods depart,
The shining
monuments of
Vulcan's
art:
Jove on his
couch
reclined his
awful head,
And Juno
slumber'd on
the golden
bed. |
|
|
|
|
| |
Get a Free CD containing all your Literary Favorites.
Get your literary
favorites sent to you on a Free CD. Read your favorite
literary works in leisure whenever you want. Share them with
friends and family or add them to your own personal library
of great works. Collections on CD are great for anyone with
a love of the classics. Collections on CD are also great for
children and students to use for reference studies with
school work or college. 
|
If you enjoy Public Domain Books Online...
Please take a moment to
drop us a line to tell us all about it. We are happy to hear
from people who enjoy what we have to offer. We are a work
in progress always adding more great literary works to share
with you, so please check back often.

|
Share us with your friends by linking to us.
To link to us simply copy
and paste the banner code you see in the box below.
It will look like
this...

|
<a href="http://publicdomainbooksonline.com/index.html"
target="_blank">
<img border="0" src="http://publicdomainbooksonline.com/images/pdbo-small.png"
align="middle" alt="Read
from thousands of great
literary classics
online...Free"></a> |
|
If you find a
bug on any of
our pages please
tell us about it
here.
|
|
|
|
|