ARGUMENT - THE SIXTH
BATTLE, THE ACTS AND
DEATH OF PATROCLUS
Patroclus (in pursuance
of the request of Nestor
in the eleventh book)
entreats Achilles to
suffer him to go to the
assistance of the Greeks
with
Achilles' troops and
armour. He agrees to it,
but at the same time
charges
him to content himself
with rescuing the fleet,
without further pursuit
of
the enemy. The armour,
horses, soldiers, and
officers are described.
Achilles offers a
libation for the success
of his friend, after
which
Patroclus leads the
Myrmidons to battle. The
Trojans, at the sight of
Patroclus in Achilles'
armour, taking him for
that hero, are cast into
the
uttermost consternation;
he beats them off from
the vessels, Hector
himself flies, Sarpedon
is killed, though
Jupiter was averse to
his fate.
Several other
particulars of the
battle are described; in
the heat of
which, Patroclus,
neglecting the orders of
Achilles, pursues the
foe to
the walls of Troy, where
Apollo repulses and
disarms him, Euphorbus
wounds
him, and Hector kills
him, which concludes the
book.
So warr'd
both armies
on the
ensanguined
shore,
While the
black
vessels
smoked with
human gore.
Meantime
Patroclus to
Achilles
flies;
The
streaming
tears fall
copious from
his eyes
Not faster,
trickling to
the plains
below,
From the
tall rock
the sable
waters flow.
Divine
Pelides,
with
compassion
moved.
Thus spoke,
indulgent,
to his best
beloved:(243)
"Patroclus,
say, what
grief thy
bosom bears,
That flows
so fast in
these
unmanly
tears?
No girl, no
infant whom
the mother
keeps
From her
loved
breast, with
fonder
passion
weeps;
Not more the
mother's
soul, that
infant
warms,
Clung to her
knees, and
reaching at
her arms,
Than thou
hast mine!
Oh tell me,
to what end
Thy melting
sorrows thus
pursue thy
friend?
"Griev'st
thou for me,
or for, my
martial
band?
Or come sad
tidings from
our native
land?
Our fathers
live (our
first, most
tender
care),
Thy good
Menoetius
breathes the
vital air,
And hoary
Peleus yet
extends his
days;
Pleased in
their age to
hear their
children's
praise.
Or may some
meaner cause
thy pity
claim?
Perhaps yon
relics of
the Grecian
name,
Doom'd in
their ships
to sink by
fire and
sword,
And pay the
forfeit of
their
haughty
lord?
Whate'er the
cause,
reveal thy
secret care,
And speak
those
sorrows
which a
friend would
share."
A sigh that
instant from
his bosom
broke,
Another
follow'd,
and
Patroclus
spoke:
"Let Greece
at length
with pity
touch thy
breast,
Thyself a
Greek; and,
once, of
Greeks the
best!
Lo! every
chief that
might her
fate
prevent,
Lies pierced
with wounds,
and bleeding
in his tent:
Eurypylus,
Tydides,
Atreus' son,
And wise
Ulysses, at
the navy
groan,
More for
their
country's
wounds than
for their
own.
Their pain
soft arts of
pharmacy can
ease,
Thy breast
alone no
lenitives
appease.
May never
rage like
thine my
soul
enslave,
O great in
vain!
unprofitably
brave!
Thy country
slighted in
her last
distress,
What friend,
what man,
from thee
shall hope
redress?
No--men
unborn, and
ages yet
behind,
Shall curse
that fierce,
that
unforgiving
mind.
"O man
unpitying!
if of man
thy race;
But sure
thou
spring'st
not from a
soft
embrace,
Nor ever
amorous hero
caused thy
birth,
Nor ever
tender
goddess
brought thee
forth:
Some rugged
rock's hard
entrails
gave thee
form,
And raging
seas
produced
thee in a
storm,
A soul well
suiting that
tempestuous
kind,
So rough thy
manners, so
untamed thy
mind.
"If some
dire oracle
thy breast
alarm,
If aught
from Jove,
or Thetis,
stop thy
arm,
Some beam of
comfort yet
on Greece
may shine,
If I but
lead the
Myrmidonian
line:
Clad in thy
dreadful
arms if I
appear,
Proud Troy
shall
tremble, and
desert the
war;
Without thy
person
Greece shall
win the day,
And thy mere
image chase
her foes
away.
Press'd by
fresh
forces, her
o'erlabour'd
train
Shall quit
the ships,
and Greece
respire
again."
Thus, blind
to fate!
with
supplicating
breath,
Thou begg'st
his arms,
and in his
arms thy
death.
Unfortunately
good! a
boding sigh
Thy friend
return'd;
and with it,
this reply:
"Patroclus!
thy Achilles
knows no
fears;
Nor words
from Jove
nor oracles
he hears;
Nor aught a
mother's
caution can
suggest;
The tyrant's
pride lies
rooted in my
breast.
My wrongs,
my wrongs,
my constant
thought
engage,
Those, my
sole
oracles,
inspire my
rage:
I made him
tyrant: gave
him power to
wrong
Even my: I
felt it; and
shall feel
it long.
The maid, my
black-eyed
maid, he
forced away,
Due to the
toils of
many a
well-fought
day;
Due to my
conquest of
her father's
reign;
Due to the
votes of all
the Grecian
train.
From me he
forced her;
me, the bold
and brave,
Disgraced,
dishonour'd,
like the
meanest
slave.
But bear we
this--the
wrongs I
grieve are
past;
'Tis time
our fury
should
relent at
last:
I fix'd its
date; the
day I wish'd
appears:
How Hector
to my ships
his battle
bears,
The flames
my eyes, the
shouts
invade my
ears.
Go then,
Patroclus!
court fair
honour's
charms
In Troy's
famed
fields, and
in Achilles'
arms:
Lead forth
my martial
Myrmidons to
fight,
Go save the
fleets, and
conquer in
my right.
See the thin
relics of
their
baffled band
At the last
edge of yon
deserted
land!
Behold all
Ilion on
their ships
descends;
How the
cloud
blackens,
how the
storm
impends!
It was not
thus, when,
at my sight
amazed,
Troy saw and
trembled, as
this helmet
blazed:
Had not the
injurious
king our
friendship
lost,
Yon ample
trench had
buried half
her host.
No camps, no
bulwarks now
the Trojans
fear,
Those are
not
dreadful, no
Achilles
there;
No longer
flames the
lance of
Tydeus' son;
No more your
general
calls his
heroes on:
Hector,
alone, I
hear; his
dreadful
breath
Commands
your
slaughter,
or proclaims
your death.
Yet now,
Patroclus,
issue to the
plain:
Now save the
ships, the
rising fires
restrain,
And give the
Greeks to
visit Greece
again.
But heed my
words, and
mark a
friend's
command,
Who trusts
his fame and
honours in
thy hand,
And from thy
deeds
expects the
Achaian host
Shall render
back the
beauteous
maid he
lost:
Rage
uncontroll'd
through all
the hostile
crew,
But touch
not Hector,
Hector is my
due.
Though Jove
in thunder
should
command the
war,
Be just,
consult my
glory, and
forbear.
The fleet
once saved,
desist from
further
chase,
Nor lead to
Ilion's
walls the
Grecian
race;
Some adverse
god thy
rashness may
destroy;
Some god,
like
Phoebus,
ever kind to
Troy.
Let Greece,
redeem'd
from this
destructive
strait,
Do her own
work; and
leave the
rest to
fate.
O! would to
all the
immortal
powers
above,
Apollo,
Pallas, and
almighty
Jove!
That not one
Trojan might
be left
alive,
And not a
Greek of all
the race
survive:
Might only
we the vast
destruction
shun,
And only we
destroy the
accursed
town!"
Such
conference
held the
chiefs;
while on the
strand
Great Jove
with
conquest
crown'd the
Trojan band.
Ajax no more
the sounding
storm
sustain'd,
So thick the
darts an
iron tempest
rain'd:
On his tired
arm the
weighty
buckler
hung;
His hollow
helm with
falling
javelins
rung;
His breath,
in quick
short
pantings,
comes and
goes;
And painful
sweat from
all his
members
flows.
Spent and
o'erpower'd,
he barely
breathes at
most;
Yet scarce
an army
stirs him
from his
post;
Dangers on
dangers all
around him
glow,
And toil to
toil, and
woe succeeds
to woe.
Say, Muses,
throned
above the
starry
frame,
How first
the navy
blazed with
Trojan
flame?
Stern Hector
waved his
sword, and
standing
near,
Where
furious Ajax
plied his
ashen spear,
Full on the
lance a
stroke so
justly sped,
That the
broad
falchion
lopp'd its
brazen head;
His
pointless
spear the
warrior
shakes in
vain;
The brazen
head falls
sounding on
the plain.
Great Ajax
saw, and
own'd the
hand divine;
Confessing
Jove, and
trembling at
the sign,
Warn'd he
retreats.
Then swift
from all
sides pour
The hissing
brands;
thick
streams the
fiery
shower;
O'er the
high stern
the curling
volumes
rise,
And sheets
of rolling
smoke
involve the
skies.
Divine
Achilles
view'd the
rising
flames,
And smote
his thigh,
and thus
aloud
exclaims:
"Arm, arm,
Patroclus!
Lo, the
blaze
aspires!
The glowing
ocean
reddens with
the fires.
Arm, ere our
vessels
catch the
spreading
flame;
Arm, ere the
Grecians be
no more a
name;
I haste to
bring the
troops."--The
hero said;
The friend
with ardour
and with joy
obey'd.
He cased his
limbs in
brass; and
first around
His manly
legs, with
silver
buckles
bound
The clasping
greaves;
then to his
breast
applies
The flaming
cuirass of a
thousand
dyes;
Emblazed
with studs
of gold his
falchion
shone
In the rich
belt, as in
a starry
zone:
Achilles'
shield his
ample
shoulders
spread,
Achilles'
helmet
nodded o'er
his head:
Adorn'd in
all his
terrible
array,
He flash'd
around
intolerable
day.
Alone
untouch'd,
Pelides'
javelin
stands,
Not to be
poised but
by Pelides'
hands:
From
Pelion's
shady brow
the plant
entire
Old Chiron
rent, and
shaped it
for his
sire;
Whose son's
great arm
alone the
weapon
wields,
The death of
heroes, and
the dread of
fields.
The brave
Automedon
(an honour'd
name,
The second
to his lord
in love and
fame,
In peace his
friend, and
partner of
the war)
The winged
coursers
harness'd to
the car;
Xanthus and
Balius, of
immortal
breed,
Sprung from
the wind,
and like the
wind in
speed.
Whom the
wing'd
harpy, swift
Podarge,
bore,
By Zephyr
pregnant on
the breezy
shore:
Swift
Pedasus was
added to
their side,
(Once great
Aetion's,
now
Achilles'
pride)
Who, like in
strength, in
swiftness,
and in
grace,
A mortal
courser
match'd the
immortal
race.
Achilles
speeds from
tent to
tent, and
warms
His hardy
Myrmidons to
blood and
arms.
All
breathing
death,
around the
chief they
stand,
A grim,
terrific,
formidable
band:
Grim as
voracious
wolves, that
seek the
springs(244)
When
scalding
thirst their
burning
bowels
wrings;
When some
tall stag,
fresh-slaughtered
in the wood,
Has drench'd
their wide
insatiate
throats with
blood,
To the black
fount they
rush, a
hideous
throng,
With paunch
distended,
and with
lolling
tongue,
Fire fills
their eye,
their black
jaws belch
the gore,
And gorged
with
slaughter
still they
thirst for
more.
Like
furious,
rush'd the
Myrmidonian
crew,
Such their
dread
strength,
and such
their
deathful
view.
High in the
midst the
great
Achilles
stands,
Directs
their order,
and the war
commands.
He, loved of
Jove, had
launch'd for
Ilion's
shores
Full fifty
vessels,
mann'd with
fifty oars:
Five chosen
leaders the
fierce bands
obey,
Himself
supreme in
valour, as
in sway.
First
march'd
Menestheus,
of celestial
birth,
Derived from
thee, whose
waters wash
the earth,
Divine
Sperchius!
Jove-descended
flood!
A mortal
mother
mixing with
a god.
Such was
Menestheus,
but
miscall'd by
fame
The son of
Borus, that
espoused the
dame.
Eudorus
next; whom
Polymele the
gay,
Famed in the
graceful
dance,
produced
to-day.
Her, sly
Cellenius
loved: on
her would
gaze,
As with
swift step
she form'd
the running
maze:
To her high
chamber from
Diana's
quire,
The god
pursued her,
urged, and
crown'd his
fire.
The son
confess'd
his father's
heavenly
race,
And heir'd
his mother's
swiftness in
the chase.
Strong
Echecleus,
bless'd in
all those
charms
That pleased
a god,
succeeded to
her arms;
Not
conscious of
those loves,
long hid
from fame,
With gifts
of price he
sought and
won the
dame;
Her secret
offspring to
her sire she
bare;
Her sire
caress'd him
with a
parent's
care.
Pisander
follow'd;
matchless in
his art
To wing the
spear, or
aim the
distant
dart;
No hand so
sure of all
the Emathian
line,
Or if a
surer, great
Patroclus!
thine.
The fourth
by Phoenix'
grave
command was
graced,
Laerces'
valiant
offspring
led the
last.
Soon as
Achilles
with
superior
care
Had call'd
the chiefs,
and order'd
all the war,
This stern
remembrance
to his
troops he
gave:
"Ye
far-famed
Myrmidons,
ye fierce
and brave!
Think with
what threats
you dared
the Trojan
throng,
Think what
reproach
these ears
endured so
long;
'Stern son
of Peleus,
(thus ye
used to say,
While
restless,
raging, in
your ships
you lay)
Oh nursed
with gall,
unknowing
how to
yield;
Whose rage
defrauds us
of so famed
a field:
If that dire
fury must
for ever
burn,
What make we
here?
Return, ye
chiefs,
return!'
Such were
your
words--Now,
warriors!
grieve no
more,
Lo there the
Trojans;
bathe your
swords in
gore!
This day
shall give
you all your
soul
demands,
Glut all
your hearts,
and weary
all your
hands!"
Thus while
he roused
the fire in
every
breast,
Close and
more close
the
listening
cohorts
press'd;
Ranks wedged
in ranks; of
arms a
steely ring
Still grows,
and spreads,
and thickens
round the
king.
As when a
circling
wall the
builder
forms,
Of strength
defensive
against wind
and storms,
Compacted
stones the
thickening
work
compose,
And round
him wide the
rising
structure
grows:
So helm to
helm, and
crest to
crest they
throng,
Shield urged
on shield,
and man
drove man
along;
Thick,
undistinguish'd
plumes,
together
join'd,
Float in one
sea, and
wave before
the wind.
Far o'er the
rest in
glittering
pomp appear,
There bold
Automedon,
Patroclus
here;
Brothers in
arms, with
equal fury
fired;
Two friends,
two bodies
with one
soul
inspired.
But mindful
of the gods,
Achilles
went
To the rich
coffer in
his shady
tent;
There lay on
heaps his
various
garments
roll'd,
And costly
furs, and
carpets
stiff with
gold,
(The
presents of
the
silver-footed
dame)
From thence
he took a
bowl, of
antique
frame,
Which never
man had
stained with
ruddy wine,
Nor raised
in offerings
to the power
divine,
But Peleus'
son; and
Peleus' son
to none
Had raised
in
offerings,
but to Jove
alone.
This tinged
with
sulphur,
sacred first
to flame,
He purged;
and wash'd
it in the
running
stream.
Then
cleansed his
hands; and
fixing for a
space
His eyes on
heaven, his
feet upon
the place
Of
sacrifice,
the purple
draught he
pour'd
Forth in the
midst; and
thus the god
implored:
"O thou
supreme!
high-throned
all height
above!
O great
Pelasgic,
Dodonaean
Jove!
Who 'midst
surrounding
frosts, and
vapours
chill,
Presid'st on
bleak
Dodona's
vocal hill:
(Whose
groves the
Selli, race
austere!
surround,
Their feet
unwash'd,
their
slumbers on
the ground;
Who hear,
from
rustling
oaks, thy
dark
decrees;
And catch
the fates,
low-whispered
in the
breeze;)
Hear, as of
old! Thou
gav'st, at
Thetis'
prayer,
Glory to me,
and to the
Greeks
despair.
Lo, to the
dangers of
the fighting
field
The best,
the dearest
of my
friends, I
yield,
Though still
determined,
to my ships
confined;
Patroclus
gone, I stay
but half
behind.
Oh! be his
guard thy
providential
care,
Confirm his
heart, and
string his
arm to war:
Press'd by
his single
force let
Hector see
His fame in
arms not
owing all to
me.
But when the
fleets are
saved from
foes and
fire,
Let him with
conquest and
renown
retire;
Preserve his
arms,
preserve his
social
train,
And safe
return him
to these
eyes again!"
Great Jove
consents to
half the
chief's
request,
But heaven's
eternal doom
denies the
rest;
To free the
fleet was
granted to
his prayer;
His safe
return, the
winds
dispersed in
air.
Back to his
tent the
stern
Achilles
flies,
And waits
the combat
with
impatient
eyes.
Meanwhile
the troops
beneath
Patroclus'
care,
Invade the
Trojans, and
commence the
war.
As wasps,
provoked by
children in
their play,
Pour from
their
mansions by
the broad
highway,
In swarms
the
guiltless
traveller
engage,
Whet all
their
stings, and
call forth
all their
rage:
All rise in
arms, and,
with a
general cry,
Assert their
waxen domes,
and buzzing
progeny.
Thus from
the tents
the fervent
legion
swarms,
So loud
their
clamours,
and so keen
their arms:
Their rising
rage
Patroclus'
breath
inspires,
Who thus
inflames
them with
heroic
fires:
"O warriors,
partners of
Achilles'
praise!
Be mindful
of your
deeds in
ancient
days;
Your godlike
master let
your acts
proclaim,
And add new
glories to
his mighty
name.
Think your
Achilles
sees you
fight: be
brave,
And humble
the proud
monarch whom
you save."
Joyful they
heard, and
kindling as
he spoke,
Flew to the
fleet,
involved in
fire and
smoke.
From shore
to shore the
doubling
shouts
resound,
The hollow
ships return
a deeper
sound.
The war
stood still,
and all
around them
gazed,
When great
Achilles'
shining
armour
blazed:
Troy saw,
and thought
the dread
Achilles
nigh,
At once they
see, they
tremble, and
they fly.
Then first
thy spear,
divine
Patroclus!
flew,
Where the
war raged,
and where
the tumult
grew.
Close to the
stern of
that famed
ship which
bore
Unbless'd
Protesilaus
to Ilion's
shore,
The great
Paeonian,
bold
Pyrechmes
stood;
(Who led his
bands from
Axius'
winding
flood;)
His
shoulder-blade
receives the
fatal wound;
The groaning
warrior
pants upon
the ground.
His troops,
that see
their
country's
glory slain,
Fly diverse,
scatter'd
o'er the
distant
plain.
Patroclus'
arm forbids
the
spreading
fires,
And from the
half-burn'd
ship proud
Troy
retires;
Clear'd from
the smoke
the joyful
navy lies;
In heaps on
heaps the
foe
tumultuous
flies;
Triumphant
Greece her
rescued
decks
ascends,
And loud
acclaim the
starry
region
rends.
So when
thick clouds
enwrap the
mountain's
head,
O'er
heaven's
expanse like
one black
ceiling
spread;
Sudden the
Thunderer,
with a
flashing
ray,
Bursts
through the
darkness,
and lets
down the
day:
The hills
shine out,
the rocks in
prospect
rise,
And streams,
and vales,
and forests,
strike the
eyes;
The smiling
scene wide
opens to the
sight,
And all the
unmeasured
ether flames
with light.
But Troy
repulsed,
and
scatter'd
o'er the
plains,
Forced from
the navy,
yet the
fight
maintains.
Now every
Greek some
hostile hero
slew,
But still
the
foremost,
bold
Patroclus
flew:
As Areilycus
had turn'd
him round,
Sharp in his
thigh he
felt the
piercing
wound;
The
brazen-pointed
spear, with
vigour
thrown,
The thigh
transfix'd,
and broke
the brittle
bone:
Headlong he
fell. Next,
Thoas was
thy chance;
Thy breast,
unarm'd,
received the
Spartan
lance.
Phylides'
dart (as
Amphidus
drew nigh)
His blow
prevented,
and
transpierced
his thigh,
Tore all the
brawn, and
rent the
nerves away;
In darkness,
and in
death, the
warrior lay.
In equal
arms two
sons of
Nestor
stand,
And two bold
brothers of
the Lycian
band:
By great
Antilochus,
Atymnius
dies,
Pierced in
the flank,
lamented
youth! he
lies,
Kind Maris,
bleeding in
his
brother's
wound,
Defends the
breathless
carcase on
the ground;
Furious he
flies, his
murderer to
engage:
But godlike
Thrasimed
prevents his
rage,
Between his
arm and
shoulder
aims a blow;
His arm
falls
spouting on
the dust
below:
He sinks,
with endless
darkness
cover'd
o'er:
And vents
his soul,
effused with
gushing
gore.
Slain by two
brothers,
thus two
brothers
bleed,
Sarpedon's
friends,
Amisodarus'
seed;
Amisodarus,
who, by
Furies led,
The bane of
men,
abhorr'd
Chimaera
bred;
Skill'd in
the dart in
vain, his
sons expire,
And pay the
forfeit of
their guilty
sire.
Stopp'd in
the tumult
Cleobulus
lies,
Beneath
Oileus' arm,
a living
prize;
A living
prize not
long the
Trojan
stood;
The thirsty
falchion
drank his
reeking
blood:
Plunged in
his throat
the smoking
weapon lies;
Black death,
and fate
unpitying,
seal his
eyes.
Amid the
ranks, with
mutual
thirst of
fame,
Lycon the
brave, and
fierce
Peneleus
came;
In vain
their
javelins at
each other
flew,
Now, met in
arms, their
eager swords
they drew.
On the
plumed crest
of his
Boeotian foe
The daring
Lycon aim'd
a noble
blow;
The sword
broke short;
but his,
Peneleus
sped
Full on the
juncture of
the neck and
head:
The head,
divided by a
stroke so
just,
Hung by the
skin; the
body sunk to
dust.
O'ertaken
Neamas by
Merion
bleeds,
Pierced
through the
shoulder as
he mounts
his steeds;
Back from
the car he
tumbles to
the ground:
His swimming
eyes eternal
shades
surround.
Next Erymas
was doom'd
his fate to
feel,
His open'd
mouth
received the
Cretan
steel:
Beneath the
brain the
point a
passage
tore,
Crash'd the
thin bones,
and drown'd
the teeth in
gore:
His mouth,
his eyes,
his
nostrils,
pour a
flood;
He sobs his
soul out in
the gush of
blood.
As when the
flocks
neglected by
the swain,
Or kids, or
lambs, lie
scatter'd
o'er the
plain,
A troop of
wolves the
unguarded
charge
survey,
And rend the
trembling,
unresisting
prey:
Thus on the
foe the
Greeks
impetuous
came;
Troy fled,
unmindful of
her former
fame.
But still at
Hector
godlike Ajax
aim'd,
Still,
pointed at
his breast,
his javelin
flamed.
The Trojan
chief,
experienced
in the
field,
O'er his
broad
shoulders
spread the
massy
shield,
Observed the
storm of
darts the
Grecians
pour,
And on his
buckler
caught the
ringing
shower:
He sees for
Greece the
scale of
conquest
rise,
Yet stops,
and turns,
and saves
his loved
allies.
As when the
hand of Jove
a tempest
forms,
And rolls
the cloud to
blacken
heaven with
storms,
Dark o'er
the fields
the
ascending
vapour
flies,
And shades
the sun, and
blots the
golden
skies:
So from the
ships, along
the dusky
plain,
Dire Flight
and Terror
drove the
Trojan
train.
Even Hector
fled;
through
heads of
disarray
The fiery
coursers
forced their
lord away:
While far
behind his
Trojans fall
confused;
Wedged in
the trench,
in one vast
carnage
bruised:
Chariots on
chariots
roll: the
clashing
spokes
Shock; while
the madding
steeds break
short their
yokes.
In vain they
labour up
the steepy
mound;
Their
charioteers
lie foaming
on the
ground.
Fierce on
the rear,
with shouts
Patroclus
flies;
Tumultuous
clamour
fills the
fields and
skies;
Thick drifts
of dust
involve
their rapid
flight;
Clouds rise
on clouds,
and heaven
is snatch'd
from sight.
The
affrighted
steeds their
dying lords
cast down,
Scour o'er
the fields,
and stretch
to reach the
town.
Loud o'er
the rout was
heard the
victor's
cry,
Where the
war bleeds,
and where
the thickest
die,
Where horse
and arms,
and chariots
he
o'erthrown,
And bleeding
heroes under
axles groan.
No stop, no
check, the
steeds of
Peleus knew:
From bank to
bank the
immortal
coursers
flew.
High-bounding
o'er the
fosse, the
whirling car
Smokes
through the
ranks,
o'ertakes
the flying
war,
And thunders
after
Hector;
Hector
flies,
Patroclus
shakes his
lance; but
fate denies.
Not with
less noise,
with less
impetuous
force,
The tide of
Trojans urge
their
desperate
course,
Than when in
autumn Jove
his fury
pours,
And earth is
loaden with
incessant
showers;
(When guilty
mortals
break the
eternal
laws,
Or judges,
bribed,
betray the
righteous
cause;)
From their
deep beds he
bids the
rivers rise,
And opens
all the
flood-gates
of the
skies:
The
impetuous
torrents
from their
hills obey,
Whole fields
are drown'd,
and
mountains
swept away;
Loud roars
the deluge
till it
meets the
main;
And
trembling
man sees all
his labours
vain!
And now the
chief (the
foremost
troops
repell'd)
Back to the
ships his
destined
progress
held,
Bore down
half Troy in
his
resistless
way,
And forced
the routed
ranks to
stand the
day.
Between the
space where
silver
Simois
flows,
Where lay
the fleets,
and where
the rampires
rose,
All grim in
dust and
blood
Patroclus
stands,
And turns
the
slaughter on
the
conquering
bands.
First
Pronous died
beneath his
fiery dart,
Which
pierced
below the
shield his
valiant
heart.
Thestor was
next, who
saw the
chief
appear,
And fell the
victim of
his coward
fear;
Shrunk up he
sat, with
wild and
haggard eye,
Nor stood to
combat, nor
had force to
fly;
Patroclus
mark'd him
as he
shunn'd the
war,
And with
unmanly
tremblings
shook the
car,
And dropp'd
the flowing
reins. Him
'twixt the
jaws,
The javelin
sticks, and
from the
chariot
draws.
As on a rock
that
overhangs
the main,
An angler,
studious of
the line and
cane,
Some mighty
fish draws
panting to
the shore:
Not with
less ease
the barbed
javelin bore
The gaping
dastard; as
the spear
was shook,
He fell, and
life his
heartless
breast
forsook.
Next on
Eryalus he
flies; a
stone,
Large as a
rock, was by
his fury
thrown:
Full on his
crown the
ponderous
fragment
flew,
And burst
the helm,
and cleft
the head in
two:
Prone to the
ground the
breathless
warrior
fell,
And death
involved him
with the
shades of
hell.
Then low in
dust
Epaltes,
Echius, lie;
Ipheas,
Evippus,
Polymelus,
die;
Amphoterus
and Erymas
succeed;
And last
Tlepolemus
and Pyres
bleed.
Where'er he
moves, the
growing
slaughters
spread
In heaps on
heaps a
monument of
dead.
When now
Sarpedon his
brave
friends
beheld
Grovelling
in dust, and
gasping on
the field,
With this
reproach his
flying host
he warms:
"Oh stain to
honour! oh
disgrace to
arms!
Forsake,
inglorious,
the
contended
plain;
This hand
unaided
shall the
war sustain:
The task be
mine this
hero's
strength to
try,
Who mows
whole
troops, and
makes an
army fly."
He spake:
and,
speaking,
leaps from
off the car:
Patroclus
lights, and
sternly
waits the
war.
As when two
vultures on
the
mountain's
height
Stoop with
resounding
pinions to
the fight;
They cuff,
they tear,
they raise a
screaming
cry;
The desert
echoes, and
the rocks
reply:
The warriors
thus opposed
in arms,
engage
With equal
clamours,
and with
equal rage.
Jove view'd
the combat:
whose event
foreseen,
He thus
bespoke his
sister and
his queen:
"The hour
draws on;
the
destinies
ordain,(245)
My godlike
son shall
press the
Phrygian
plain:
Already on
the verge of
death he
stands,
His life is
owed to
fierce
Patroclus'
hands,
What
passions in
a parent's
breast
debate!
Say, shall I
snatch him
from
impending
fate,
And send him
safe to
Lycia,
distant far
From all the
dangers and
the toils of
war;
Or to his
doom my
bravest
offspring
yield,
And fatten,
with
celestial
blood, the
field?"
Then thus
the goddess
with the
radiant
eyes:
"What words
are these, O
sovereign of
the skies!
Short is the
date
prescribed
to mortal
man;
Shall Jove
for one
extend the
narrow span,
Whose bounds
were fix'd
before his
race began?
How many
sons of
gods,
foredoom'd
to death,
Before proud
Ilion must
resign their
breath!
Were thine
exempt,
debate would
rise above,
And
murmuring
powers
condemn
their
partial
Jove.
Give the
bold chief a
glorious
fate in
fight;
And when the
ascending
soul has
wing'd her
flight,
Let Sleep
and Death
convey, by
thy command,
The
breathless
body to his
native land.
His friends
and people,
to his
future
praise,
A marble
tomb and
pyramid
shall raise,
And lasting
honours to
his ashes
give;
His fame
('tis all
the dead can
have) shall
live."
She said:
the
cloud-compeller,
overcome,
Assents to
fate, and
ratifies the
doom.
Then touch'd
with grief,
the weeping
heavens
distill'd
A shower of
blood o'er
all the
fatal field:
The god, his
eyes
averting
from the
plain,
Laments his
son,
predestined
to be slain,
Far from the
Lycian
shores, his
happy native
reign.
Now met in
arms, the
combatants
appear;
Each heaved
the shield,
and poised
the lifted
spear;
From strong
Patroclus'
hand the
javelin
fled,
And pass'd
the groin of
valiant
Thrasymed;
The nerves
unbraced no
more his
bulk
sustain,
He falls,
and falling
bites the
bloody
plain.
Two sounding
darts the
Lycian
leader
threw:
The first
aloof with
erring fury
flew,
The next
transpierced
Achilles'
mortal
steed,
The generous
Pedasus of
Theban
breed:
Fix'd in the
shoulder's
joint, he
reel'd
around,
Roll'd in
the bloody
dust, and
paw'd the
slippery
ground.
His sudden
fall the
entangled
harness
broke;
Each axle
crackled,
and the
chariot
shook:
When bold
Automedon,
to disengage
The starting
coursers,
and restrain
their rage,
Divides the
traces with
his sword,
and freed
The
encumbered
chariot from
the dying
steed:
The rest
move on,
obedient to
the rein:
The car
rolls slowly
o'er the
dusty plain.
The towering
chiefs to
fiercer
fight
advance:
And first
Sarpedon
whirl'd his
weighty
lance,
Which o'er
the
warrior's
shoulder
took its
course,
And spent in
empty air
its dying
force.
Not so
Patroclus'
never-erring
dart;
Aim'd at his
breast it
pierced a
mortal part,
Where the
strong
fibres bind
the solid
heart.
Then as the
mountain
oak, or
poplar tall,
Or pine (fit
mast for
some great
admiral)
Nods to the
axe, till
with a
groaning
sound
It sinks,
and spreads
its honours
on the
ground,
Thus fell
the king;
and laid on
earth
supine,
Before his
chariot
stretch'd
his form
divine:
He grasp'd
the dust
distain'd
with
streaming
gore,
And, pale in
death, lay
groaning on
the shore.
So lies a
bull beneath
the lion's
paws,
While the
grim savage
grinds with
foamy jaws
The
trembling
limbs, and
sucks the
smoking
blood;
Deep groans,
and hollow
roars,
rebellow
through the
wood.
Then to the
leader of
the Lycian
band
The dying
chief
address'd
his last
command;
"Glaucus, be
bold; thy
task be
first to
dare
The glorious
dangers of
destructive
war,
To lead my
troops, to
combat at
their head,
Incite the
living, and
supply the
dead.
Tell them, I
charged them
with my
latest
breath
Not
unrevenged
to bear
Sarpedon's
death.
What grief,
what shame,
must Glaucus
undergo,
If these
spoil'd arms
adorn a
Grecian foe!
Then as a
friend, and
as a warrior
fight;
Defend my
body,
conquer in
my right:
That, taught
by great
examples,
all may try
Like thee to
vanquish, or
like me to
die."
He ceased;
the Fates
suppress'd
his
labouring
breath,
And his eyes
darken'd
with the
shades of
death.
The
insulting
victor with
disdain
bestrode
The
prostrate
prince, and
on his bosom
trod;
Then drew
the weapon
from his
panting
heart,
The reeking
fibres
clinging to
the dart;
From the
wide wound
gush'd out a
stream of
blood,
And the soul
issued in
the purple
flood.
His flying
steeds the
Myrmidons
detain,
Unguided
now, their
mighty
master
slain.
All-impotent
of aid,
transfix'd
with grief,
Unhappy
Glaucus
heard the
dying chief:
His painful
arm, yet
useless with
the smart
Inflicted
late by
Teucer's
deadly dart,
Supported on
his better
hand he
stay'd:
To Phoebus
then ('twas
all he
could) he
pray'd:
"All-seeing
monarch!
whether
Lycia's
coast,
Or sacred
Ilion, thy
bright
presence
boast,
Powerful
alike to
ease the
wretch's
smart;
O hear me!
god of every
healing art!
Lo! stiff
with clotted
blood, and
pierced with
pain,
That thrills
my arm, and
shoots
through
every vein,
I stand
unable to
sustain the
spear,
And sigh, at
distance
from the
glorious
war.
Low in the
dust is
great
Sarpedon
laid,
Nor Jove
vouchsafed
his hapless
offspring
aid;
But thou, O
god of
health! thy
succour
lend,
To guard the
relics of my
slaughter'd
friend:
For thou,
though
distant,
canst
restore my
might,
To head my
Lycians, and
support the
fight."
Apollo
heard; and,
suppliant as
he stood,
His heavenly
hand
restrain'd
the flux of
blood;
He drew the
dolours from
the wounded
part,
And breathed
a spirit in
his rising
heart.
Renew'd by
art divine,
the hero
stands,
And owns the
assistance
of immortal
hands.
First to the
fight his
native
troops he
warms,
Then loudly
calls on
Troy's
vindictive
arms;
With ample
strides he
stalks from
place to
place;
Now fires
Agenor, now
Polydamas:
Æneas next,
and Hector
he accosts;
Inflaming
thus the
rage of all
their hosts.
"What
thoughts,
regardless
chief! thy
breast
employ?
Oh too
forgetful of
the friends
of Troy!
Those
generous
friends,
who, from
their
country far,
Breathe
their brave
souls out in
another's
war.
See! where
in dust the
great
Sarpedon
lies,
In action
valiant, and
in council
wise,
Who guarded
right, and
kept his
people free;
To all his
Lycians
lost, and
lost to
thee!
Stretch'd by
Patroclus'
arm on
yonder
plains,
O save from
hostile rage
his loved
remains!
Ah let not
Greece his
conquer'd
trophies
boast,
Nor on his
corse
revenge her
heroes
lost!"
He spoke:
each leader
in his grief
partook:
Troy, at the
loss,
through all
her legions
shook.
Transfix'd
with deep
regret, they
view
o'erthrown
At once his
country's
pillar, and
their own;
A chief, who
led to
Troy's
beleaguer'd
wall
A host of
heroes, and
outshined
them all.
Fired, they
rush on;
first Hector
seeks the
foes,
And with
superior
vengeance
greatly
glows.
But o'er the
dead the
fierce
Patroclus
stands,
And rousing
Ajax, roused
the
listening
bands:
"Heroes, be
men; be what
you were
before;
Or weigh the
great
occasion,
and be more.
The chief
who taught
our lofty
walls to
yield,
Lies pale in
death,
extended on
the field.
To guard his
body Troy in
numbers
flies;
Tis half the
glory to
maintain our
prize.
Haste, strip
his arms,
the
slaughter
round him
spread,
And send the
living
Lycians to
the dead."
The heroes
kindle at
his fierce
command;
The martial
squadrons
close on
either hand:
Here Troy
and Lycia
charge with
loud alarms,
Thessalia
there, and
Greece,
oppose their
arms.
With horrid
shouts they
circle round
the slain;
The clash of
armour rings
o'er all the
plain.
Great Jove,
to swell the
horrors of
the fight,
O'er the
fierce
armies pours
pernicious
night,
And round
his son
confounds
the warring
hosts,
His fate
ennobling
with a crowd
of ghosts.
Now Greece
gives way,
and great
Epigeus
falls;
Agacleus'
son, from
Budium's
lofty walls;
Who chased
for murder
thence a
suppliant
came
To Peleus,
and the
silver-footed
dame;
Now sent to
Troy,
Achilles'
arms to aid,
He pays due
vengeance to
his
kinsman's
shade.
Soon as his
luckless
hand had
touch'd the
dead,
A rock's
large
fragment
thunder'd on
his head;
Hurl'd by
Hectorean
force it
cleft in
twain
His
shatter'd
helm, and
stretch'd
him o'er the
slain.
Fierce to
the van of
fight
Patroclus
came,
And, like an
eagle
darting at
his game,
Sprung on
the Trojan
and the
Lycian band.
What grief
thy heart,
what fury
urged thy
hand,
O generous
Greek! when
with full
vigour
thrown,
At
Sthenelaus
flew the
weighty
stone,
Which sunk
him to the
dead: when
Troy, too
near
That arm,
drew back;
and Hector
learn'd to
fear.
Far as an
able hand a
lance can
throw,
Or at the
lists, or at
the fighting
foe;
So far the
Trojans from
their lines
retired;
Till
Glaucus,
turning, all
the rest
inspired.
Then
Bathyclaeus
fell beneath
his rage,
The only
hope of
Chalcon's
trembling
age;
Wide o'er
the land was
stretch'd
his large
domain,
With stately
seats, and
riches blest
in vain:
Him, bold
with youth,
and eager to
pursue
The flying
Lycians,
Glaucus met
and slew;
Pierced
through the
bosom with a
sudden
wound,
He fell, and
falling made
the fields
resound.
The Achaians
sorrow for
their heroes
slain;
With
conquering
shouts the
Trojans
shake the
plain,
And crowd to
spoil the
dead: the
Greeks
oppose;
An iron
circle round
the carcase
grows.
Then brave
Laogonus
resign'd his
breath,
Despatch'd
by Merion to
the shades
of death:
On Ida's
holy hill he
made abode,
The priest
of Jove, and
honour'd
like his
god.
Between the
jaw and ear
the javelin
went;
The soul,
exhaling,
issued at
the vent.
His spear
Aeneas at
the victor
threw,
Who stooping
forward from
the death
withdrew;
The lance
hiss'd
harmless
o'er his
covering
shield,
And
trembling
struck, and
rooted in
the field;
There yet
scarce
spent, it
quivers on
the plain,
Sent by the
great
Aeneas' arm
in vain.
"Swift as
thou art
(the raging
hero cries)
And skill'd
in dancing
to dispute
the prize,
My spear,
the destined
passage had
it found,
Had fix'd
thy active
vigour to
the ground."
"O valiant
leader of
the Dardan
host!
(Insulted
Merion thus
retorts the
boast)
Strong as
you are,
'tis mortal
force you
trust,
An arm as
strong may
stretch thee
in the dust.
And if to
this my
lance thy
fate be
given,
Vain are thy
vaunts;
success is
still from
heaven:
This,
instant,
sends thee
down to
Pluto's
coast;
Mine is the
glory, his
thy parting
ghost."
"O friend
(Menoetius'
son this
answer gave)
With words
to combat,
ill befits
the brave;
Not empty
boasts the
sons of Troy
repel,
Your swords
must plunge
them to the
shades of
hell.
To speak,
beseems the
council; but
to dare
In glorious
action, is
the task of
war."
This said,
Patroclus to
the battle
flies;
Great Merion
follows, and
new shouts
arise:
Shields,
helmets
rattle, as
the warriors
close;
And thick
and heavy
sounds the
storm of
blows.
As through
the
shrilling
vale, or
mountain
ground,
The labours
of the
woodman's
axe resound;
Blows
following
blows are
heard
re-echoing
wide,
While
crackling
forests fall
on every
side:
Thus echoed
all the
fields with
loud alarms,
So fell the
warriors,
and so rung
their arms.
Now great
Sarpedon on
the sandy
shore,
His heavenly
form defaced
with dust
and gore,
And stuck
with darts
by warring
heroes shed,
Lies
undistinguish'd
from the
vulgar dead.
His
long-disputed
corse the
chiefs
enclose,
On every
side the
busy combat
grows;
Thick as
beneath some
shepherd's
thatch'd
abode
(The pails
high foaming
with a milky
flood)
The buzzing
flies, a
persevering
train,
Incessant
swarm, and
chased
return
again.
Jove view'd
the combat
with a stern
survey,
And eyes
that flash'd
intolerable
day.
Fix'd on the
field his
sight, his
breast
debates
The
vengeance
due, and
meditates
the fates:
Whether to
urge their
prompt
effect, and
call
The force of
Hector to
Patroclus'
fall,
This instant
see his
short-lived
trophies
won,
And stretch
him
breathless
on his
slaughter'd
son;
Or yet, with
many a
soul's
untimely
flight,
Augment the
fame and
horror of
the fight.
To crown
Achilles'
valiant
friend with
praise
At length he
dooms; and,
that his
last of days
Shall set in
glory, bids
him drive
the foe;
Nor
unattended
see the
shades
below.
Then
Hector's
mind he
fills with
dire dismay;
He mounts
his car, and
calls his
hosts away;
Sunk with
Troy's heavy
fates, he
sees decline
The scales
of Jove, and
pants with
awe divine.
Then, nor
before, the
hardy
Lycians
fled,
And left
their
monarch with
the common
dead:
Around, in
heaps on
heaps, a
dreadful
wall
Of carnage
rises, as
the heroes
fall.
(So Jove
decreed!) At
length the
Greeks
obtain
The prize
contested,
and despoil
the slain.
The radiant
arms are by
Patroclus
borne;
Patroclus'
ships the
glorious
spoils
adorn.
Then thus to
Phoebus, in
the realms
above,
Spoke from
his throne
the
cloud-compelling
Jove:
"Descend, my
Phoebus! on
the Phrygian
plain,
And from the
fight convey
Sarpedon
slain;
Then bathe
his body in
the crystal
flood,
With dust
dishonour'd,
and deform'd
with blood;
O'er all his
limbs
ambrosial
odours shed,
And with
celestial
robes adorn
the dead.
Those rites
discharged,
his sacred
corse
bequeath
To the soft
arms of
silent Sleep
and Death.
They to his
friends the
immortal
charge shall
bear;
His friends
a tomb and
pyramid
shall rear:
What honour
mortals
after death
receive,
Those
unavailing
honours we
may give!"
Apollo bows,
and from
mount Ida's
height,
Swift to the
field
precipitates
his flight;
Thence from
the war the
breathless
hero bore,
Veil'd in a
cloud, to
silver
Simois'
shore;
There bathed
his
honourable
wounds, and
dress'd
His manly
members in
the immortal
vest;
And with
perfumes of
sweet
ambrosial
dews
Restores his
freshness,
and his form
renews.
Then Sleep
and Death,
two twins of
winged race,
Of matchless
swiftness,
but of
silent pace,
Received
Sarpedon, at
the god's
command,
And in a
moment
reach'd the
Lycian land;
The corse
amidst his
weeping
friends they
laid,
Where
endless
honours wait
the sacred
shade.
Meanwhile
Patroclus
pours along
the plains,
With foaming
coursers,
and with
loosen'd
reins.
Fierce on
the Trojan
and the
Lycian crew,
Ah blind to
fate! thy
headlong
fury flew
Against what
fate and
powerful
Jove ordain,
Vain was thy
friend's
command, thy
courage
vain.
For he, the
god, whose
counsels
uncontroll'd
Dismay the
mighty, and
confound the
bold;
The god who
gives,
resumes, and
orders all,
He urged
thee on, and
urged thee
on to fall.
Who first,
brave hero!
by that arm
was slain,
Who last
beneath thy
vengeance
press'd the
plain;
When heaven
itself thy
fatal fury
led,
And call'd
to fill the
number of
the dead?
Adrestus
first;
Autonous
then
succeeds;
Echeclus
follows;
next young
Megas
bleeds,
Epistor,
Melanippus,
bite the
ground;
The
slaughter,
Elasus and
Mulius
crown'd:
Then sunk
Pylartes to
eternal
night;
The rest,
dispersing,
trust their
fates to
flight.
Now Troy had
stoop'd
beneath his
matchless
power,
But flaming
Phoebus kept
the sacred
tower
Thrice at
the
battlements
Patroclus
strook;(246)
His blazing
aegis thrice
Apollo
shook;
He tried the
fourth;
when,
bursting
from the
cloud,
A more than
mortal voice
was heard
aloud.
"Patroclus!
cease; this
heaven-defended
wall
Defies thy
lance; not
fated yet to
fall;
Thy friend,
thy greater
far, it
shall
withstand,
Troy shall
not stoop
even to
Achilles'
hand."
So spoke the
god who
darts
celestial
fires;
The Greek
obeys him,
and with awe
retires.
While
Hector,
checking at
the Scaean
gates
His panting
coursers, in
his breast
debates,
Or in the
field his
forces to
employ,
Or draw the
troops
within the
walls of
Troy.
Thus while
he thought,
beside him
Phoebus
stood,
In Asius'
shape, who
reigned by
Sangar's
flood;
(Thy
brother,
Hecuba! from
Dymas
sprung,
A valiant
warrior,
haughty,
bold, and
young;)
Thus he
accosts him.
"What a
shameful
sight!
God! is it
Hector that
forbears the
fight?
Were thine
my vigour
this
successful
spear
Should soon
convince
thee of so
false a
fear.
Turn thee,
ah turn thee
to the field
of fame,
And in
Patroclus'
blood efface
thy shame.
Perhaps
Apollo shall
thy arms
succeed,
And heaven
ordains him
by thy lance
to bleed."
So spoke the
inspiring
god; then
took his
flight,
And plunged
amidst the
tumult of
the fight.
He bids
Cebrion
drive the
rapid car;
The lash
resounds,
the coursers
rush to war.
The god the
Grecians'
sinking
souls
depress'd,
And pour'd
swift
spirits
through each
Trojan
breast.
Patroclus
lights,
impatient
for the
fight;
A spear his
left, a
stone
employs his
right:
With all his
nerves he
drives it at
the foe.
Pointed
above, and
rough and
gross below:
The falling
ruin crush'd
Cebrion's
head,
The lawless
offspring of
king Priam's
bed;
His front,
brows, eyes,
one
undistinguish'd
wound:
The bursting
balls drop
sightless to
the ground.
The
charioteer,
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