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The Iliad by Homer 1899 |
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| The
Iliad by Homer
1899
About the
Author:
Homer
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ARGUMENT - THE DEATH OF
HECTOR
The Trojans being safe
within the walls, Hector
only stays to oppose
Achilles. Priam is
struck at his approach,
and tries to persuade
his son
to re-enter the town.
Hecuba joins her
entreaties, but in vain.
Hector
consults within himself
what measures to take;
but at the advance of
Achilles, his resolution
fails him, and he flies.
Achilles pursues him
thrice round the walls
of Troy. The gods debate
concerning the fate of
Hector; at length
Minerva descends to the
aid of Achilles. She
deludes
Hector in the shape of
Deiphobus; he stands the
combat, and is slain.
Achilles drags the dead
body at his chariot in
the sight of Priam and
Hecuba. Their
lamentations, tears, and
despair. Their cries
reach the ears
of Andromache, who,
ignorant of this, was
retired into the inner
part of
the palace: she mounts
up to the walls, and
beholds her dead
husband. She
swoons at the spectacle.
Her excess of grief and
lamentation.
The thirtieth day still
continues. The scene
lies under the walls,
and on
the battlements of Troy.
Thus to
their
bulwarks,
smit with
panic fear,
The herded
Ilians rush
like driven
deer:
There safe
they wipe
the briny
drops away,
And drown in
bowls the
labours of
the day.
Close to the
walls,
advancing
o'er the
fields
Beneath one
roof of
well-compacted
shields,
March,
bending on,
the Greeks'
embodied
powers,
Far
stretching
in the shade
of Trojan
towers.
Great Hector
singly
stay'd:
chain'd down
by fate
There fix'd
he stood
before the
Scaean gate;
Still his
bold arms
determined
to employ,
The guardian
still of
long-defended
Troy.
Apollo now
to tired
Achilles
turns:
(The power
confess'd in
all his
glory
burns:)
"And what
(he cries)
has Peleus'
son in view,
With mortal
speed a
godhead to
pursue?
For not to
thee to know
the gods is
given,
Unskill'd to
trace the
latent marks
of heaven.
What boots
thee now,
that Troy
forsook the
plain?
Vain thy
past labour,
and thy
present
vain:
Safe in
their walls
are now her
troops
bestow'd,
While here
thy frantic
rage attacks
a god."
The chief
incensed--"Too
partial god
of day!
To check my
conquests in
the middle
way:
How few in
Ilion else
had refuge
found!
What gasping
numbers now
had bit the
ground!
Thou robb'st
me of a
glory justly
mine,
Powerful of
godhead, and
of fraud
divine:
Mean fame,
alas! for
one of
heavenly
strain,
To cheat a
mortal who
repines in
vain."
Then to the
city,
terrible and
strong,
With high
and haughty
steps he
tower'd
along,
So the proud
courser,
victor of
the prize,
To the near
goal with
double
ardour
flies.
Him, as he
blazing shot
across the
field,
The careful
eyes of
Priam first
beheld.
Not half so
dreadful
rises to the
sight,(274)
Through the
thick gloom
of some
tempestuous
night,
Orion's dog
(the year
when autumn
weighs),
And o'er the
feebler
stars exerts
his rays;
Terrific
glory! for
his burning
breath
Taints the
red air with
fevers,
plagues, and
death.
So flamed
his fiery
mail. Then
wept the
sage:
He strikes
his reverend
head, now
white with
age;
He lifts his
wither'd
arms;
obtests the
skies;
He calls his
much-loved
son with
feeble
cries:
The son,
resolved
Achilles'
force to
dare,
Full at the
Scaean gates
expects the
war;
While the
sad father
on the
rampart
stands,
And thus
adjures him
with
extended
hands:
"Ah stay
not, stay
not!
guardless
and alone;
Hector! my
loved, my
dearest,
bravest son!
Methinks
already I
behold thee
slain,
And
stretch'd
beneath that
fury of the
plain.
Implacable
Achilles!
might'st
thou be
To all the
gods no
dearer than
to me!
Thee,
vultures
wild should
scatter
round the
shore.
And bloody
dogs grow
fiercer from
thy gore.
How many
valiant sons
I late
enjoy'd,
Valiant in
vain! by thy
cursed arm
destroy'd:
Or, worse
than
slaughtered,
sold in
distant
isles
To shameful
bondage, and
unworthy
toils.
Two, while I
speak, my
eyes in vain
explore,
Two from one
mother
sprung, my
Polydore,
And loved
Lycaon; now
perhaps no
more!
Oh! if in
yonder
hostile camp
they live,
What heaps
of gold,
what
treasures
would I
give!
(Their
grandsire's
wealth, by
right of
birth their
own,
Consign'd
his daughter
with
Lelegia's
throne:)
But if
(which
Heaven
forbid)
already
lost,
All pale
they wander
on the
Stygian
coast;
What sorrows
then must
their sad
mother know,
What anguish
I?
unutterable
woe!
Yet less
that
anguish,
less to her,
to me,
Less to all
Troy, if not
deprived of
thee.
Yet shun
Achilles!
enter yet
the wall;
And spare
thyself, thy
father,
spare us
all!
Save thy
dear life;
or, if a
soul so
brave
Neglect that
thought, thy
dearer glory
save.
Pity, while
yet I live,
these silver
hairs;
While yet
thy father
feels the
woes he
bears,
Yet cursed
with sense!
a wretch,
whom in his
rage
(All
trembling on
the verge of
helpless
age)
Great Jove
has placed,
sad
spectacle of
pain!
The bitter
dregs of
fortune's
cup to
drain:
To fill with
scenes of
death his
closing
eyes,
And number
all his days
by miseries!
My heroes
slain, my
bridal bed
o'erturn'd,
My daughters
ravish'd,
and my city
burn'd,
My bleeding
infants
dash'd
against the
floor;
These I have
yet to see,
perhaps yet
more!
Perhaps even
I, reserved
by angry
fate,
The last sad
relic of my
ruin'd
state,
(Dire pomp
of sovereign
wretchedness!)
must fall,
And stain
the pavement
of my regal
hall;
Where
famish'd
dogs, late
guardians of
my door,
Shall lick
their
mangled
master's
spatter'd
gore.
Yet for my
sons I thank
ye, gods!
'tis well;
Well have
they
perish'd,
for in fight
they fell.
Who dies in
youth and
vigour, dies
the best,
Struck
through with
wounds, all
honest on
the breast.
But when the
fates, in
fulness of
their rage,
Spurn the
hoar head of
unresisting
age,
In dust the
reverend
lineaments
deform,
And pour to
dogs the
life-blood
scarcely
warm:
This, this
is misery!
the last,
the worse,
That man can
feel! man,
fated to be
cursed!"
He said, and
acting what
no words
could say,
Rent from
his head the
silver locks
away.
With him the
mournful
mother bears
a part;
Yet all her
sorrows turn
not Hector's
heart.
The zone
unbraced,
her bosom
she
display'd;
And thus,
fast-falling
the salt
tears, she
said:
"Have mercy
on me, O my
son! revere
The words of
age; attend
a parent's
prayer!
If ever thee
in these
fond arms I
press'd,
Or still'd
thy infant
clamours at
this breast;
Ah do not
thus our
helpless
years
forego,
But, by our
walls
secured,
repel the
foe.
Against his
rage if
singly thou
proceed,
Should'st
thou, (but
Heaven avert
it!)
should'st
thou bleed,
Nor must thy
corse lie
honour'd on
the bier,
Nor spouse,
nor mother,
grace thee
with a tear!
Far from our
pious rites
those dear
remains
Must feast
the vultures
on the naked
plains."
So they,
while down
their cheeks
the torrents
roll;
But fix'd
remains the
purpose of
his soul;
Resolved he
stands, and
with a fiery
glance
Expects the
hero's
terrible
advance.
So, roll'd
up in his
den, the
swelling
snake
Beholds the
traveller
approach the
brake;
When fed
with noxious
herbs his
turgid veins
Have
gather'd
half the
poisons of
the plains;
He burns, he
stiffens
with
collected
ire,
And his red
eyeballs
glare with
living fire.
Beneath a
turret, on
his shield
reclined,
He stood,
and
question'd
thus his
mighty
mind:(275)
"Where lies
my way? to
enter in the
wall?
Honour and
shame the
ungenerous
thought
recall:
Shall proud
Polydamas
before the
gate
Proclaim,
his counsels
are obey'd
too late,
Which timely
follow'd but
the former
night,
What numbers
had been
saved by
Hector's
flight?
That wise
advice
rejected
with
disdain,
I feel my
folly in my
people
slain.
Methinks my
suffering
country's
voice I
hear,
But most her
worthless
sons insult
my ear,
On my rash
courage
charge the
chance of
war,
And blame
those
virtues
which they
cannot
share.
No--if I
e'er return,
return I
must
Glorious, my
country's
terror laid
in dust:
Or if I
perish, let
her see me
fall
In field at
least, and
fighting for
her wall.
And yet
suppose
these
measures I
forego,
Approach
unarm'd, and
parley with
the foe,
The
warrior-shield,
the helm,
and lance,
lay down.
And treat on
terms of
peace to
save the
town:
The wife
withheld,
the treasure
ill-detain'd
(Cause of
the war, and
grievance of
the land)
With
honourable
justice to
restore:
And add half
Ilion's yet
remaining
store,
Which Troy
shall,
sworn,
produce;
that injured
Greece
May share
our wealth,
and leave
our walls in
peace.
But why this
thought?
Unarm'd if I
should go,
What hope of
mercy from
this
vengeful
foe,
But
woman-like
to fall, and
fall without
a blow?
We greet not
here, as man
conversing
man,
Met at an
oak, or
journeying
o'er a
plain;
No season
now for calm
familiar
talk,
Like youths
and maidens
in an
evening
walk:
War is our
business,
but to whom
is given
To die, or
triumph,
that,
determine
Heaven!"
Thus
pondering,
like a god
the Greek
drew nigh;
His dreadful
plumage
nodded from
on high;
The Pelian
javelin, in
his better
hand,
Shot
trembling
rays that
glitter'd
o'er the
land;
And on his
breast the
beamy
splendour
shone,
Like Jove's
own
lightning,
or the
rising sun.
As Hector
sees,
unusual
terrors
rise,
Struck by
some god, he
fears,
recedes, and
flies.
He leaves
the gates,
he leaves
the wall
behind:
Achilles
follows like
the winged
wind.
Thus at the
panting dove
a falcon
flies
(The
swiftest
racer of the
liquid
skies),
Just when he
holds, or
thinks he
holds his
prey,
Obliquely
wheeling
through the
aerial way,
With open
beak and
shrilling
cries he
springs,
And aims his
claws, and
shoots upon
his wings:
No less
fore-right
the rapid
chase they
held,
One urged by
fury, one by
fear
impell'd:
Now circling
round the
walls their
course
maintain,
Where the
high
watch-tower
overlooks
the plain;
Now where
the
fig-trees
spread their
umbrage
broad,
(A wider
compass,)
smoke along
the road.
Next by
Scamander's
double
source they
bound,
Where two
famed
fountains
burst the
parted
ground;
This hot
through
scorching
clefts is
seen to
rise,
With
exhalations
steaming to
the skies;
That the
green banks
in summer's
heat
o'erflows,
Like crystal
clear, and
cold as
winter
snows:
Each gushing
fount a
marble
cistern
fills,
Whose
polish'd bed
receives the
falling
rills;
Where Trojan
dames (ere
yet alarm'd
by Greece)
Wash'd their
fair
garments in
the days of
peace.(276)
By these
they pass'd,
one chasing,
one in
flight:
(The mighty
fled,
pursued by
stronger
might:)
Swift was
the course;
no vulgar
prize they
play,
No vulgar
victim must
reward the
day:
(Such as in
races crown
the speedy
strife:)
The prize
contended
was great
Hector's
life.
As when some
hero's
funerals are
decreed
In grateful
honour of
the mighty
dead;
Where high
rewards the
vigorous
youth
inflame
(Some golden
tripod, or
some lovely
dame)
The panting
coursers
swiftly turn
the goal,
And with
them turns
the raised
spectator's
soul:
Thus three
times round
the Trojan
wall they
fly.
The gazing
gods lean
forward from
the sky;
To whom,
while eager
on the chase
they look,
The sire of
mortals and
immortals
spoke:
"Unworthy
sight! the
man beloved
of heaven,
Behold,
inglorious
round yon
city driven!
My heart
partakes the
generous
Hector's
pain;
Hector,
whose zeal
whole
hecatombs
has slain,
Whose
grateful
fumes the
gods
received
with joy,
From Ida's
summits, and
the towers
of Troy:
Now see him
flying; to
his fears
resign'd,
And fate,
and fierce
Achilles,
close
behind.
Consult, ye
powers!
('tis worthy
your debate)
Whether to
snatch him
from
impending
fate,
Or let him
bear, by
stern
Pelides
slain,
(Good as he
is) the lot
imposed on
man."
Then Pallas
thus: "Shall
he whose
vengeance
forms
The forky
bolt, and
blackens
heaven with
storms,
Shall he
prolong one
Trojan's
forfeit
breath?
A man, a
mortal,
pre-ordain'd
to death!
And will no
murmurs fill
the courts
above?
No gods
indignant
blame their
partial
Jove?"
"Go then
(return'd
the sire)
without
delay,
Exert thy
will: I give
the Fates
their way.
Swift at the
mandate
pleased
Tritonia
flies,
And stoops
impetuous
from the
cleaving
skies.
As through
the forest,
o'er the
vale and
lawn,
The
well-breath'd
beagle
drives the
flying fawn,
In vain he
tries the
covert of
the brakes,
Or deep
beneath the
trembling
thicket
shakes;
Sure of the
vapour in
the tainted
dews,
The certain
hound his
various maze
pursues.
Thus step by
step,
where'er the
Trojan
wheel'd,
There swift
Achilles
compass'd
round the
field.
Oft as to
reach the
Dardan gates
he bends,
And hopes
the
assistance
of his
pitying
friends,
(Whose
showering
arrows, as
he coursed
below,
From the
high turrets
might
oppress the
foe,)
So oft
Achilles
turns him to
the plain:
He eyes the
city, but he
eyes in
vain.
As men in
slumbers
seem with
speedy pace,
One to
pursue, and
one to lead
the chase,
Their
sinking
limbs the
fancied
course
forsake,
Nor this can
fly, nor
that can
overtake:
No less the
labouring
heroes pant
and strain:
While that
but flies,
and this
pursues in
vain.
What god, O
muse,
assisted
Hector's
force
With fate
itself so
long to hold
the course?
Phoebus it
was; who, in
his latest
hour,
Endued his
knees with
strength,
his nerves
with power:
And great
Achilles,
lest some
Greek's
advance
Should
snatch the
glory from
his lifted
lance,
Sign'd to
the troops
to yield his
foe the way,
And leave
untouch'd
the honours
of the day.
Jove lifts
the golden
balances,
that show
The fates of
mortal men,
and things
below:
Here each
contending
hero's lot
he tries,
And weighs,
with equal
hand, their
destinies.
Low sinks
the scale
surcharged
with
Hector's
fate;
Heavy with
death it
sinks, and
hell
receives the
weight.
Then Phoebus
left him.
Fierce
Minerva
flies
To stern
Pelides, and
triumphing,
cries:
"O loved of
Jove! this
day our
labours
cease,
And conquest
blazes with
full beams
on Greece.
Great Hector
falls; that
Hector famed
so far,
Drunk with
renown,
insatiable
of war,
Falls by thy
hand, and
mine! nor
force, nor
flight,
Shall more
avail him,
nor his god
of light.
See, where
in vain he
supplicates
above,
Roll'd at
the feet of
unrelenting
Jove;
Rest here:
myself will
lead the
Trojan on,
And urge to
meet the
fate he
cannot
shun."
Her voice
divine the
chief with
joyful mind
Obey'd; and
rested, on
his lance
reclined
While like
Deiphobus
the martial
dame
(Her face,
her gesture,
and her arms
the same),
In show an
aid, by
hapless
Hector's
side
Approach'd,
and greets
him thus
with voice
belied:
"Too long, O
Hector! have
I borne the
sight
Of this
distress,
and sorrow'd
in thy
flight:
It fits us
now a noble
stand to
make,
And here, as
brothers,
equal fates
partake."
Then he: "O
prince!
allied in
blood and
fame,
Dearer than
all that own
a brother's
name;
Of all that
Hecuba to
Priam bore,
Long tried,
long loved:
much loved,
but honoured
more!
Since you,
of all our
numerous
race alone
Defend my
life,
regardless
of your
own."
Again the
goddess:
"Much my
father's
prayer,
And much my
mother's,
press'd me
to forbear:
My friends
embraced my
knees,
adjured my
stay,
But stronger
love
impell'd,
and I obey.
Come then,
the glorious
conflict let
us try,
Let the
steel
sparkle, and
the javelin
fly;
Or let us
stretch
Achilles on
the field,
Or to his
arm our
bloody
trophies
yield."
Fraudful she
said; then
swiftly
march'd
before:
The Dardan
hero shuns
his foe no
more.
Sternly they
met. The
silence
Hector
broke:
His dreadful
plumage
nodded as he
spoke:
"Enough, O
son of
Peleus! Troy
has view'd
Her walls
thrice
circled, and
her chief
pursued.
But now some
god within
me bids me
try
Thine, or my
fate: I kill
thee, or I
die.
Yet on the
verge of
battle let
us stay,
And for a
moment's
space
suspend the
day;
Let Heaven's
high powers
be call'd to
arbitrate
The just
conditions
of this
stern
debate,
(Eternal
witnesses of
all below,
And faithful
guardians of
the
treasured
vow!)
To them I
swear; if,
victor in
the strife,
Jove by
these hands
shall shed
thy noble
life,
No vile
dishonour
shall thy
corse
pursue;
Stripp'd of
its arms
alone (the
conqueror's
due)
The rest to
Greece
uninjured
I'll
restore:
Now plight
thy mutual
oath, I ask
no more."
"Talk not of
oaths (the
dreadful
chief
replies,
While anger
flash'd from
his
disdainful
eyes),
Detested as
thou art,
and ought to
be,
Nor oath nor
pact
Achilles
plights with
thee:
Such pacts
as lambs and
rabid wolves
combine,
Such leagues
as men and
furious
lions join,
To such I
call the
gods! one
constant
state
Of lasting
rancour and
eternal
hate:
No thought
but rage,
and
never-ceasing
strife,
Till death
extinguish
rage, and
thought, and
life.
Rouse then
thy forces
this
important
hour,
Collect thy
soul, and
call forth
all thy
power.
No further
subterfuge,
no further
chance;
'Tis Pallas,
Pallas gives
thee to my
lance.
Each Grecian
ghost, by
thee
deprived of
breath,
Now hovers
round, and
calls thee
to thy
death."
He spoke,
and launch'd
his javelin
at the foe;
But Hector
shunn'd the
meditated
blow:
He stoop'd,
while o'er
his head the
flying spear
Sang
innocent,
and spent
its force in
air.
Minerva
watch'd it
falling on
the land,
Then drew,
and gave to
great
Achilles'
hand,
Unseen of
Hector, who,
elate with
joy,
Now shakes
his lance,
and braves
the dread of
Troy.
"The life
you boasted
to that
javelin
given,
Prince! you
have miss'd.
My fate
depends on
Heaven,
To thee,
presumptuous
as thou art,
unknown,
Or what must
prove my
fortune, or
thy own.
Boasting is
but an art,
our fears to
blind,
And with
false
terrors sink
another's
mind.
But know,
whatever
fate I am to
try,
By no
dishonest
wound shall
Hector die.
I shall not
fall a
fugitive at
least,
My soul
shall
bravely
issue from
my breast.
But first,
try thou my
arm; and may
this dart
End all my
country's
woes, deep
buried in
thy heart."
The weapon
flew, its
course
unerring
held,
Unerring,
but the
heavenly
shield
repell'd
The mortal
dart;
resulting
with a bound
From off the
ringing orb,
it struck
the ground.
Hector
beheld his
javelin fall
in vain,
Nor other
lance, nor
other hope
remain;
He calls
Deiphobus,
demands a
spear--
In vain, for
no Deiphobus
was there.
All
comfortless
he stands:
then, with a
sigh;
"'Tis
so--Heaven
wills it,
and my hour
is nigh!
I deem'd
Deiphobus
had heard my
call,
But he
secure lies
guarded in
the wall.
A god
deceived me;
Pallas,
'twas thy
deed,
Death and
black fate
approach!
'tis I must
bleed.
No refuge
now, no
succour from
above,
Great Jove
deserts me,
and the son
of Jove,
Propitious
once, and
kind! Then
welcome
fate!
'Tis true I
perish, yet
I perish
great:
Yet in a
mighty deed
I shall
expire,
Let future
ages hear
it, and
admire!"
Fierce, at
the word,
his weighty
sword he
drew,
And, all
collected,
on Achilles
flew.
So Jove's
bold bird,
high
balanced in
the air,
Stoops from
the clouds
to truss the
quivering
hare.
Nor less
Achilles his
fierce soul
prepares:
Before his
breast the
flaming
shield he
bears,
Refulgent
orb! above
his fourfold
cone
The gilded
horse-hair
sparkled in
the sun.
Nodding at
every step:
(Vulcanian
frame!)
And as he
moved, his
figure
seem'd on
flame.
As radiant
Hesper
shines with
keener
light,(277)
Far-beaming
o'er the
silver host
of night,
When all the
starry train
emblaze the
sphere:
So shone the
point of
great
Achilles'
spear.
In his right
hand he
waves the
weapon
round,
Eyes the
whole man,
and
meditates
the wound;
But the rich
mail
Patroclus
lately wore
Securely
cased the
warrior's
body o'er.
One space at
length he
spies, to
let in fate,
Where 'twixt
the neck and
throat the
jointed
plate
Gave
entrance:
through that
penetrable
part
Furious he
drove the
well-directed
dart:
Nor pierced
the windpipe
yet, nor
took the
power
Of speech,
unhappy!
from thy
dying hour.
Prone on the
field the
bleeding
warrior
lies,
While, thus
triumphing,
stern
Achilles
cries:
"At last is
Hector
stretch'd
upon the
plain,
Who fear'd
no vengeance
for
Patroclus
slain:
Then,
prince! you
should have
fear'd, what
now you
feel;
Achilles
absent was
Achilles
still:
Yet a short
space the
great
avenger
stayed,
Then low in
dust thy
strength and
glory laid.
Peaceful he
sleeps, with
all our
rites
adorn'd,
For ever
honour'd,
and for ever
mourn'd:
While cast
to all the
rage of
hostile
power,
Thee birds
shall
mangle, and
the gods
devour."
Then Hector,
fainting at
the approach
of death:
"By thy own
soul! by
those who
gave thee
breath!
By all the
sacred
prevalence
of prayer;
Ah, leave me
not for
Grecian dogs
to tear!
The common
rites of
sepulture
bestow,
To soothe a
father's and
a mother's
woe:
Let their
large gifts
procure an
urn at
least,
And Hector's
ashes in his
country
rest."
"No, wretch
accursed!
relentless
he replies;
(Flames, as
he spoke,
shot
flashing
from his
eyes;)
Not those
who gave me
breath
should bid
me spare,
Nor all the
sacred
prevalence
of prayer.
Could I
myself the
bloody
banquet
join!
No--to the
dogs that
carcase I
resign.
Should Troy,
to bribe me,
bring forth
all her
store,
And giving
thousands,
offer
thousands
more;
Should
Dardan
Priam, and
his weeping
dame,
Drain their
whole realm
to buy one
funeral
flame:
Their Hector
on the pile
they should
not see,
Nor rob the
vultures of
one limb of
thee."
Then thus
the chief
his dying
accents
drew:
"Thy rage,
implacable!
too well I
knew:
The Furies
that
relentless
breast have
steel'd,
And cursed
thee with a
heart that
cannot
yield.
Yet think, a
day will
come, when
fate's
decree
And angry
gods shall
wreak this
wrong on
thee;
Phoebus and
Paris shall
avenge my
fate,
And stretch
thee here
before the
Scaean
gate."(278)
He ceased.
The Fates
suppress'd
his
labouring
breath,
And his eyes
stiffen'd at
the hand of
death;
To the dark
realm the
spirit wings
its way,
(The manly
body left a
load of
clay,)
And
plaintive
glides along
the dreary
coast,
A naked,
wandering,
melancholy
ghost!
Achilles,
musing as he
roll'd his
eyes
O'er the
dead hero,
thus
unheard,
replies:
"Die thou
the first!
When Jove
and heaven
ordain,
I follow
thee"--He
said, and
stripp'd the
slain.
Then forcing
backward
from the
gaping wound
The reeking
javelin,
cast it on
the ground.
The
thronging
Greeks
behold with
wondering
eyes
His manly
beauty and
superior
size;
While some,
ignobler,
the great
dead deface
With wounds
ungenerous,
or with
taunts
disgrace:
"How changed
that Hector,
who like
Jove of late
Sent
lightning on
our fleets,
and
scatter'd
fate!"
High o'er
the slain
the great
Achilles
stands,
Begirt with
heroes and
surrounding
bands;
And thus
aloud, while
all the host
attends:
"Princes and
leaders!
countrymen
and friends!
Since now at
length the
powerful
will of
heaven
The dire
destroyer to
our arm has
given,
Is not Troy
fallen
already?
Haste, ye
powers!
See, if
already
their
deserted
towers
Are left
unmann'd; or
if they yet
retain
The souls of
heroes,
their great
Hector
slain.
But what is
Troy, or
glory what
to me?
Or why
reflects my
mind on
aught but
thee,
Divine
Patroclus!
Death hath
seal'd his
eyes;
Unwept,
unhonour'd,
uninterr'd
he lies!
Can his dear
image from
my soul
depart,
Long as the
vital spirit
moves my
heart?
If in the
melancholy
shades
below,
The flames
of friends
and lovers
cease to
glow,
Yet mine
shall sacred
last; mine,
undecay'd,
Burn on
through
death, and
animate my
shade.
Meanwhile,
ye sons of
Greece, in
triumph
bring
The corpse
of Hector,
and your
paeans sing.
Be this the
song,
slow-moving
toward the
shore,
"Hector is
dead, and
Ilion is no
more."
Then his
fell soul a
thought of
vengeance
bred;
(Unworthy of
himself, and
of the
dead;)
The nervous
ancles
bored, his
feet he
bound
With thongs
inserted
through the
double
wound;
These fix'd
up high
behind the
rolling
wain,
His graceful
head was
trail'd
along the
plain.
Proud on his
car the
insulting
victor
stood,
And bore
aloft his
arms,
distilling
blood.
He smites
the steeds;
the rapid
chariot
flies;
The sudden
clouds of
circling
dust arise.
Now lost is
all that
formidable
air;
The face
divine, and
long-descending
hair,
Purple the
ground, and
streak the
sable sand;
Deform'd,
dishonour'd,
in his
native land,
Given to the
rage of an
insulting
throng,
And, in his
parents'
sight, now
dragg'd
along!
The mother
first beheld
with sad
survey;
She rent her
tresses,
venerable
grey,
And cast,
far off, the
regal veils
away.
With
piercing
shrieks his
bitter fate
she moans,
While the
sad father
answers
groans with
groans
Tears after
tears his
mournful
cheeks
o'erflow,
And the
whole city
wears one
face of woe:
No less than
if the rage
of hostile
fires.
From her
foundations
curling to
her spires,
O'er the
proud
citadel at
length
should rise,
And the last
blaze send
Ilion to the
skies.
The wretched
monarch of
the falling
state,
Distracted,
presses to
the Dardan
gate.
Scarce the
whole people
stop his
desperate
course,
While strong
affliction
gives the
feeble
force:
Grief tears
his heart,
and drives
him to and
fro,
In all the
raging
impotence of
woe.
At length he
roll'd in
dust, and
thus begun,
Imploring
all, and
naming one
by one:
"Ah! let me,
let me go
where sorrow
calls;
I, only I,
will issue
from your
walls
(Guide or
companion,
friends! I
ask ye
none),
And bow
before the
murderer of
my son.
My grief
perhaps his
pity may
engage;
Perhaps at
least he may
respect my
age.
He has a
father too;
a man like
me;
One, not
exempt from
age and
misery
(Vigorous no
more, as
when his
young
embrace
Begot this
pest of me,
and all my
race).
How many
valiant
sons, in
early bloom,
Has that
cursed hand
send
headlong to
the tomb!
Thee,
Hector!
last: thy
loss
(divinely
brave)
Sinks my sad
soul with
sorrow to
the grave.
O had thy
gentle
spirit
pass'd in
peace,
The son
expiring in
the sire's
embrace,
While both
thy parents
wept the
fatal hour,
And, bending
o'er thee,
mix'd the
tender
shower!
Some comfort
that had
been, some
sad relief,
To melt in
full satiety
of grief!"
Thus wail'd
the father,
grovelling
on the
ground,
And all the
eyes of
Ilion
stream'd
around.
Amidst her
matrons
Hecuba
appears:
(A mourning
princess,
and a train
in tears;)
"Ah why has
Heaven
prolong'd
this hated
breath,
Patient of
horrors, to
behold thy
death?
O Hector!
late thy
parents'
pride and
joy,
The boast of
nations! the
defence of
Troy!
To whom her
safety and
her fame she
owed;
Her chief,
her hero,
and almost
her god!
O fatal
change!
become in
one sad day
A senseless
corse!
inanimated
clay!"
But not as
yet the
fatal news
had spread
To fair
Andromache,
of Hector
dead;
As yet no
messenger
had told his
fate,
Not e'en his
stay without
the Scaean
gate.
Far in the
close
recesses of
the dome,
Pensive she
plied the
melancholy
loom;
A growing
work
employ'd her
secret
hours,
Confusedly
gay with
intermingled
flowers.
Her
fair-haired
handmaids
heat the
brazen urn,
The bath
preparing
for her
lord's
return
In vain;
alas! her
lord returns
no more;
Unbathed he
lies, and
bleeds along
the shore!
Now from the
walls the
clamours
reach her
ear,
And all her
members
shake with
sudden fear:
Forth from
her ivory
hand the
shuttle
falls,
And thus,
astonish'd,
to her maids
she calls:
"Ah follow
me! (she
cried) what
plaintive
noise
Invades my
ear? 'Tis
sure my
mother's
voice.
My faltering
knees their
trembling
frame
desert,
A pulse
unusual
flutters at
my heart;
Some strange
disaster,
some reverse
of fate
(Ye gods
avert it!)
threats the
Trojan
state.
Far be the
omen which
my thoughts
suggest!
But much I
fear my
Hector's
dauntless
breast
Confronts
Achilles;
chased along
the plain,
Shut from
our walls! I
fear, I fear
him slain!
Safe in the
crowd he
ever scorn'd
to wait,
And sought
for glory in
the jaws of
fate:
Perhaps that
noble heat
has cost his
breath,
Now quench'd
for ever in
the arms of
death."
She spoke:
and furious,
with
distracted
pace,
Fears in her
heart, and
anguish in
her face,
Flies
through the
dome (the
maids her
steps
pursue),
And mounts
the walls,
and sends
around her
view.
Too soon her
eyes the
killing
object
found,
The godlike
Hector
dragg'd
along the
ground.
A sudden
darkness
shades her
swimming
eyes:
She faints,
she falls;
her breath,
her colour
flies.
Her hair's
fair
ornaments,
the braids
that bound,
The net that
held them,
and the
wreath that
crown'd,
The veil and
diadem flew
far away
(The gift of
Venus on her
bridal day).
Around a
train of
weeping
sisters
stands,
To raise her
sinking with
assistant
hands.
Scarce from
the verge of
death
recall'd,
again
She faints,
or but
recovers to
complain.
"O wretched
husband of a
wretched
wife!
Born with
one fate, to
one unhappy
life!
For sure one
star its
baneful beam
display'd
On Priam's
roof, and
Hippoplacia's
shade.
From
different
parents,
different
climes we
came.
At different
periods, yet
our fate the
same!
Why was my
birth to
great Aetion
owed,
And why was
all that
tender care
bestow'd?
Would I had
never
been!--O
thou, the
ghost
Of my dead
husband!
miserably
lost!
Thou to the
dismal
realms for
ever gone!
And I
abandon'd,
desolate,
alone!
An only
child, once
comfort of
my pains,
Sad product
now of
hapless
love,
remains!
No more to
smile upon
his sire; no
friend
To help him
now! no
father to
defend!
For should
he 'scape
the sword,
the common
doom,
What wrongs
attend him,
and what
griefs to
come!
Even from
his own
paternal
roof
expell'd,
Some
stranger
ploughs his
patrimonial
field.
The day,
that to the
shades the
father
sends,
Robs the sad
orphan of
his father's
friends:
He, wretched
outcast of
mankind!
appears
For ever
sad, for
ever bathed
in tears;
Amongst the
happy,
unregarded,
he
Hangs on the
robe, or
trembles at
the knee,
While those
his father's
former
bounty fed
Nor reach
the goblet,
nor divide
the bread:
The kindest
but his
present
wants allay,
To leave him
wretched the
succeeding
day.
Frugal
compassion!
Heedless,
they who
boast
Both parents
still, nor
feel what he
has lost,
Shall cry,
'Begone! thy
father
feasts not
here:'
The wretch
obeys,
retiring
with a tear.
Thus
wretched,
thus
retiring all
in tears,
To my sad
soul
Astyanax
appears!
Forced by
repeated
insults to
return,
And to his
widow'd
mother
vainly
mourn:
He, who,
with tender
delicacy
bred,
With princes
sported, and
on dainties
fed,
And when
still
evening gave
him up to
rest,
Sunk soft in
down upon
the nurse's
breast,
Must--ah
what must he
not? Whom
Ilion calls
Astyanax,
from her
well-guarded
walls,(279)
Is now that
name no
more,
unhappy boy!
Since now no
more thy
father
guards his
Troy.
But thou, my
Hector,
liest
exposed in
air,
Far from thy
parents' and
thy
consort's
care;
Whose hand
in vain,
directed by
her love,
The martial
scarf and
robe of
triumph
wove.
Now to
devouring
flames be
these a
prey,
Useless to
thee, from
this
accursed
day!
Yet let the
sacrifice at
least be
paid,
An honour to
the living,
not the
dead!"
So spake the
mournful
dame: her
matrons
hear,
Sigh back
her sighs,
and answer
tear with
tear. |
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