ARGUMENT - FUNERAL GAMES
IN HONOUR OF PATROCLUS (280)
Achilles and the
Myrmidons do honours to
the body of Patroclus.
After the
funeral feast he retires
to the sea-shore, where,
falling asleep, the
ghost of his friend
appears to him, and
demands the rites of
burial; the
next morning the
soldiers are sent with
mules and waggons to
fetch wood
for the pyre. The
funeral procession, and
the offering their hair
to the
dead. Achilles
sacrifices several
animals, and lastly
twelve Trojan
captives, at the pile;
then sets fire to it. He
pays libations to the
Winds, which (at the
instance of Iris) rise,
and raise the flames.
When
the pile has burned all
night, they gather the
bones, place them in an
urn
of gold, and raise the
tomb. Achilles
institutes the funeral
games: the
chariot-race, the fight
of the caestus, the
wrestling, the
foot-race, the
single combat, the
discus, the shooting
with arrows, the darting
the
javelin: the various
descriptions of which,
and the various success
of the
several antagonists,
make the greatest part
of the book.
In this book ends the
thirtieth day. The night
following, the ghost of
Patroclus appears to
Achilles: the
one-and-thirtieth day is
employed in
felling the timber for
the pile: the
two-and-thirtieth in
burning it; and
the three-and-thirtieth
in the games. The scene
is generally on the
sea-shore.
Thus humbled
in the dust,
the pensive
train
Through the
sad city
mourn'd her
hero slain.
The body
soil'd with
dust, and
black with
gore,
Lies on
broad
Hellespont's
resounding
shore.
The Grecians
seek their
ships, and
clear the
strand,
All, but the
martial
Myrmidonian
band:
These yet
assembled
great
Achilles
holds,
And the
stern
purpose of
his mind
unfolds:
"Not yet, my
brave
companions
of the war,
Release your
smoking
coursers
from the
car;
But, with
his chariot
each in
order led,
Perform due
honours to
Patroclus
dead.
Ere yet from
rest or food
we seek
relief,
Some rites
remain, to
glut our
rage of
grief."
The troops
obey'd; and
thrice in
order led(281)
(Achilles
first) their
coursers
round the
dead;
And thrice
their
sorrows and
laments
renew;
Tears bathe
their arms,
and tears
the sands
bedew.
For such a
warrior
Thetis aids
their woe,
Melts their
strong
hearts, and
bids their
eyes to
flow.
But chief,
Pelides:
thick-succeeding
sighs
Burst from
his heart,
and torrents
from his
eyes:
His
slaughtering
hands, yet
red with
blood, he
laid
On his dead
friend's
cold breast,
and thus he
said:
"All hail,
Patroclus!
let thy
honour'd
ghost
Hear, and
rejoice on
Pluto's
dreary
coast;
Behold!
Achilles'
promise is
complete;
The bloody
Hector
stretch'd
before thy
feet.
Lo! to the
dogs his
carcase I
resign;
And twelve
sad victims,
of the
Trojan line,
Sacred to
vengeance,
instant
shall
expire;
Their lives
effused
around thy
funeral
pyre."
Gloomy he
said, and
(horrible to
view)
Before the
bier the
bleeding
Hector
threw,
Prone on the
dust. The
Myrmidons
around
Unbraced
their
armour, and
the steeds
unbound.
All to
Achilles'
sable ship
repair,
Frequent and
full, the
genial feast
to share.
Now from the
well-fed
swine black
smokes
aspire,
The bristly
victims
hissing o'er
the fire:
The huge ox
bellowing
falls; with
feebler
cries
Expires the
goat; the
sheep in
silence
dies.
Around the
hero's
prostrate
body flow'd,
In one
promiscuous
stream, the
reeking
blood.
And now a
band of
Argive
monarchs
brings
The glorious
victor to
the king of
kings.
From his
dead friend
the pensive
warrior
went,
With steps
unwilling,
to the regal
tent.
The
attending
heralds, as
by office
bound,
With kindled
flames the
tripod-vase
surround:
To cleanse
his
conquering
hands from
hostile
gore,
They urged
in vain; the
chief
refused, and
swore:(282)
"No drop
shall touch
me, by
almighty
Jove!
The first
and greatest
of the gods
above!
Till on the
pyre I place
thee; till I
rear
The grassy
mound, and
clip thy
sacred hair.
Some ease at
least those
pious rites
may give,
And soothe
my sorrows,
while I bear
to live.
Howe'er,
reluctant as
I am, I stay
And share
your feast;
but with the
dawn of day,
(O king of
men!) it
claims thy
royal care,
That Greece
the
warrior's
funeral pile
prepare,
And bid the
forests
fall: (such
rites are
paid
To heroes
slumbering
in eternal
shade:)
Then, when
his earthly
part shall
mount in
fire,
Let the
leagued
squadrons to
their posts
retire."
He spoke:
they hear
him, and the
word obey;
The rage of
hunger and
of thirst
allay,
Then ease in
sleep the
labours of
the day.
But great
Pelides,
stretch'd
along the
shore,
Where,
dash'd on
rocks, the
broken
billows
roar,
Lies inly
groaning;
while on
either hand
The martial
Myrmidons
confusedly
stand.
Along the
grass his
languid
members
fall,
Tired with
his chase
around the
Trojan wall;
Hush'd by
the murmurs
of the
rolling
deep,
At length he
sinks in the
soft arms of
sleep.
When lo! the
shade,
before his
closing
eyes,
Of sad
Patroclus
rose, or
seem'd to
rise:
In the same
robe he
living wore,
he came:
In stature,
voice, and
pleasing
look, the
same.
The form
familiar
hover'd o'er
his head,
"And sleeps
Achilles?
(thus the
phantom
said:)
Sleeps my
Achilles,
his
Patroclus
dead?
Living, I
seem'd his
dearest,
tenderest
care,
But now
forgot, I
wander in
the air.
Let my pale
corse the
rites of
burial know,
And give me
entrance in
the realms
below:
Till then
the spirit
finds no
resting-place,
But here and
there the
unbodied
spectres
chase
The vagrant
dead around
the dark
abode,
Forbid to
cross the
irremeable
flood.
Now give thy
hand; for to
the farther
shore
When once we
pass, the
soul returns
no more:
When once
the last
funereal
flames
ascend,
No more
shall meet
Achilles and
his friend;
No more our
thoughts to
those we
loved make
known;
Or quit the
dearest, to
converse
alone.
Me fate has
sever'd from
the sons of
earth,
The fate
fore-doom'd
that waited
from my
birth:
Thee too it
waits;
before the
Trojan wall
Even great
and godlike
thou art
doom'd to
fall.
Hear then;
and as in
fate and
love we
join,
Ah suffer
that my
bones may
rest with
thine!
Together
have we
lived;
together
bred,
One house
received us,
and one
table fed;
That golden
urn, thy
goddess-mother
gave,
May mix our
ashes in one
common
grave."
"And is it
thou? (he
answers) To
my sight(283)
Once more
return'st
thou from
the realms
of night?
O more than
brother!
Think each
office paid,
Whate'er can
rest a
discontented
shade;
But grant
one last
embrace,
unhappy boy!
Afford at
least that
melancholy
joy."
He said, and
with his
longing arms
essay'd
In vain to
grasp the
visionary
shade!
Like a thin
smoke he
sees the
spirit fly,(284)
And hears a
feeble,
lamentable
cry.
Confused he
wakes;
amazement
breaks the
bands
Of golden
sleep, and
starting
from the
sands,
Pensive he
muses with
uplifted
hands:
"'Tis true,
'tis
certain;
man, though
dead,
retains
Part of
himself; the
immortal
mind
remains:
The form
subsists
without the
body's aid,
Aerial
semblance,
and an empty
shade!
This night
my friend,
so late in
battle lost,
Stood at my
side, a
pensive,
plaintive
ghost:
Even now
familiar, as
in life, he
came;
Alas! how
different!
yet how like
the same!"
Thus while
he spoke,
each eye
grew big
with tears:
And now the
rosy-finger'd
morn
appears,
Shows every
mournful
face with
tears
o'erspread,
And glares
on the pale
visage of
the dead.
But
Agamemnon,
as the rites
demand,
With mules
and waggons
sends a
chosen band
To load the
timber, and
the pile to
rear;
A charge
consign'd to
Merion's
faithful
care.
With proper
instruments
they take
the road,
Axes to cut,
and ropes to
sling the
load.
First march
the heavy
mules,
securely
slow,
O'er hills,
o'er dales,
o'er crags,
o'er rocks
they go:(285)
Jumping,
high o'er
the shrubs
of the rough
ground,
Rattle the
clattering
cars, and
the shock'd
axles bound
But when
arrived at
Ida's
spreading
woods,(286)
(Fair Ida,
water'd with
descending
floods,)
Loud sounds
the axe,
redoubling
strokes on
strokes;
On all sides
round the
forest hurls
her oaks
Headlong.
Deep echoing
groan the
thickets
brown;
Then
rustling,
crackling,
crashing,
thunder
down.
The wood the
Grecians
cleave,
prepared to
burn;
And the slow
mules the
same rough
road return
The sturdy
woodmen
equal
burdens bore
(Such charge
was given
them) to the
sandy shore;
There on the
spot which
great
Achilles
show'd,
They eased
their
shoulders,
and disposed
the load;
Circling
around the
place, where
times to
come
Shall view
Patroclus'
and
Achilles'
tomb.
The hero
bids his
martial
troops
appear
High on
their cars
in all the
pomp of war;
Each in
refulgent
arms his
limbs
attires,
All mount
their
chariots,
combatants
and squires.
The chariots
first
proceed, a
shining
train;
Then clouds
of foot that
smoke along
the plain;
Next these
the
melancholy
band appear;
Amidst, lay
dead
Patroclus on
the bier;
O'er all the
corse their
scattered
locks they
throw;
Achilles
next,
oppress'd
with mighty
woe,
Supporting
with his
hands the
hero's head,
Bends o'er
the extended
body of the
dead.
Patroclus
decent on
the
appointed
ground
They place,
and heap the
sylvan pile
around.
But great
Achilles
stands apart
in prayer,
And from his
head divides
the yellow
hair;
Those
curling
locks which
from his
youth he
vow'd,(287)
And sacred
grew, to
Sperchius'
honour'd
flood:
Then
sighing, to
the deep his
locks he
cast,
And roll'd
his eyes
around the
watery
waste:
"Sperchius!
whose waves
in mazy
errors lost
Delightful
roll along
my native
coast!
To whom we
vainly
vow'd, at
our return,
These locks
to fall, and
hecatombs to
burn:
Full fifty
rams to
bleed in
sacrifice,
Where to the
day thy
silver
fountains
rise,
And where in
shade of
consecrated
bowers
Thy altars
stand,
perfumed
with native
flowers!
So vow'd my
father, but
he vow'd in
vain;
No more
Achilles
sees his
native
plain;
In that vain
hope these
hairs no
longer grow,
Patroclus
bears them
to the
shades
below."
Thus o'er
Patroclus
while the
hero pray'd,
On his cold
hand the
sacred lock
he laid.
Once more
afresh the
Grecian
sorrows
flow:
And now the
sun had set
upon their
woe;
But to the
king of men
thus spoke
the chief:
"Enough,
Atrides!
give the
troops
relief:
Permit the
mourning
legions to
retire,
And let the
chiefs alone
attend the
pyre;
The pious
care be
ours, the
dead to
burn--"
He said: the
people to
their ships
return:
While those
deputed to
inter the
slain
Heap with a
rising
pyramid the
plain.(288)
A hundred
foot in
length, a
hundred
wide,
The growing
structure
spreads on
every side;
High on the
top the
manly corse
they lay,
And well-fed
sheep and
sable oxen
slay:
Achilles
covered with
their fat
the dead,
And the
piled
victims
round the
body spread;
Then jars of
honey, and
of fragrant
oil,
Suspends
around,
low-bending
o'er the
pile.
Four
sprightly
coursers,
with a
deadly groan
Pour forth
their lives,
and on the
pyre are
thrown.
Of nine
large dogs,
domestic at
his board,
Fall two,
selected to
attend their
lord,
Then last of
all, and
horrible to
tell,
Sad
sacrifice!
twelve
Trojan
captives
fell.(289)
On these the
rage of fire
victorious
preys,
Involves and
joins them
in one
common
blaze.
Smear'd with
the bloody
rites, he
stands on
high,
And calls
the spirit
with a
dreadful
cry:(290)
"All hail,
Patroclus!
let thy
vengeful
ghost
Hear, and
exult, on
Pluto's
dreary
coast.
Behold
Achilles'
promise
fully paid,
Twelve
Trojan
heroes
offer'd to
thy shade;
But heavier
fates on
Hector's
corse
attend,
Saved from
the flames,
for hungry
dogs to
rend."
So spake he,
threatening:
but the gods
made vain
His threat,
and guard
inviolate
the slain:
Celestial
Venus
hover'd o'er
his head,
And roseate
unguents,
heavenly
fragrance!
shed:
She watch'd
him all the
night and
all the day,
And drove
the
bloodhounds
from their
destined
prey.
Nor sacred
Phoebus less
employ'd his
care;
He pour'd
around a
veil of
gather'd
air,
And kept the
nerves
undried, the
flesh
entire,
Against the
solar beam
and Sirian
fire.
Nor yet the
pile, where
dead
Patroclus
lies,
Smokes, nor
as yet the
sullen
flames
arise;
But, fast
beside,
Achilles
stood in
prayer,
Invoked the
gods whose
spirit moves
the air,
And victims
promised,
and
libations
cast,
To gentle
Zephyr and
the Boreal
blast:
He call'd
the aerial
powers,
along the
skies
To breathe,
and whisper
to the fires
to rise.
The winged
Iris heard
the hero's
call,
And instant
hasten'd to
their airy
hall,
Where in old
Zephyr's
open courts
on high,
Sat all the
blustering
brethren of
the sky.
She shone
amidst them,
on her
painted bow;
The rocky
pavement
glitter'd
with the
show.
All from the
banquet
rise, and
each invites
The various
goddess to
partake the
rites.
"Not so (the
dame
replied), I
haste to go
To sacred
Ocean, and
the floods
below:
Even now our
solemn
hecatombs
attend,
And heaven
is feasting
on the
world's
green end
With
righteous
Ethiops
(uncorrupted
train!)
Far on the
extremest
limits of
the main.
But Peleus'
son
entreats,
with
sacrifice,
The western
spirit, and
the north,
to rise!
Let on
Patroclus'
pile your
blast be
driven,
And bear the
blazing
honours high
to heaven."
Swift as the
word she
vanish'd
from their
view;
Swift as the
word the
winds
tumultuous
flew;
Forth burst
the stormy
band with
thundering
roar,
And heaps on
heaps the
clouds are
toss'd
before.
To the wide
main then
stooping
from the
skies,
The heaving
deeps in
watery
mountains
rise:
Troy feels
the blast
along her
shaking
walls,
Till on the
pile the
gather'd
tempest
falls.
The
structure
crackles in
the roaring
fires,
And all the
night the
plenteous
flame
aspires.
All night
Achilles
hails
Patroclus'
soul,
With large
libations
from the
golden bowl.
As a poor
father,
helpless and
undone,
Mourns o'er
the ashes of
an only son,
Takes a sad
pleasure the
last bones
to burn,
And pours in
tears, ere
yet they
close the
urn:
So stay'd
Achilles,
circling
round the
shore,
So watch'd
the flames,
till now
they flame
no more.
'Twas when,
emerging
through the
shades of
night.
The morning
planet told
the approach
of light;
And, fast
behind,
Aurora's
warmer ray
O'er the
broad ocean
pour'd the
golden day:
Then sank
the blaze,
the pile no
longer
burn'd,
And to their
caves the
whistling
winds
return'd:
Across the
Thracian
seas their
course they
bore;
The ruffled
seas beneath
their
passage
roar.
Then parting
from the
pile he
ceased to
weep,
And sank to
quiet in the
embrace of
sleep,
Exhausted
with his
grief:
meanwhile
the crowd
Of thronging
Grecians
round
Achilles
stood;
The tumult
waked him:
from his
eyes he
shook
Unwilling
slumber, and
the chiefs
bespoke:
"Ye kings
and princes
of the
Achaian
name!
First let us
quench the
yet
remaining
flame
With sable
wine; then,
as the rites
direct,
The hero's
bones with
careful view
select:
(Apart, and
easy to be
known they
lie
Amidst the
heap, and
obvious to
the eye:
The rest
around the
margin will
be seen
Promiscuous,
steeds and
immolated
men:)
These
wrapp'd in
double cauls
of fat,
prepare;
And in the
golden vase
dispose with
care;
There let
them rest
with decent
honour laid,
Till I shall
follow to
the infernal
shade.
Meantime
erect the
tomb with
pious hands,
A common
structure on
the humble
sands:
Hereafter
Greece some
nobler work
may raise,
And late
posterity
record our
praise!"
The Greeks
obey; where
yet the
embers glow,
Wide o'er
the pile the
sable wine
they throw,
And deep
subsides the
ashy heap
below.
Next the
white bones
his sad
companions
place,
With tears
collected,
in the
golden vase.
The sacred
relics to
the tent
they bore;
The urn a
veil of
linen
covered
o'er.
That done,
they bid the
sepulchre
aspire,
And cast the
deep
foundations
round the
pyre;
High in the
midst they
heap the
swelling bed
Of rising
earth,
memorial of
the dead.
The swarming
populace the
chief
detains,
And leads
amidst a
wide extent
of plains;
There placed
them round:
then from
the ships
proceeds
A train of
oxen, mules,
and stately
steeds,
Vases and
tripods (for
the funeral
games),
Resplendent
brass, and
more
resplendent
dames.
First stood
the prizes
to reward
the force
Of rapid
racers in
the dusty
course:
A woman for
the first,
in beauty's
bloom,
Skill'd in
the needle,
and the
labouring
loom;
And a large
vase, where
two bright
handles
rise,
Of twenty
measures its
capacious
size.
The second
victor
claims a
mare
unbroke,
Big with a
mule,
unknowing of
the yoke:
The third, a
charger yet
untouch'd by
flame;
Four ample
measures
held the
shining
frame:
Two golden
talents for
the fourth
were placed:
An ample
double bowl
contents the
last.
These in
fair order
ranged upon
the plain,
The hero,
rising, thus
address'd
the train:
"Behold the
prizes,
valiant
Greeks!
decreed
To the brave
rulers of
the racing
steed;
Prizes which
none beside
ourself
could gain,
Should our
immortal
coursers
take the
plain;
(A race
unrivall'd,
which from
ocean's god
Peleus
received,
and on his
son
bestow'd.)
But this no
time our
vigour to
display;
Nor suit,
with them,
the games of
this sad
day:
Lost is
Patroclus
now, that
wont to deck
Their
flowing
manes, and
sleek their
glossy neck.
Sad, as they
shared in
human grief,
they stand,
And trail
those
graceful
honours on
the sand!
Let others
for the
noble task
prepare,
Who trust
the courser
and the
flying car."
Fired at his
word the
rival racers
rise;
But far the
first
Eumelus
hopes the
prize,
Famed though
Pieria for
the fleetest
breed,
And skill'd
to manage
the
high-bounding
steed.
With equal
ardour bold
Tydides
swell'd,
The steeds
of Tros
beneath his
yoke
compell'd
(Which late
obey'd the
Dardan
chiefs
command,
When scarce
a god
redeem'd him
from his
hand).
Then
Menelaus his
Podargus
brings,
And the
famed
courser of
the king of
kings:
Whom rich
Echepolus
(more rich
than brave),
To 'scape
the wars, to
Agamemnon
gave,
(Ęthe her
name) at
home to end
his days;
Base wealth
preferring
to eternal
praise.
Next him
Antilochus
demands the
course
With beating
heart, and
cheers his
Pylian
horse.
Experienced
Nestor gives
his son the
reins,
Directs his
judgment,
and his heat
restrains;
Nor idly
warns the
hoary sire,
nor hears
The prudent
son with
unattending
ears.
"My son!
though
youthful
ardour fire
thy breast,
The gods
have loved
thee, and
with arts
have
bless'd;
Neptune and
Jove on thee
conferr'd
the skill
Swift round
the goal to
turn the
flying
wheel.
To guide thy
conduct
little
precept
needs;
But slow,
and past
their
vigour, are
my steeds.
Fear not thy
rivals,
though for
swiftness
known;
Compare
those
rivals'
judgment and
thy own:
It is not
strength,
but art,
obtains the
prize,
And to be
swift is
less than to
be wise.
'Tis more by
art than
force of
numerous
strokes
The
dexterous
woodman
shapes the
stubborn
oaks;
By art the
pilot,
through the
boiling deep
And howling
tempest,
steers the
fearless
ship;
And 'tis the
artist wins
the glorious
course;
Not those
who trust in
chariots and
in horse.
In vain,
unskilful to
the goal
they strive,
And short,
or wide, the
ungovern'd
courser
drive:
While with
sure skill,
though with
inferior
steeds,
The knowing
racer to his
end
proceeds;
Fix'd on the
goal his eye
foreruns the
course,
His hand
unerring
steers the
steady
horse,
And now
contracts,
or now
extends the
rein,
Observing
still the
foremost on
the plain.
Mark then
the goal,
'tis easy to
be found;
Yon aged
trunk, a
cubit from
the ground;
Of some once
stately oak
the last
remains,
Or hardy
fir,
unperish'd
with the
rains:
Inclosed
with stones,
conspicuous
from afar;
And round, a
circle for
the wheeling
car.
(Some tomb
perhaps of
old, the
dead to
grace;
Or then, as
now, the
limit of a
race.)
Bear close
to this, and
warily
proceed,
A little
bending to
the
left-hand
steed;
But urge the
right, and
give him all
the reins;
While thy
strict hand
his fellow's
head
restrains,
And turns
him short;
till,
doubling as
they roll,
The wheel's
round naves
appear to
brush the
goal.
Yet (not to
break the
car, or lame
the horse)
Clear of the
stony heap
direct the
course;
Lest through
incaution
failing,
thou mayst
be
A joy to
others, a
reproach to
me.
So shalt
thou pass
the goal,
secure of
mind,
And leave
unskilful
swiftness
far behind:
Though thy
fierce rival
drove the
matchless
steed
Which bore
Adrastus, of
celestial
breed;
Or the famed
race,
through all
the regions
known,
That whirl'd
the car of
proud
Laomedon."
Thus (nought
unsaid) the
much-advising
sage
Concludes;
then sat,
stiff with
unwieldy
age.
Next bold
Meriones was
seen to
rise,
The last,
but not
least ardent
for the
prize.
They mount
their seats;
the lots
their place
dispose
(Roll'd in
his helmet,
these
Achilles
throws).
Young Nestor
leads the
race:
Eumelus
then;
And next the
brother of
the king of
men:
Thy lot,
Meriones,
the fourth
was cast;
And, far the
bravest,
Diomed, was
last.
They stand
in order, an
impatient
train:
Pelides
points the
barrier on
the plain,
And sends
before old
Phoenix to
the place,
To mark the
racers, and
to judge the
race.
At once the
coursers
from the
barrier
bound;
The lifted
scourges all
at once
resound;
Their heart,
their eyes,
their voice,
they send
before;
And up the
champaign
thunder from
the shore:
Thick, where
they drive,
the dusty
clouds
arise,
And the lost
courser in
the
whirlwind
flies;
Loose on
their
shoulders
the long
manes
reclined,
Float in
their speed,
and dance
upon the
wind:
The smoking
chariots,
rapid as
they bound,
Now seem to
touch the
sky, and now
the ground.
While hot
for fame,
and conquest
all their
care,
(Each o'er
his flying
courser hung
in air,)
Erect with
ardour,
poised upon
the rein,
They pant,
they
stretch,
they shout
along the
plain.
Now (the
last compass
fetch'd
around the
goal)
At the near
prize each
gathers all
his soul,
Each burns
with double
hope, with
double pain,
Tears up the
shore, and
thunders
toward the
main.
First flew
Eumelus on
Pheretian
steeds;
With those
of Tros bold
Diomed
succeeds:
Close on
Eumelus'
back they
puff the
wind,
And seem
just
mounting on
his car
behind;
Full on his
neck he
feels the
sultry
breeze,
And,
hovering
o'er, their
stretching
shadows
sees.
Then had he
lost, or
left a
doubtful
prize;
But angry
Phoebus to
Tydides
flies,
Strikes from
his hand the
scourge, and
renders vain
His
matchless
horses'
labour on
the plain.
Rage fills
his eye with
anguish, to
survey
Snatch'd
from his
hope the
glories of
the day.
The fraud
celestial
Pallas sees
with pain,
Springs to
her knight,
and gives
the scourge
again,
And fills
his steeds
with vigour.
At a stroke
She breaks
his rival's
chariot from
the yoke:
No more
their way
the startled
horses held;
The car
reversed
came
rattling on
the field;
Shot
headlong
from his
seat, beside
the wheel,
Prone on the
dust the
unhappy
master fell;
His batter'd
face and
elbows
strike the
ground;
Nose, mouth,
and front,
one
undistinguish'd
wound:
Grief stops
his voice, a
torrent
drowns his
eyes:
Before him
far the glad
Tydides
flies;
Minerva's
spirit
drives his
matchless
pace,
And crowns
him victor
of the
labour'd
race.
The next,
though
distant,
Menelaus
succeeds;
While thus
young Nestor
animates his
steeds:
"Now, now,
my generous
pair, exert
your force;
Not that we
hope to
match
Tydides'
horse,
Since great
Minerva
wings their
rapid way,
And gives
their lord
the honours
of the day;
But reach
Atrides!
shall his
mare outgo
Your
swiftness?
vanquish'd
by a female
foe?
Through your
neglect, if
lagging on
the plain
The last
ignoble gift
be all we
gain,
No more
shall
Nestor's
hand your
food supply,
The old
man's fury
rises, and
ye die.
Haste then:
yon narrow
road, before
our sight,
Presents the
occasion,
could we use
it right."
Thus he. The
coursers at
their
master's
threat
With quicker
steps the
sounding
champaign
beat.
And now
Antilochus
with nice
survey
Observes the
compass of
the hollow
way.
'Twas where,
by force of
wintry
torrents
torn,
Fast by the
road a
precipice
was worn:
Here, where
but one
could pass,
to shun the
throng
The Spartan
hero's
chariot
smoked
along.
Close up the
venturous
youth
resolves to
keep,
Still edging
near, and
bears him
toward the
steep.
Atrides,
trembling,
casts his
eye below,
And wonders
at the
rashness of
his foe.
"Hold, stay
your
steeds--What
madness thus
to ride
This narrow
way! take
larger field
(he cried),
Or both must
fall."--Atrides
cried in
vain;
He flies
more fast,
and throws
up all the
rein.
Far as an
able arm the
disk can
send,
When
youthful
rivals their
full force
extend,
So far,
Antilochus!
thy chariot
flew
Before the
king: he,
cautious,
backward
drew
His horse
compell'd;
foreboding
in his fears
The rattling
ruin of the
clashing
cars,
The
floundering
coursers
rolling on
the plain,
And conquest
lost through
frantic
haste to
gain.
But thus
upbraids his
rival as he
flies:
"Go, furious
youth!
ungenerous
and unwise!
Go, but
expect not
I'll the
prize
resign;
Add perjury
to fraud,
and make it
thine--"
Then to his
steeds with
all his
force he
cries,
"Be swift,
be vigorous,
and regain
the prize!
Your rivals,
destitute of
youthful
force,
With
fainting
knees shall
labour in
the course,
And yield
the glory
yours."--The
steeds obey;
Already at
their heels
they wing
their way,
And seem
already to
retrieve the
day.
Meantime the
Grecians in
a ring
beheld
The coursers
bounding
o'er the
dusty field.
The first
who mark'd
them was the
Cretan king;
High on a
rising
ground,
above the
ring,
The monarch
sat: from
whence with
sure survey
He well
observed the
chief who
led the way,
And heard
from far his
animating
cries,
And saw the
foremost
steed with
sharpen'd
eyes;
On whose
broad front
a blaze of
shining
white,
Like the
full moon,
stood
obvious to
the sight.
He saw; and
rising, to
the Greeks
begun:
"Are yonder
horse
discern'd by
me alone?
Or can ye,
all, another
chief
survey,
And other
steeds than
lately led
the way?
Those,
though the
swiftest, by
some god
withheld,
Lie sure
disabled in
the middle
field:
For, since
the goal
they
doubled,
round the
plain
I search to
find them,
but I search
in vain.
Perchance
the reins
forsook the
driver's
hand,
And, turn'd
too short,
he tumbled
on the
strand,
Shot from
the chariot;
while his
coursers
stray
With frantic
fury from
the destined
way.
Rise then
some other,
and inform
my sight,
For these
dim eyes,
perhaps,
discern not
right;
Yet sure he
seems, to
judge by
shape and
air,
The great
Ętolian
chief,
renown'd in
war."
"Old man!
(Oileus
rashly thus
replies)
Thy tongue
too hastily
confers the
prize;
Of those who
view the
course, nor
sharpest
eyed,
Nor
youngest,
yet the
readiest to
decide.
Eumelus'
steeds, high
bounding in
the chase,
Still, as at
first,
unrivall'd
lead the
race:
I well
discern him,
as he shakes
the rein,
And hear his
shouts
victorious
o'er the
plain."
Thus he.
Idomeneus,
incensed,
rejoin'd:
"Barbarous
of words!
and arrogant
of mind!
Contentious
prince, of
all the
Greeks
beside
The last in
merit, as
the first in
pride!
To vile
reproach
what answer
can we make?
A goblet or
a tripod let
us stake,
And be the
king the
judge. The
most unwise
Will learn
their
rashness,
when they
pay the
price."
He said: and
Ajax, by mad
passion
borne,
Stern had
replied;
fierce scorn
enhancing
scorn
To fell
extremes.
But Thetis'
godlike son
Awful amidst
them rose,
and thus
begun:
"Forbear, ye
chiefs!
reproachful
to contend;
Much would
ye blame,
should
others thus
offend:
And lo! the
approaching
steeds your
contest
end."
No sooner
had he
spoke, but
thundering
near,
Drives,
through a
stream of
dust, the
charioteer.
High o'er
his head the
circling
lash he
wields:
His bounding
horses
scarcely
touch the
fields:
His car
amidst the
dusty
whirlwind
roll'd,
Bright with
the mingled
blaze of tin
and gold,
Refulgent
through the
cloud: no
eye could
find
The track
his flying
wheels had
left behind:
And the
fierce
coursers
urged their
rapid pace
So swift, it
seem'd a
flight, and
not a race.
Now victor
at the goal
Tydides
stands,
Quits his
bright car,
and springs
upon the
sands;
From the hot
steeds the
sweaty
torrents
stream;
The
well-plied
whip is hung
athwart the
beam:
With joy
brave
Sthenelus
receives the
prize,
The
tripod-vase,
and dame
with radiant
eyes:
These to the
ships his
train
triumphant
leads,
The chief
himself
unyokes the
panting
steeds.
Young Nestor
follows (who
by art, not
force,
O'erpass'd
Atrides)
second in
the course.
Behind,
Atrides
urged the
race, more
near
Than to the
courser in
his swift
career
The
following
car, just
touching
with his
heel
And brushing
with his
tail the
whirling
wheel:
Such, and so
narrow now
the space
between
The rivals,
late so
distant on
the green;
So soon
swift Ęthe
her lost
ground
regain'd,
One length,
one moment,
had the race
obtain'd.
Merion
pursued, at
greater
distance
still,
With tardier
coursers,
and inferior
skill.
Last came,
Admetus! thy
unhappy son;
Slow dragged
the steeds
his batter'd
chariot on:
Achilles
saw, and
pitying thus
begun:
"Behold! the
man whose
matchless
art
surpass'd
The sons of
Greece! the
ablest, yet
the last!
Fortune
denies, but
justice bids
us pay
(Since great
Tydides
bears the
first away)
To him the
second
honours of
the day."
The Greeks
consent with
loud-applauding
cries,
And then
Eumelus had
received the
prize,
But youthful
Nestor,
jealous of
his fame,
The award
opposes, and
asserts his
claim.
"Think not
(he cries) I
tamely will
resign,
O Peleus'
son! the
mare so
justly mine.
What if the
gods, the
skilful to
confound,
Have thrown
the horse
and horseman
to the
ground?
Perhaps he
sought not
heaven by
sacrifice,
And vows
omitted
forfeited
the prize.
If yet
(distinction
to thy
friend to
show,
And please a
soul
desirous to
bestow)
Some gift
must grace
Eumelus,
view thy
store
Of beauteous
handmaids,
steeds, and
shining ore;
An ample
present let
him thence
receive,
And Greece
shall praise
thy generous
thirst to
give.
But this my
prize I
never shall
forego;
This, who
but touches,
warriors! is
my foe."
Thus spake
the youth;
nor did his
words
offend;
Pleased with
the
well-turn'd
flattery of
a friend,
Achilles
smiled: "The
gift
proposed (he
cried),
Antilochus!
we shall
ourself
provide.
With plates
of brass the
corslet
cover'd
o'er,
(The same
renown'd
Asteropaeus
wore,)
Whose
glittering
margins
raised with
silver
shine,
(No vulgar
gift,)
Eumelus!
shall be
thine."
He said:
Automedon at
his command
The corslet
brought, and
gave it to
his hand.
Distinguish'd
by his
friend, his
bosom glows
With
generous
joy: then
Menelaus
rose;
The herald
placed the
sceptre in
his hands,
And still'd
the clamour
of the
shouting
bands.
Not without
cause
incensed at
Nestor's
son,
And inly
grieving,
thus the
king begun:
"The praise
of wisdom,
in thy youth
obtain'd,
An act so
rash,
Antilochus!
has stain'd.
Robb'd of my
glory and my
just reward,
To you, O
Grecians! be
my wrong
declared:
So not a
leader shall
our conduct
blame,
Or judge me
envious of a
rival's
fame.
But shall
not we,
ourselves,
the truth
maintain?
What needs
appealing in
a fact so
plain?
What Greek
shall blame
me, if I bid
thee rise,
And
vindicate by
oath th'
ill-gotten
prize?
Rise if thou
darest,
before thy
chariot
stand,
The driving
scourge
high-lifted
in thy hand;
And touch
thy steeds,
and swear
thy whole
intent
Was but to
conquer, not
to
circumvent.
Swear by
that god
whose liquid
arms
surround
The globe,
and whose
dread
earthquakes
heave the
ground!"
The prudent
chief with
calm
attention
heard;
Then mildly
thus:
"Excuse, if
youth have
err'd;
Superior as
thou art,
forgive the
offence,
Nor I thy
equal, or in
years, or
sense.
Thou know'st
the errors
of unripen'd
age,
Weak are its
counsels,
headlong is
its rage.
The prize I
quit, if
thou thy
wrath
resign;
The mare, or
aught thou
ask'st, be
freely thine
Ere I become
(from thy
dear
friendship
torn)
Hateful to
thee, and to
the gods
forsworn."
So spoke
Antilochus;
and at the
word
The mare
contested to
the king
restored.
Joy swells
his soul: as
when the
vernal grain
Lifts the
green ear
above the
springing
plain,
The fields
their
vegetable
life renew,
And laugh
and glitter
with the
morning dew;
Such joy the
Spartan's
shining face
o'erspread,
And lifted
his gay
heart, while
thus he
said:
"Still may
our souls, O
generous
youth! agree
'Tis now
Atrides'
turn to
yield to
thee.
Rash heat
perhaps a
moment might
control,
Not break,
the settled
temper of
thy soul.
Not but (my
friend) 'tis
still the
wiser way
To waive
contention
with
superior
sway;
For ah! how
few, who
should like
thee offend,
Like thee,
have talents
to regain
the friend!
To plead
indulgence,
and thy
fault atone,
Suffice thy
father's
merit and
thy own:
Generous
alike, for
me, the sire
and son
Have greatly
suffer'd,
and have
greatly
done.
I yield;
that all may
know, my
soul can
bend,
Nor is my
pride
preferr'd
before my
friend."
He said; and
pleased his
passion to
command,
Resign'd the
courser to
Noemon's
hand,
Friend of
the youthful
chief:
himself
content,
The shining
charger to
his vessel
sent.
The golden
talents
Merion next
obtain'd;
The fifth
reward, the
double bowl,
remain'd.
Achilles
this to
reverend
Nestor
bears.
And thus the
purpose of
his gift
declares:
"Accept thou
this, O
sacred sire!
(he said)
In dear
memorial of
Patroclus
dead;
Dead and for
ever lost
Patroclus
lies,
For ever
snatch'd
from our
desiring
eyes!
Take thou
this token
of a
grateful
heart,
Though 'tis
not thine to
hurl the
distant
dart,
The quoit to
toss, the
ponderous
mace to
wield,
Or urge the
race, or
wrestle on
the field:
Thy pristine
vigour age
has
overthrown,
But left the
glory of the
past thy
own."
He said, and
placed the
goblet at
his side;
With joy the
venerable
king
replied:
"Wisely and
well, my
son, thy
words have
proved
A senior
honour'd,
and a friend
beloved!
Too true it
is, deserted
of my
strength,
These
wither'd
arms and
limbs have
fail'd at
length.
Oh! had I
now that
force I felt
of yore,
Known
through
Buprasium
and the
Pylian
shore!
Victorious
then in
every solemn
game,
Ordain'd to
Amarynces'
mighty name;
The brave
Epeians gave
my glory
way,
Ętolians,
Pylians, all
resign'd the
day.
I quell'd
Clytomedes
in fights of
hand,
And backward
hurl'd
Ancaeus on
the sand,
Surpass'd
Iphyclus in
the swift
career,
Phyleus and
Polydorus
with the
spear.
The sons of
Actor won
the prize of
horse,
But won by
numbers, not
by art or
force:
For the
famed twins,
impatient to
survey
Prize after
prize by
Nestor borne
away,
Sprung to
their car;
and with
united pains
One lash'd
the
coursers,
while one
ruled the
reins.
Such once I
was! Now to
these tasks
succeeds
A younger
race, that
emulate our
deeds:
I yield,
alas! (to
age who must
not yield?)
Though once
the foremost
hero of the
field.
Go thou, my
son! by
generous
friendship
led,
With martial
honours
decorate the
dead:
While
pleased I
take the
gift thy
hands
present,
(Pledge of
benevolence,
and kind
intent,)
Rejoiced, of
all the
numerous
Greeks, to
see
Not one but
honours
sacred age
and me:
Those due
distinctions
thou so well
canst pay,
May the just
gods return
another
day!"
Proud of the
gift, thus
spake the
full of
days:
Achilles
heard him,
prouder of
the praise.
The prizes
next are
order'd to
the field,
For the bold
champions
who the
caestus
wield.
A stately
mule, as yet
by toils
unbroke,
Of six
years' age,
unconscious
of the yoke,
Is to the
circus led,
and firmly
bound;
Next stands
a goblet,
massy,
large, and
round.
Achilles
rising,
thus: "Let
Greece
excite
Two heroes
equal to
this hardy
fight;
Who dare the
foe with
lifted arms
provoke,
And rush
beneath the
long-descending
stroke.
On whom
Apollo shall
the palm
bestow,
And whom the
Greeks
supreme by
conquest
know,
This mule
his
dauntless
labours
shall repay,
The
vanquish'd
bear the
massy bowl
away."
This
dreadful
combat great
Epeus
chose;(291)
High o'er
the crowd,
enormous
bulk! he
rose,
And seized
the beast,
and thus
began to
say:
"Stand forth
some man, to
bear the
bowl away!
(Price of
his ruin:
for who
dares deny
This mule my
right; the
undoubted
victor I)
Others, 'tis
own'd, in
fields of
battle
shine,
But the
first
honours of
this fight
are mine;
For who
excels in
all? Then
let my foe
Draw near,
but first
his certain
fortune
know;
Secure this
hand shall
his whole
frame
confound,
Mash all his
bones, and
all his body
pound:
So let his
friends be
nigh, a
needful
train,
To heave the
batter'd
carcase off
the plain."
The giant
spoke; and
in a stupid
gaze
The host
beheld him,
silent with
amaze!
'Twas thou,
Euryalus!
who durst
aspire
To meet his
might, and
emulate thy
sire,
The great
Mecistheus;
who in days
of yore
In Theban
games the
noblest
trophy bore,
(The games
ordain'd
dead OEdipus
to grace,)
And singly
vanquish the
Cadmean
race.
Him great
Tydides
urges to
contend,
Warm with
the hopes of
conquest for
his friend;
Officious
with the
cincture
girds him
round;
And to his
wrist the
gloves of
death are
bound.
Amid the
circle now
each
champion
stands,
And poises
high in air
his iron
hands;
With
clashing
gauntlets
now they
fiercely
close,
Their
crackling
jaws re-echo
to the
blows,
And painful
sweat from
all their
members
flows.
At length
Epeus dealt
a weighty
blow
Full on the
cheek of his
unwary foe;
Beneath that
ponderous
arm's
resistless
sway
Down dropp'd
he,
nerveless,
and extended
lay.
As a large
fish, when
winds and
waters roar,
By some huge
billow
dash'd
against the
shore,
Lies
panting; not
less
batter'd
with his
wound,
The bleeding
hero pants
upon the
ground.
To rear his
fallen foe,
the victor
lends,
Scornful,
his hand;
and gives
him to his
friends;
Whose arms
support him,
reeling
through the
throng,
And dragging
his disabled
legs along;
Nodding, his
head hangs
down his
shoulder
o'er;
His mouth
and nostrils
pour the
clotted
gore;(292)
Wrapp'd
round in
mists he
lies, and
lost to
thought;
His friends
receive the
bowl, too
dearly
bought.
The third
bold game
Achilles
next
demands,
And calls
the
wrestlers to
the level
sands:
A massy
tripod for
the victor
lies,
Of twice six
oxen its
reputed
price;
And next,
the loser's
spirits to
restore,
A female
captive,
valued but
at four.
Scarce did
the chief
the vigorous
strife prop
When
tower-like
Ajax and
Ulysses
rose.
Amid the
ring each
nervous
rival
stands,
Embracing
rigid with
implicit
hands.
Close lock'd
above, their
heads and
arms are
mix'd:
Below, their
planted feet
at distance
fix'd;
Like two
strong
rafters
which the
builder
forms,
Proof to the
wintry winds
and howling
storms,
Their tops
connected,
but at wider
space
Fix'd on the
centre
stands their
solid base.
Now to the
grasp each
manly body
bends;
The humid
sweat from
every pore
descends;
Their bones
resound with
blows:
sides,
shoulders,
thighs
Swell to
each gripe,
and bloody
tumours
rise.
Nor could
Ulysses, for
his art
renown'd,
O'erturn the
strength of
Ajax on the
ground;
Nor could
the strength
of Ajax
overthrow
The watchful
caution of
his artful
foe.
While the
long strife
even tired
the lookers
on,
Thus to
Ulysses
spoke great
Telamon:
"Or let me
lift thee,
chief, or
lift thou
me:
Prove we our
force, and
Jove the
rest
decree."
He said;
and,
straining,
heaved him
off the
ground
With
matchless
strength;
that time
Ulysses
found
The strength
to evade,
and where
the nerves
combine
His ankle
struck: the
giant fell
supine;
Ulysses,
following,
on his bosom
lies;
Shouts of
applause run
rattling
through the
skies.
Ajax to lift
Ulysses next
essays;
He barely
stirr'd him,
but he could
not raise:
His knee
lock'd fast,
the foe's
attempt
denied;
And
grappling
close, they
tumbled side
by side.
Defiled with
honourable
dust they
roll,
Still
breathing
strife, and
unsubdued of
soul:
Again they
rage, again
to combat
rise;
When great
Achilles
thus divides
the prize:
"Your noble
vigour, O my
friends,
restrain;
Nor weary
out your
generous
strength in
vain.
Ye both have
won: let
others who
excel,
Now prove
that prowess
you have
proved so
well."
The hero's
words the
willing
chiefs obey,
From their
tired bodies
wipe the
dust away,
And, clothed
anew, the
following
games
survey.
And now
succeed the
gifts
ordain'd to
grace
The youths
contending
in the rapid
race:
A silver urn
that full
six measures
held,
By none in
weight or
workmanship
excell'd:
Sidonian
artists
taught the
frame to
shine,
Elaborate,
with
artifice
divine;
Whence
Tyrian
sailors did
the prize
transport,
And gave to
Thoas at the
Lemnian
port:
From him
descended,
good Eunaeus
heir'd
The glorious
gift; and,
for Lycaon
spared,
To brave
Patroclus
gave the
rich reward:
Now, the
same hero's
funeral
rites to
grace,
It stands
the prize of
swiftness in
the race.
A well-fed
ox was for
the second
placed;
And half a
talent must
content the
last.
Achilles
rising then
bespoke the
train:
"Who hope
the palm of
swiftness to
obtain,
Stand forth,
and bear
these prizes
from the
plain."
The hero
said, and
starting
from his
place,
Oilean Ajax
rises to the
race;
Ulysses
next; and he
whose speed
surpass'd
His youthful
equals,
Nestor's
son, the
last.
Ranged in a
line the
ready racers
stand;
Pelides
points the
barrier with
his hand;
All start at
once; Oileus
led the
race;
The next
Ulysses,
measuring
pace with
pace;
Behind him,
diligently
close, he
sped,
As closely
following as
the running
thread
The spindle
follows, and
displays the
charms
Of the fair
spinster's
breast and
moving arms:
Graceful in
motion thus,
his foe he
plies,
And treads
each
footstep ere
the dust can
rise;
His glowing
breath upon
his
shoulders
plays:
The admiring
Greeks loud
acclamations
raise:
To him they
give their
wishes,
hearts, and
eyes,
And send
their souls
before him
as he flies.
Now three
times turn'd
in prospect
of the goal,
The panting
chief to
Pallas lifts
his soul:
"Assist, O
goddess!"
thus in
thought he
pray'd!
And present
at his
thought
descends the
maid.
Buoy'd by
her heavenly
force, he
seems to
swim,
And feels a
pinion
lifting
every limb.
All fierce,
and ready
now the
prize to
gain,
Unhappy Ajax
stumbles on
the plain
(O'erturn'd
by Pallas),
where the
slippery
shore
Was clogg'd
with slimy
dung and
mingled
gore.
(The
self-same
place beside
Patroclus'
pyre,
Where late
the
slaughter'd
victims fed
the fire.)
Besmear'd
| |