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<h1>TALES OF TROY: ULYSSES THE SACKER OF CITIES<br/> by Andrew Lang</h1>
<p>Contents:</p>
<p>The Boyhood and Parents of Ulysses<br/>
How People Lived in the Time of Ulysses<br/>
The Wooing of Helen of the Fair Hands<br/>
The Stealing of Helen<br/>
Trojan Victories<br/>
Battle at the Ships<br/>
The Slaying and Avenging of Patroclus<br/>
The Cruelty of Achilles, and the Ransoming of Hector<br/>
How Ulysses Stole the Luck of Troy<br/>
The Battles with the Amazons and Memnon—the Death of Achilles<br/>
Ulysses Sails to seek the Son of Achilles.—The Valour of Eurypylus<br/>
The Slaying of Paris<br/>
How Ulysses Invented the Device of the Horse of Tree<br/>
The End of Troy and the Saving of Helen</p>
<h2>THE BOYHOOD AND PARENTS OF ULYSSES</h2>
<p>Long ago, in a little island called Ithaca, on the west coast of
Greece, there lived a king named Laertes. His kingdom was small
and mountainous. People used to say that Ithaca “lay like
a shield upon the sea,” which sounds as if it were a flat country.
But in those times shields were very large, and rose at the middle into
two peaks with a hollow between them, so that Ithaca, seen far off in
the sea, with her two chief mountain peaks, and a cloven valley between
them, looked exactly like a shield. The country was so rough that
men kept no horses, for, at that time, people drove, standing up in
little light chariots with two horses; they never rode, and there was
no cavalry in battle: men fought from chariots. When Ulysses,
the son of Laertes, King of Ithaca grew up, he never fought from a chariot,
for he had none, but always on foot.</p>
<p>If there were no horses in Ithaca, there was plenty of cattle.
The father of Ulysses had flocks of sheep, and herds of swine, and wild
goats, deer, and hares lived in the hills and in the plains. The
sea was full of fish of many sorts, which men caught with nets, and
with rod and line and hook.</p>
<p>Thus Ithaca was a good island to live in. The summer was long,
and there was hardly any winter; only a few cold weeks, and then the
swallows came back, and the plains were like a garden, all covered with
wild flowers—violets, lilies, narcissus, and roses. With
the blue sky and the blue sea, the island was beautiful. White
temples stood on the shores; and the Nymphs, a sort of fairies, had
their little shrines built of stone, with wild rose-bushes hanging over
them.</p>
<p>Other islands lay within sight, crowned with mountains, stretching
away, one behind the other, into the sunset. Ulysses in the course
of his life saw many rich countries, and great cities of men, but, wherever
he was, his heart was always in the little isle of Ithaca, where he
had learned how to row, and how to sail a boat, and how to shoot with
bow and arrow, and to hunt boars and stags, and manage his hounds.</p>
<p>The mother of Ulysses was called Anticleia: she was the daughter
of King Autolycus, who lived near Parnassus, a mountain on the mainland.
This King Autolycus was the most cunning of men. He was a Master
Thief, and could steal a man’s pillow from under his head, but
he does not seem to have been thought worse of for this. The Greeks
had a God of Thieves, named Hermes, whom Autolycus worshipped, and people
thought more good of his cunning tricks than harm of his dishonesty.
Perhaps these tricks of his were only practised for amusement; however
that may be, Ulysses became as artful as his grandfather; he was both
the bravest and the most cunning of men, but Ulysses never stole things,
except once, as we shall hear, from the enemy in time of war.
He showed his cunning in stratagems of war, and in many strange escapes
from giants and man-eaters.</p>
<p>Soon after Ulysses was born, his grandfather came to see his mother
and father in Ithaca. He was sitting at supper when the nurse
of Ulysses, whose name was Eurycleia, brought in the baby, and set him
on the knees of Autolycus, saying, “Find a name for your grandson,
for he is a child of many prayers.”</p>
<p>“I am very angry with many men and women in the world,”
said Autolycus, “so let the child’s name be <i>A Man of
Wrath</i>,” which, in Greek, was Odysseus. So the child
was called Odysseus by his own people, but the name was changed into
Ulysses, and we shall call him Ulysses.</p>
<p>We do not know much about Ulysses when he was a little boy, except
that he used to run about the garden with his father, asking questions,
and begging that he might have fruit trees “for his very own.”
He was a great pet, for his parents had no other son, so his father
gave him thirteen pear trees, and forty fig trees, and promised him
fifty rows of vines, all covered with grapes, which he could eat when
he liked, without asking leave of the gardener. So he was not
tempted to steal fruit, like his grandfather.</p>
<p>When Autolycus gave Ulysses his name, he said that he must come to
stay with him, when he was a big boy, and he would get splendid presents.
Ulysses was told about this, so, when he was a tall lad, he crossed
the sea and drove in his chariot to the old man’s house on Mount
Parnassus. Everybody welcomed him, and next day his uncles and
cousins and he went out to hunt a fierce wild boar, early in the morning.
Probably Ulysses took his own dog, named Argos, the best of hounds,
of which we shall hear again, long afterwards, for the dog lived to
be very old. Soon the hounds came on the scent of a wild boar,
and after them the men went, with spears in their hands, and Ulysses
ran foremost, for he was already the swiftest runner in Greece.</p>
<p>He came on a great boar lying in a tangled thicket of boughs and
bracken, a dark place where the sun never shone, nor could the rain
pierce through. Then the noise of the men’s shouts and the
barking of the dogs awakened the boar, and up he sprang, bristling all
over his back, and with fire shining from his eyes. In rushed
Ulysses first of all, with his spear raised to strike, but the boar
was too quick for him, and ran in, and drove his sharp tusk sideways,
ripping up the thigh of Ulysses. But the boar’s tusk missed
the bone, and Ulysses sent his sharp spear into the beast’s right
shoulder, and the spear went clean through, and the boar fell dead,
with a loud cry. The uncles of Ulysses bound up his wound carefully,
and sang a magical song over it, as the French soldiers wanted to do
to Joan of Arc when the arrow pierced her shoulder at the siege of Orleans.
Then the blood ceased to flow, and soon Ulysses was quite healed of
his wound. They thought that he would be a good warrior, and gave
him splendid presents, and when he went home again he told all that
had happened to his father and mother, and his nurse, Eurycleia.
But there was always a long white mark or scar above his left knee,
and about that scar we shall hear again, many years afterwards.</p>
<h2>HOW PEOPLE LIVED IN THE TIME OF ULYSSES</h2>
<p>When Ulysses was a young man he wished to marry a princess of his
own rank. Now there were at that time many kings in Greece, and
you must be told how they lived. Each king had his own little
kingdom, with his chief town, walled with huge walls of enormous stone.
Many of these walls are still standing, though the grass has grown over
the ruins of most of them, and in later years, men believed that those
walls must have been built by giants, the stones are so enormous.
Each king had nobles under him, rich men, and all had their palaces,
each with its courtyard, and its long hall, where the fire burned in
the midst, and the King and Queen sat beside it on high thrones, between
the four chief carved pillars that held up the roof. The thrones
were made of cedar wood and ivory, inlaid with gold, and there were
many other chairs and small tables for guests, and the walls and doors
were covered with bronze plates, and gold and silver, and sheets of
blue glass. Sometimes they were painted with pictures of bull
hunts, and a few of these pictures may still be seen. At night
torches were lit, and placed in the hands of golden figures of boys,
but all the smoke of fire and torches escaped by a hole in the roof,
and made the ceiling black. On the walls hung swords and spears
and helmets and shields, which needed to be often cleaned from the stains
of the smoke. The minstrel or poet sat beside the King and Queen,
and, after supper he struck his harp, and sang stories of old wars.
At night the King and Queen slept in their own place, and the women
in their own rooms; the princesses had their chambers upstairs, and
the young princes had each his room built separate in the courtyard.</p>
<p>There were bath rooms with polished baths, where guests were taken
when they arrived dirty from a journey. The guests lay at night
on beds in the portico, for the climate was warm. There were plenty
of servants, who were usually slaves taken in war, but they were very
kindly treated, and were friendly with their masters. No coined
money was used; people paid for things in cattle, or in weighed pieces
of gold. Rich men had plenty of gold cups, and gold-hilted swords,
and bracelets, and brooches. The kings were the leaders in war
and judges in peace, and did sacrifices to the Gods, killing cattle
and swine and sheep, on which they afterwards dined.</p>
<p>They dressed in a simple way, in a long smock of linen or silk, which
fell almost to the feet, but was tucked up into a belt round the waist,
and worn longer or shorter, as they happened to choose. Where
it needed fastening at the throat, golden brooches were used, beautifully
made, with safety pins. This garment was much like the plaid that
the Highlanders used to wear, with its belt and brooches. Over
it the Greeks wore great cloaks of woollen cloth when the weather was
cold, but these they did not use in battle. They fastened their
breastplates, in war, over their smocks, and had other armour covering
the lower parts of the body, and leg armour called “greaves”;
while the great shield which guarded the whole body from throat to ankles
was carried by a broad belt slung round the neck. The sword was
worn in another belt, crossing the shield belt. They had light
shoes in peace, and higher and heavier boots in war, or for walking
across country.</p>
<p>The women wore the smock, with more brooches and jewels than the
men; and had head coverings, with veils, and mantles over all, and necklaces
of gold and amber, earrings, and bracelets of gold or of bronze.
The colours of their dresses were various, chiefly white and purple;
and, when in mourning, they wore very dark blue, not black. All
the armour, and the sword blades and spearheads were made, not of steel
or iron, but of bronze, a mixture of copper and tin. The shields
were made of several thicknesses of leather, with a plating of bronze
above; tools, such as axes and ploughshares, were either of iron or
bronze; and so were the blades of knives and daggers.</p>
<p>To us the houses and way of living would have seemed very splendid,
and also, in some ways, rather rough. The palace floors, at least
in the house of Ulysses, were littered with bones and feet of the oxen
slain for food, but this happened when Ulysses had been long from home.
The floor of the hall in the house of Ulysses was not boarded with planks,
or paved with stone: it was made of clay; for he was a poor king of
small islands. The cooking was coarse: a pig or sheep was killed,
roasted and eaten immediately. We never hear of boiling meat,
and though people probably ate fish, we do not hear of their doing so,
except when no meat could be procured. Still some people must
have liked them; for in the pictures that were painted or cut in precious
stones in these times we see the half-naked fisherman walking home,
carrying large fish.</p>
<p>The people were wonderful workers of gold and bronze. Hundreds
of their golden jewels have been found in their graves, but probably
these were made and buried two or three centuries before the time of
Ulysses. The dagger blades had pictures of fights with lions,
and of flowers, inlaid on them, in gold of various colours, and in silver;
nothing so beautiful is made now. There are figures of men hunting
bulls on some of the gold cups, and these are wonderfully life-like.
The vases and pots of earthenware were painted in charming patterns:
in short, it was a splendid world to live in.</p>
<p>The people believed in many Gods, male and female, under the chief
God, Zeus. The Gods were thought to be taller than men, and immortal,
and to live in much the same way as men did, eating, drinking, and sleeping
in glorious palaces. Though they were supposed to reward good
men, and to punish people who broke their oaths and were unkind to strangers,
there were many stories told in which the Gods were fickle, cruel, selfish,
and set very bad examples to men. How far these stories were believed
is not sure; it is certain that “all men felt a need of the Gods,”
and thought that they were pleased by good actions and displeased by
evil. Yet, when a man felt that his behaviour had been bad, he
often threw the blame on the Gods, and said that they had misled him,
which really meant no more than that “he could not help it.”</p>
<p>There was a curious custom by which the princes bought wives from
the fathers of the princesses, giving cattle and gold, and bronze and
iron, but sometimes a prince got a wife as the reward for some very
brave action. A man would not give his daughter to a wooer whom
she did not love, even if he offered the highest price, at least this
must have been the general rule, for husbands and wives were very fond
of each other, and of their children, and husbands always allowed their
wives to rule the house, and give their advice on everything.
It was thought a very wicked thing for a woman to like another man better
than her husband, and there were few such wives, but among them was
the most beautiful woman who ever lived.</p>
<h2>THE WOOING OF HELEN OF THE FAIR HANDS</h2>
<p>This was the way in which people lived when Ulysses was young, and
wished to be married. The worst thing in the way of life was that
the greatest and most beautiful princesses might be taken prisoners,
and carried off as slaves to the towns of the men who had killed their
fathers and husbands. Now at that time one lady was far the fairest
in the world: namely, Helen, daughter of King Tyndarus. Every
young prince heard of her and desired to marry her; so her father invited
them all to his palace, and entertained them, and found out what they
would give. Among the rest Ulysses went, but his father had a
little kingdom, a rough island, with others near it, and Ulysses had
not a good chance. He was not tall; though very strong and active,
he was a short man with broad shoulders, but his face was handsome,
and, like all the princes, he wore long yellow hair, clustering like
a hyacinth flower. His manner was rather hesitating, and he seemed
to speak very slowly at first, though afterwards his words came freely.
He was good at everything a man can do; he could plough, and build houses,
and make ships, and he was the best archer in Greece, except one, and
could bend the great bow of a dead king, Eurytus, which no other man
could string. But he had no horses, and had no great train of
followers; and, in short, neither Helen nor her father thought of choosing
Ulysses for her husband out of so many tall, handsome young princes,
glittering with gold ornaments. Still, Helen was very kind to
Ulysses, and there was great friendship between them, which was fortunate
for her in the end.</p>
<p>Tyndarus first made all the princes take an oath that they would
stand by the prince whom he chose, and would fight for him in all his
quarrels. Then he named for her husband Menelaus, King of Lacedaemon.
He was a very brave man, but not one of the strongest; he was not such
a fighter as the gigantic Aias, the tallest and strongest of men; or
as Diomede, the friend of Ulysses; or as his own brother, Agamemnon,
the King of the rich city of Mycenae, who was chief over all other princes,
and general of the whole army in war. The great lions carved in
stone that seemed to guard his city are still standing above the gate
through which Agamemnon used to drive his chariot.</p>
<p>The man who proved to be the best fighter of all, Achilles, was not
among the lovers of Helen, for he was still a boy, and his mother, Thetis
of the silver feet, a goddess of the sea, had sent him to be brought
up as a girl, among the daughters of Lycomedes of Scyros, in an island
far away. Thetis did this because Achilles was her only child,
and there was a prophecy that, if he went to the wars, he would win
the greatest glory, but die very young, and never see his mother again.
She thought that if war broke out he would not be found hiding in girl’s
dress, among girls, far away.</p>
<p>So at last, after thinking over the matter for long, Tyndarus gave
fair Helen to Menelaus, the rich King of Lacedaemon; and her twin sister
Clytaemnestra, who was also very beautiful, was given to King Agamemnon,
the chief over all the princes. They all lived very happily together
at first, but not for long.</p>
<p>In the meantime King Tyndarus spoke to his brother Icarius, who had
a daughter named Penelope. She also was very pretty, but not nearly
so beautiful as her cousin, fair Helen, and we know that Penelope was
not very fond of her cousin. Icarius, admiring the strength and
wisdom of Ulysses, gave him his daughter Penelope to be his wife, and
Ulysses loved her very dearly, no man and wife were ever dearer to each
other. They went away together to rocky Ithaca, and perhaps Penelope
was not sorry that a wide sea lay between her home and that of Helen;
for Helen was not only the fairest woman that ever lived in the world,
but she was so kind and gracious and charming that no man could see
her without loving her. When she was only a child, the famous
prince Theseus, who was famous in Greek Story, carried her away to his
own city of Athens, meaning to marry her when she grew up, and even
at that time, there was a war for her sake, for her brothers followed
Theseus with an army, and fought him, and brought her home.</p>
<p>She had fairy gifts; for instance, she had a great red jewel, called
“the Star,” and when she wore it red drops seemed to fall
from it and vanished before they touched and stained her white breast—so
white that people called her “the Daughter of the Swan.”
She could speak in the very voice of any man or woman, so folk also
named her Echo, and it was believed that she could neither grow old
nor die, but would at last pass away to the Elysian plain and the world’s
end, where life is easiest for men. No snow comes thither, nor
great storm, nor any rain; but always the river of Ocean that rings
round the whole earth sends forth the west wind to blow cool on the
people of King Rhadamanthus of the fair hair. These were some
of the stories that men told of fair Helen, but Ulysses was never sorry
that he had not the fortune to marry her, so fond he was of her cousin,
his wife, Penelope, who was very wise and good.</p>
<p>When Ulysses brought his wife home they lived, as the custom was,
in the palace of his father, King Laertes, but Ulysses, with his own
hands, built a chamber for Penelope and himself. There grew a
great olive tree in the inner court of the palace, and its stem was
as large as one of the tall carved pillars of the hall. Round
about this tree Ulysses built the chamber, and finished it with close-set
stones, and roofed it over, and made close-fastening doors. Then
he cut off all the branches of the olive tree, and smoothed the trunk,
and shaped it into the bed-post, and made the bedstead beautiful with
inlaid work of gold and silver and ivory. There was no such bed
in Greece, and no man could move it from its place, and this bed comes
again into the story, at the very end.</p>
<p>Now time went by, and Ulysses and Penelope had one son called Telemachus;
and Eurycleia, who had been his father’s nurse, took care of him.
They were all very happy, and lived in peace in rocky Ithaca, and Ulysses
looked after his lands, and flocks, and herds, and went hunting with
his dog Argos, the swiftest of hounds.</p>
<h2>THE STEALING OF HELEN</h2>
<p>This happy time did not last long, and Telemachus was still a baby,
when war arose, so great and mighty and marvellous as had never been
known in the world. Far across the sea that lies on the east of
Greece, there dwelt the rich King Priam. His town was called Troy,
or Ilios, and it stood on a hill near the seashore, where are the straits
of Hellespont, between Europe and Asia; it was a great city surrounded
by strong walls, and its ruins are still standing. The kings could
make merchants who passed through the straits pay toll to them, and
they had allies in Thrace, a part of Europe opposite Troy, and Priam
was chief of all princes on his side of the sea, as Agamemnon was chief
king in Greece. Priam had many beautiful things; he had a vine
made of gold, with golden leaves and clusters, and he had the swiftest
horses, and many strong and brave sons; the strongest and bravest was
named Hector, and the youngest and most beautiful was named Paris.</p>
<p>There was a prophecy that Priam’s wife would give birth to
a burning torch, so, when Paris was born, Priam sent a servant to carry
the baby into a wild wood on Mount Ida, and leave him to die or be eaten
by wolves and wild cats. The servant left the child, but a shepherd
found him, and brought him up as his own son. The boy became as
beautiful, for a boy, as Helen was for a girl, and was the best runner,
and hunter, and archer among the country people. He was loved
by the beautiful Œnone, a nymph—that is, a kind of fairy—who
dwelt in a cave among the woods of Ida. The Greeks and Trojans
believed in these days that such fair nymphs haunted all beautiful woodland
places, and the mountains, and wells, and had crystal palaces, like
mermaids, beneath the waves of the sea. These fairies were not
mischievous, but gentle and kind. Sometimes they married mortal
men, and Œnone was the bride of Paris, and hoped to keep him for
her own all the days of his life.</p>
<p>It was believed that she had the magical power of healing wounded
men, however sorely they were hurt. Paris and Œnone lived
most happily together in the forest; but one day, when the servants
of Priam had driven off a beautiful bull that was in the herd of Paris,
he left the hills to seek it, and came into the town of Troy.
His mother, Hecuba, saw him, and looking at him closely, perceived that
he wore a ring which she had tied round her baby’s neck when he
was taken away from her soon after his birth. Then Hecuba, beholding
him so beautiful, and knowing him to be her son, wept for joy, and they
all forgot the prophecy that he would be a burning torch of fire, and
Priam gave him a house like those of his brothers, the Trojan princes.</p>
<p>The fame of beautiful Helen reached Troy, and Paris quite forgot
unhappy Œnone, and must needs go to see Helen for himself.
Perhaps he meant to try to win her for his wife, before her marriage.
But sailing was little understood in these times, and the water was
wide, and men were often driven for years out of their course, to Egypt,
and Africa, and far away into the unknown seas, where fairies lived
in enchanted islands, and cannibals dwelt in caves of the hills.</p>
<p>Paris came much too late to have a chance of marrying Helen; however,
he was determined to see her, and he made his way to her palace beneath
the mountain Taygetus, beside the clear swift river Eurotas. The
servants came out of the hall when they heard the sound of wheels and
horses’ feet, and some of them took the horses to the stables,
and tilted the chariots against the gateway, while others led Paris
into the hall, which shone like the sun with gold and silver.
Then Paris and his companions were led to the baths, where they were
bathed, and clad in new clothes, mantles of white, and robes of purple,
and next they were brought before King Menelaus, and he welcomed them
kindly, and meat was set before them, and wine in cups of gold.
While they were talking, Helen came forth from her fragrant chamber,
like a Goddess, her maidens following her, and carrying for her an ivory
distaff with violet-coloured wool, which she span as she sat, and heard
Paris tell how far he had travelled to see her who was so famous for
her beauty even in countries far away.</p>
<p>Then Paris knew that he had never seen, and never could see, a lady
so lovely and gracious as Helen as she sat and span, while the red drops
fell and vanished from the ruby called the Star; and Helen knew that
among all the princes in the world there was none so beautiful as Paris.
Now some say that Paris, by art magic, put on the appearance of Menelaus,
and asked Helen to come sailing with him, and that she, thinking he
was her husband, followed him, and he carried her across the wide waters
of Troy, away from her lord and her one beautiful little daughter, the
child Hermione. And others say that the Gods carried Helen herself
off to Egypt, and that they made in her likeness a beautiful ghost,
out of flowers and sunset clouds, whom Paris bore to Troy, and this
they did to cause war between Greeks and Trojans. Another story
is that Helen and her bower maiden and her jewels were seized by force,
when Menelaus was out hunting. It is only certain that Paris and
Helen did cross the seas together, and that Menelaus and little Hermione
were left alone in the melancholy palace beside the Eurotas. Penelope,
we know for certain, made no excuses for her beautiful cousin, but hated
her as the cause of her own sorrows and of the deaths of thousands of
men in war, for all the Greek princes were bound by their oath to fight
for Menelaus against any one who injured him and stole his wife away.
But Helen was very unhappy in Troy, and blamed herself as bitterly as
all the other women blamed her, and most of all Œnone, who had
been the love of Paris. The men were much more kind to Helen,
and were determined to fight to the death rather than lose the sight
of her beauty among them.</p>
<p>The news of the dishonour done to Menelaus and to all the princes
of Greece ran through the country like fire through a forest.
East and west and south and north went the news: to kings in their castles
on the hills, and beside the rivers and on cliffs above the sea.
The cry came to ancient Nestor of the white beard at Pylos, Nestor who
had reigned over two generations of men, who had fought against the
wild folk of the hills, and remembered the strong Heracles, and Eurytus
of the black bow that sang before the day of battle.</p>
<p>The cry came to black-bearded Agamemnon, in his strong town called
“golden Mycenae,” because it was so rich; it came to the
people in Thisbe, where the wild doves haunt; and it came to rocky Pytho,
where is the sacred temple of Apollo and the maid who prophesies.
It came to Aias, the tallest and strongest of men, in his little isle
of Salamis; and to Diomede of the loud war-cry, the bravest of warriors,
who held Argos and Tiryns of the black walls of huge, stones, that are
still standing. The summons came to the western islands and to
Ulysses in Ithaca, and even far south to the great island of Crete of
the hundred cities, where Idomeneus ruled in Cnossos; Idomeneus, whose
ruined palace may still be seen with the throne of the king, and pictures
painted on the walls, and the King’s own draught-board of gold
and silver, and hundreds of tablets of clay, on which are written the
lists of royal treasures. Far north went the news to Pelasgian
Argos, and Hellas, where the people of Peleus dwelt, the Myrmidons;
but Peleus was too old to fight, and his boy, Achilles, dwelt far away,
in the island of Scyros, dressed as a girl, among the daughters of King
Lycomedes. To many another town and to a hundred islands went
the bitter news of approaching war, for all princes knew that their
honour and their oaths compelled them to gather their spearmen, and
bowmen, and slingers from the fields and the fishing, and to make ready
their ships, and meet King Agamemnon in the harbour of Aulis, and cross
the wide sea to besiege Troy town.</p>
<p>Now the story is told that Ulysses was very unwilling to leave his
island and his wife Penelope, and little Telemachus; while Penelope
had no wish that he should pass into danger, and into the sight of Helen
of the fair hands. So it is said that when two of the princes
came to summon Ulysses, he pretended to be mad, and went ploughing the
sea sand with oxen, and sowing the sand with salt. Then the prince
Palamedes took the baby Telemachus from the arms of his nurse, Eurycleia,
and laid him in the line of the furrow, where the ploughshare would
strike him and kill him. But Ulysses turned the plough aside,
and they cried that he was not mad, but sane, and he must keep his oath,
and join the fleet at Aulis, a long voyage for him to sail, round the
stormy southern Cape of Maleia.</p>
<p>Whether this tale be true or not, Ulysses did go, leading twelve
black ships, with high beaks painted red at prow and stern. The
ships had oars, and the warriors manned the oars, to row when there
was no wind. There was a small raised deck at each end of the
ships; on these decks men stood to fight with sword and spear when there
was a battle at sea. Each ship had but one mast, with a broad
lugger sail, and for anchors they had only heavy stones attached to
cables. They generally landed at night, and slept on the shore
of one of the many islands, when they could, for they greatly feared
to sail out of sight of land.</p>
<p>The fleet consisted of more than a thousand ships, each with fifty
warriors, so the army was of more than fifty thousand men. Agamemnon
had a hundred ships, Diomede had eighty, Nestor had ninety, the Cretans
with Idomeneus, had eighty, Menelaus had sixty; but Aias and Ulysses,
who lived in small islands, had only twelve ships apiece. Yet
Aias was so brave and strong, and Ulysses so brave and wise, that they
were ranked among the greatest chiefs and advisers of Agamemnon, with
Menelaus, Diomede, Idomeneus, Nestor, Menestheus of Athens, and two
or three others. These chiefs were called the Council, and gave
advice to Agamemnon, who was commander-in-chief. He was a brave
fighter, but so anxious and fearful of losing the lives of his soldiers
that Ulysses and Diomede were often obliged to speak to him very severely.
Agamemnon was also very insolent and greedy, though, when anybody stood
up to him, he was ready to apologise, for fear the injured chief should
renounce his service and take away his soldiers.</p>
<p>Nestor was much respected because he remained brave, though he was
too old to be very useful in battle. He generally tried to make
peace when the princes quarrelled with Agamemnon. He loved to
tell long stories about his great deeds when he was young, and he wished
the chiefs to fight in old-fashioned ways.</p>
<p>For instance, in his time the Greeks had fought in clan regiments,
and the princely men had never dismounted in battle, but had fought
in squadrons of chariots, but now the owners of chariots fought on foot,
each man for himself, while his squire kept the chariot near him to
escape on if he had to retreat. Nestor wished to go back to the
good old way of chariot charges against the crowds of foot soldiers
of the enemy. In short, he was a fine example of the old-fashioned
soldier.</p>
<p>Aias, though so very tall, strong, and brave, was rather stupid.
He seldom spoke, but he was always ready to fight, and the last to retreat.
Menelaus was weak of body, but as brave as the best, or more brave,
for he had a keen sense of honour, and would attempt what he had not
the strength to do. Diomede and Ulysses were great friends, and
always fought side by side, when they could, and helped each other in
the most dangerous adventures.</p>
<p>These were the chiefs who led the great Greek armada from the harbour
of Aulis. A long time had passed, after the flight of Helen, before
the large fleet could be collected, and more time went by in the attempt
to cross the sea to Troy. There were tempests that scattered the
ships, so they were driven back to Aulis to refit; and they fought,
as they went out again, with the peoples of unfriendly islands, and
besieged their towns. What they wanted most of all was to have
Achilles with them, for he was the leader of fifty ships and 2,500 men,
and he had magical armour made, men said, for his father, by Hephaestus,
the God of armour-making and smithy work.</p>
<p>At last the fleet came to the Isle of Scyros, where they suspected
that Achilles was concealed. King Lycomedes received the chiefs
kindly, and they saw all his beautiful daughters dancing and playing
at ball, but Achilles was still so young and slim and so beautiful that
they did not know him among the others. There was a prophecy that
they could not take Troy without him, and yet they could not find him
out. Then Ulysses had a plan. He blackened his eyebrows
and beard and put on the dress of a Phoenician merchant. The Phoenicians
were a people who lived near the Jews, and were of the same race, and
spoke much the same language, but, unlike the Jews, who, at that time
were farmers in Palestine, tilling the ground, and keeping flocks and
herds, the Phoenicians were the greatest of traders and sailors, and
stealers of slaves. They carried cargoes of beautiful cloths,
and embroideries, and jewels of gold, and necklaces of amber, and sold
these everywhere about the shores of Greece and the islands.</p>
<p>Ulysses then dressed himself like a Phoenician pedlar, with his pack
on his back: he only took a stick in his hand, his long hair was turned
up, and hidden under a red sailor’s cap, and in this figure he
came, stooping beneath his pack, into the courtyard of King Lycomedes.
The girls heard that a pedlar had come, and out they all ran, Achilles
with the rest to watch the pedlar undo his pack. Each chose what
she liked best: one took a wreath of gold; another a necklace of gold
and amber; another earrings; a fourth a set of brooches, another a dress
of embroidered scarlet cloth; another a veil; another a pair of bracelets;
but at the bottom of the pack lay a great sword of bronze, the hilt
studded with golden nails. Achilles seized the sword. “This
is for me!” he said, and drew the sword from the gilded sheath,
and made it whistle round his head.</p>
<p>“You are Achilles, Peleus’ son!” said Ulysses;
“and you are to be the chief warrior of the Achaeans,” for
the Greeks then called themselves Achaeans. Achilles was only
too glad to hear these words, for he was quite tired of living among
maidens. Ulysses led him into the hall where the chiefs were sitting
at their wine, and Achilles was blushing like any girl.</p>
<p>“Here is the Queen of the Amazons,” said Ulysses—for
the Amazons were a race of warlike maidens—“or rather here
is Achilles, Peleus’ son, with sword in hand.” Then
they all took his hand, and welcomed him, and he was clothed in man’s
dress, with the sword by his side, and presently they sent him back
with ten ships to his home. There his mother, Thetis, of the silver
feet, the goddess of the sea, wept over him, saying, “My child,
thou hast the choice of a long and happy and peaceful life here with
me, or of a brief time of war and undying renown. Never shall
I see thee again in Argos if thy choice is for war.” But
Achilles chose to die young, and to be famous as long as the world stands.
So his father gave him fifty ships, with Patroclus, who was older than
he, to be his friend, and with an old man, Phoenix, to advise him; and
his mother gave him the glorious armour that the God had made for his
father, and the heavy ashen spear that none but he could wield, and
he sailed to join the host of the Achaeans, who all praised and thanked
Ulysses that had found for them such a prince. For Achilles was
the fiercest fighter of them all, and the swiftest-footed man, and the
most courteous prince, and the gentlest with women and children, but
he was proud and high of heart, and when he was angered his anger was
terrible.</p>
<p>The Trojans would have had no chance against the Greeks if only the
men of the city of Troy had fought to keep Helen of the fair hands.
But they had allies, who spoke different languages, and came to fight
for them both from Europe and from Asia. On the Trojan as well
as on the Greek side were people called Pelasgians, who seem to have
lived on both shores of the sea. There were Thracians, too, who
dwelt much further north than Achilles, in Europe and beside the strait
of Hellespont, where the narrow sea runs like a river. There were
warriors of Lycia, led by Sarpedon and Glaucus; there were Carians,
who spoke in a strange tongue; there were Mysians and men from Alybe,
which was called “the birthplace of silver,” and many other
peoples sent their armies, so that the war was between Eastern Europe,
on one side, and Western Asia Minor on the other. The people of
Egypt took no part in the war: the Greeks and Islesmen used to come
down in their ships and attack the Egyptians as the Danes used to invade
England. You may see the warriors from the islands, with their
horned helmets, in old Egyptian pictures.</p>
<p>The commander-in-chief, as we say now, of the Trojans was Hector,
the son of Priam. He was thought a match for any one of the Greeks,
and was brave and good. His brothers also were leaders, but Paris
preferred to fight from a distance with bow and arrows. He and
Pandarus, who dwelt on the slopes of Mount Ida, were the best archers
in the Trojan army. The princes usually fought with heavy spears,
which they threw at each other, and with swords, leaving archery to
the common soldiers who had no armour of bronze. But Teucer, Meriones,
and Ulysses were the best archers of the Achaeans. People called
Dardanians were led by Aeneas, who was said to be the son of the most
beautiful of the goddesses. These, with Sarpedon and Glaucus,
were the most famous of the men who fought for Troy.</p>
<p>Troy was a strong town on a hill. Mount Ida lay behind it,
and in front was a plain sloping to the sea shore. Through this
plain ran two beautiful clear rivers, and there were scattered here
and there what you would have taken for steep knolls, but they were
really mounds piled up over the ashes of warriors who had died long
ago. On these mounds sentinels used to stand and look across the
water to give warning if the Greek fleet drew near, for the Trojans
had heard that it was on its way. At last the fleet came in view,
and the sea was black with ships, the oarsmen pulling with all their
might for the honour of being the first to land. The race was
won by the ship of the prince Protesilaus, who was first of all to leap
on shore, but as he leaped he was struck to the heart by an arrow from
the bow of Paris. This must have seemed a good omen to the Trojans,
and to the Greeks evil, but we do not hear that the landing was resisted
in great force, any more than that of Norman William was, when he invaded
England.</p>
<p>The Greeks drew up all their ships on shore, and the men camped in
huts built in front of the ships. There was thus a long row of
huts with the ships behind them, and in these huts the Greeks lived
all through the ten years that the siege of Troy lasted. In these
days they do not seem to have understood how to conduct a siege.
You would have expected the Greeks to build towers and dig trenches
all round Troy, and from the towers watch the roads, so that provisions
might not be brought in from the country. This is called “investing”
a town, but the Greeks never invested Troy. Perhaps they had not
men enough; at all events the place remained open, and cattle could
always be driven in to feed the warriors and the women and children.</p>
<p>Moreover, the Greeks for long never seem to have tried to break down
one of the gates, nor to scale the walls, which were very high, with
ladders. On the other hand, the Trojans and allies never ventured
to drive the Greeks into the sea; they commonly remained within the
walls or skirmished just beneath them. The older men insisted
on this way of fighting, in spite of Hector, who always wished to attack
and storm the camp of the Greeks. Neither side had machines for
throwing heavy stones, such as the Romans used later, and the most that
the Greeks did was to follow Achilles and capture small neighbouring
cities, and take the women for slaves, and drive the cattle. They
got provisions and wine from the Phoenicians, who came in ships, and
made much profit out of the war.</p>
<p>It was not till the tenth year that the war began in real earnest,
and scarcely any of the chief leaders had fallen. Fever came upon
the Greeks, and all day the camp was black with smoke, and all night
shone with fire from the great piles of burning wood, on which the Greeks
burned their dead, whose bones they then buried under hillocks of earth.
Many of these hillocks are still standing on the plain of Troy.
When the plague had raged for ten days, Achilles called an assembly
of the whole army, to try to find out why the Gods were angry.
They thought that the beautiful God Apollo (who took the Trojan side)
was shooting invisible arrows at them from his silver bow, though fevers
in armies are usually caused by dirt and drinking bad water. The
great heat of the sun, too, may have helped to cause the disease; but
we must tell the story as the Greeks told it themselves. So Achilles
spoke in the assembly, and proposed to ask some prophet why Apollo was
angry. The chief prophet was Calchas. He rose and said that
he would declare the truth if Achilles would promise to protect him
from the anger of any prince whom the truth might offend.</p>
<p>Achilles knew well whom Calchas meant. Ten days before, a priest
of Apollo had come to the camp and offered ransom for his daughter Chryseis,
a beautiful girl, whom Achilles had taken prisoner, with many others,
when he captured a small town. Chryseis had been given as a slave
to Agamemnon, who always got the best of the plunder because he was
chief king, whether he had taken part in the fighting or not.
As a rule he did not. To Achilles had been given another girl,
Briseis, of whom he was very fond. Now when Achilles had promised
to protect Calchas, the prophet spoke out, and boldly said, what all
men knew already, that Apollo caused the plague because Agamemnon would
not return Chryseis, and had insulted her father, the priest of the
God.</p>
<p>On hearing this, Agamemnon was very angry. He said that he
would send Chryseis home, but that he would take Briseis away from Achilles.
Then Achilles was drawing his great sword from the sheath to kill Agamemnon,
but even in his anger he knew that this was wrong, so he merely called
Agamemnon a greedy coward, “with face of dog and heart of deer,”
and he swore that he and his men would fight no more against the Trojans.
Old Nestor tried to make peace, and swords were not drawn, but Briseis
was taken away from Achilles, and Ulysses put Chryseis on board of his
ship and sailed away with her to her father’s town, and gave her
up to her father. Then her father prayed to Apollo that the plague
might cease, and it did cease—when the Greeks had cleansed their
camp, and purified themselves and cast their filth into the sea.</p>
<p>We know how fierce and brave Achilles was, and we may wonder that
he did not challenge Agamemnon to fight a duel. But the Greeks
never fought duels, and Agamemnon was believed to be chief king by right
divine. Achilles went alone to the sea shore when his dear Briseis
was led away, and he wept, and called to his mother, the silver-footed
lady of the waters. Then she arose from the grey sea, like a mist,
and sat down beside her son, and stroked his hair with her hand, and
he told her all his sorrows. So she said that she would go up
to the dwelling of the Gods, and pray Zeus, the chief of them all, to
make the Trojans win a great battle, so that Agamemnon should feel his
need of Achilles, and make amends for his insolence, and do him honour.</p>
<p>Thetis kept her promise, and Zeus gave his word that the Trojans
should defeat the Greeks. That night Zeus sent a deceitful dream
to Agamemnon. The dream took the shape of old Nestor, and said
that Zeus would give him victory that day. While he was still
asleep, Agamemnon was fun of hope that he would instantly take Troy,
but, when he woke, he seems not to have been nearly so confident, for
in place of putting on his armour, and bidding the Greeks arm themselves,
he merely dressed in his robe and mantle, took his sceptre, and went
and told the chiefs about his dream. They did not feel much encouraged,
so he said that he would try the temper of the army. He would
call them together, and propose to return to Greece; but, if the soldiers
took him at his word, the other chiefs were to stop them. This
was a foolish plan, for the soldiers were wearying for beautiful Greece,
and their homes, and wives and children. Therefore, when Agamemnon
did as he had said, the whole army rose, like the sea under the west
wind, and, with a shout, they rushed to the ships, while the dust blew
in clouds from under their feet. Then they began to launch their
ships, and it seems that the princes were carried away in the rush,
and were as eager as the rest to go home.</p>
<p>But Ulysses only stood in sorrow and anger beside his ship, and never
put hand to it, for he felt how disgraceful it was to run away.
At last he threw down his mantle, which his herald Eurybates of Ithaca,
a round-shouldered, brown, curly-haired man, picked up, and he ran to
find Agamemnon, and took his sceptre, a gold-studded staff, like a marshal’s
baton, and he gently told the chiefs whom he met that they were doing
a shameful thing; but he drove the common soldiers back to the place
of meeting with the sceptre. They all returned, puzzled and chattering,
but one lame, bandy-legged, bald, round-shouldered, impudent fellow,
named Thersites, jumped up and made an insolent speech, insulting the
princes, and advising the army to run away. Then Ulysses took
him and beat him till the blood came, and he sat down, wiping away his
tears, and looking so foolish that the whole army laughed at him, and
cheered Ulysses when he and Nestor bade them arm and fight. Agamemnon
still believed a good deal in his dream, and prayed that he might take
Troy that very day, and kill Hector. Thus Ulysses alone saved
the army from a cowardly retreat; but for him the ships would have been
launched in an hour. But the Greeks armed and advanced in full
force, all except Achilles and his friend Patroclus with their two or
three thousand men. The Trojans also took heart, knowing that
Achilles would not fight, and the armies approached each other.
Paris himself, with two spears and a bow, and without armour, walked
into the space between the hosts, and challenged any Greek prince to
single combat. Menelaus, whose wife Paris had carried away, was
as glad as a hungry lion when he finds a stag or a goat, and leaped
in armour from his chariot, but Paris turned and slunk away, like a
man when he meets a great serpent on a narrow path in the hills.
Then Hector rebuked Paris for his cowardice, and Paris was ashamed and
offered to end the war by fighting Menelaus. If he himself fell,
the Trojans must give up Helen and all her jewels; if Menelaus fell,
the Greeks were to return without fair Helen. The Greeks accepted
this plan, and both sides disarmed themselves to look on at the fight
in comfort, and they meant to take the most solemn oaths to keep peace
till the combat was lost and won, and the quarrel settled. Hector
sent into Troy for two lambs, which were to be sacrificed when the oaths
were taken.</p>
<p>In the meantime Helen of the fair hands was at home working at a
great purple tapestry on which she embroidered the battles of the Greeks
and Trojans. It was just like the tapestry at Bayeux on which
Norman ladies embroidered the battles in the Norman Conquest of England.
Helen was very fond of embroidering, like poor Mary, Queen of Scots,
when a prisoner in Loch Leven Castle. Probably the work kept both
Helen and Mary from thinking of their past lives and their sorrows.</p>
<p>When Helen heard that her husband was to fight Paris, she wept, and
threw a shining veil over her head, and with her two bower maidens went
to the roof of the gate tower, where king Priam was sitting with the
old Trojan chiefs. They saw her and said that it was small blame
to fight for so beautiful a lady, and Priam called her “dear child,”
and said, “I do not blame you, I blame the Gods who brought about
this war.” But Helen said that she wished she had died before
she left her little daughter and her husband, and her home: “Alas!
shameless me!” Then she told Priam the names of the chief
Greek warriors, and of Ulysses, who was shorter by a head than Agamemnon,
but broader in chest and shoulders. She wondered that she could
not see her own two brothers, Castor and Polydeuces, and thought that
they kept aloof in shame for her sin; but the green grass covered their
graves, for they had both died in battle, far away in Lacedaemon, their
own country.</p>
<p>Then the lambs were sacrificed, and the oaths were taken, and Paris
put on his brother’s armour, helmet, breastplate, shield, and
leg-armour. Lots were drawn to decide whether Paris or Menelaus
should throw his spear first, and, as Paris won, he threw his spear,
but the point was blunted against the shield of Menelaus. But
when Menelaus threw his spear it went clean through the shield of Paris,
and through the side of his breastplate, but only grazed his robe.
Menelaus drew his sword, and rushed in, and smote at the crest of the
helmet of Paris, but his bronze blade broke into four pieces.
Menelaus caught Paris by the horsehair crest of his helmet, and dragged
him towards the Greeks, but the chin-strap broke, and Menelaus turning
round threw the helmet into the ranks of the Greeks. But when
Menelaus looked again for Paris, with a spear in his hand, he could
see him nowhere! The Greeks believed that the beautiful goddess
Aphrodite, whom the Romans called Venus, hid him in a thick cloud of
darkness and carried him to his own house, where Helen of the fair hands
found him and said to him, “Would that thou hadst perished, conquered
by that great warrior who was my lord! Go forth again and challenge
him to fight thee face to face.” But Paris had no more desire
to fight, and the Goddess threatened Helen, and compelled her to remain
with him in Troy, coward as he had proved himself. Yet on other
days Paris fought well; it seems that he was afraid of Menelaus because,
in his heart, he was ashamed of himself.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Menelaus was seeking for Paris everywhere, and the Trojans,
who hated him, would have shown his hiding place. But they knew
not where he was, and the Greeks claimed the victory, and thought that,
as Paris had the worst of the fight, Helen would be restored to them,
and they would all sail home.</p>
<h2>TROJAN VICTORIES</h2>
<p>The war might now have ended, but an evil and foolish thought came
to Pandarus, a prince of Ida, who fought for the Trojans. He chose
to shoot an arrow at Menelaus, contrary to the sworn vows of peace,
and the arrow pierced the breastplate of Menelaus through the place
where the clasped plates meet, and drew his blood. Then Agamemnon,
who loved his brother dearly, began to lament, saying that if he died,
the army would all go home and Trojans would dance on the grave of Menelaus.
“Do not alarm all our army,” said Menelaus, “the arrow
has done me little harm;” and so it proved, for the surgeon easily
drew the arrow out of the wound.</p>
<p>Then Agamemnon hastened here and there, bidding the Greeks arm and
attack the Trojans, who would certainly be defeated, for they had broken
the oaths of peace. But with his usual insolence he chose to accuse
Ulysses and Diomede of cowardice, though Diomede was as brave as any
man, and Ulysses had just prevented the whole army from launching their
ships and going home. Ulysses answered him with spirit, but Diomede
said nothing at the moment; later he spoke his mind. He leaped
from his chariot, and all the chiefs leaped down and advanced in line,
the chariots following them, while the spearmen and bowmen followed
the chariots. The Trojan army advanced, all shouting in their
different languages, but the Greeks came on silently. Then the
two front lines clashed, shield against shield, and the noise was like
the roaring of many flooded torrents among the hills. When a man
fell he who had slain him tried to strip off his armour, and his friends
fought over his body to save the dead from this dishonour.</p>
<p>Ulysses fought above a wounded friend, and drove his spear through
head and helmet of a Trojan prince, and everywhere men were falling
beneath spears and arrows and heavy stones which the warriors threw.
Here Menelaus speared the man who built the ships with which Paris had
sailed to Greece; and the dust rose like a cloud, and a mist went up
from the fighting men, while Diomede stormed across the plain like a
river in flood, leaving dead bodies behind him as the river leaves boughs
of trees and grass to mark its course. Pandarus wounded Diomede
with an arrow, but Diomede slew him, and the Trojans were being driven
in flight, when Sarpedon and Hector turned and hurled themselves on
the Greeks; and even Diomede shuddered when Hector came on, and charged
at Ulysses, who was slaying Trojans as he went, and the battle swayed
this way and that, and the arrows fell like rain.</p>
<p>But Hector was sent into the city to bid the women pray to the goddess
Athênê for help, and he went to the house of Paris, whom
Helen was imploring to go and fight like a man, saying: “Would
that the winds had wafted me away, and the tides drowned me, shameless
that I am, before these things came to pass!”</p>
<p>Then Hector went to see his dear wife, Andromache, whose father had
been slain by Achilles early in the siege, and he found her and her
nurse carrying her little boy, Hector’s son, and like a star upon
her bosom lay his beautiful and shining golden head. Now, while
Helen urged Paris to go into the fight, Andromache prayed Hector to
stay with her in the town, and fight no more lest he should be slain
and leave her a widow, and the boy an orphan, with none to protect him.
The army she said, should come back within the walls, where they had
so long been safe, not fight in the open plain. But Hector answered
that he would never shrink from battle, “yet I know this in my
heart, the day shall come for holy Troy to be laid low, and Priam and
the people of Priam. But this and my own death do not trouble
me so much as the thought of you, when you shall be carried as a slave
to Greece, to spin at another woman’s bidding, and bear water
from a Grecian well. May the heaped up earth of my tomb cover
me ere I hear thy cries and the tale of thy captivity.”</p>
<p>Then Hector stretched out his hands to his little boy, but the child
was afraid when he saw the great glittering helmet of his father and
the nodding horsehair crest. So Hector laid his helmet on the
ground and dandled the child in his arms, and tried to comfort his wife,
and said good-bye for the last time, for he never came back to Troy
alive. He went on his way back to the battle, and Paris went with
him, in glorious armour, and soon they were slaying the princes of the
Greeks.</p>
<p>The battle raged till nightfall, and in the night the Greeks and
Trojans burned their dead; and the Greeks made a trench and wall round
their camp, which they needed for safety now that the Trojans came from
their town and fought in the open plain.</p>
<p>Next day the Trojans were so successful that they did not retreat
behind their walls at night, but lit great fires on the plain: a thousand
fires, with fifty men taking supper round each of them, and drinking
their wine to the music of flutes. But the Greeks were much discouraged,
and Agamemnon called the whole army together, and proposed that they
should launch their ships in the night and sail away home. Then
Diomede stood up, and said: “You called me a coward lately.
You are the coward! Sail away if you are afraid to remain here,
but all the rest of us will fight till we take Troy town.”</p>
<p>Then all shouted in praise of Diomede, and Nestor advised them to
send five hundred young men, under his own son, Thrasymedes, to watch
the Trojans, and guard the new wall and the ditch, in case the Trojans
attacked them in the darkness. Next Nestor counselled Agamemnon
to send Ulysses and Aias to Achilles, and promise to give back Briseis,
and rich presents of gold, and beg pardon for his insolence. If
Achilles would be friends again with Agamemnon, and fight as he used
to fight, the Trojans would soon be driven back into the town.</p>
<p>Agamemnon was very ready to beg pardon, for he feared that the whole
army would be defeated, and cut off from their ships, and killed or
kept as slaves. So Ulysses and Aias and the old tutor of Achilles,
Phoenix, went to Achilles and argued with him, praying him to accept
the rich presents, and help the Greeks. But Achilles answered
that he did not believe a word that Agamemnon said; Agamemnon had always
hated him, and always would hate him. No; he would not cease to
be angry, he would sail away next day with all his men, and he advised
the rest to come with him. “Why be so fierce?” said
tall Aias, who seldom spoke. “Why make so much trouble about
one girl? We offer you seven girls, and plenty of other gifts.”</p>
<p>Then Achilles said that he would not sail away next day, but he would
not fight till the Trojans tried to burn his own ships, and there he
thought that Hector would find work enough to do. This was the
most that Achilles would promise, and all the Greeks were silent when
Ulysses delivered his message. But Diomede arose and said that,
with or without Achilles, fight they must; and all men, heavy at heart,
went to sleep in their huts or in the open air at their doors.</p>
<p>Agamemnon was much too anxious to sleep. He saw the glow of
the thousand fires of the Trojans in the dark, and heard their merry
flutes, and he groaned and pulled out his long hair by handfuls.
When he was tired of crying and groaning and tearing his hair, he thought
that he would go for advice to old Nestor. He threw a lion skin,
the coverlet of his bed, over his shoulder, took his spear, went out
and met Menelaus—for he, too, could not sleep—and Menelaus
proposed to send a spy among the Trojans, if any man were brave enough
to go, for the Trojan camp was all alight with fires, and the adventure
was dangerous. Therefore the two wakened Nestor and the other
chiefs, who came just as they were, wrapped in the fur coverlets of
their beds, without any armour. First they visited the five hundred
young men set to watch the wall, and then they crossed the ditch and
sat down outside and considered what might be done. “Will
nobody go as a spy among the Trojans?” said Nestor; he meant would
none of the young men go. Diomede said that he would take the
risk if any other man would share it with him, and, if he might choose
a companion, he would take Ulysses.</p>
<p>“Come, then, let us be going,” said Ulysses, “for
the night is late, and the dawn is near.” As these two chiefs
had no armour on, they borrowed shields and leather caps from the young
men of the guard, for leather would not shine as bronze helmets shine
in the firelight. The cap lent to Ulysses was strengthened outside
with rows of boars’ tusks. Many of these tusks, shaped for
this purpose, have been found, with swords and armour, in a tomb in
Mycenae, the town of Agamemnon. This cap which was lent to Ulysses
had once been stolen by his grandfather, Autolycus, who was a Master
Thief, and he gave it as a present to a friend, and so, through several
hands, it had come to young Meriones of Crete, one of the five hundred
guards, who now lent it to Ulysses. So the two princes set forth
in the dark, so dark it was that though they heard a heron cry, they
could not see it as it flew away.</p>
<p>While Ulysses and Diomede stole through the night silently, like
two wolves among the bodies of dead men, the Trojan leaders met and
considered what they ought to do. They did not know whether the
Greeks had set sentinels and outposts, as usual, to give warning if
the enemy were approaching; or whether they were too weary to keep a
good watch; or whether perhaps they were getting ready their ships to
sail homewards in the dawn. So Hector offered a reward to any
man who would creep through the night and spy on the Greeks; he said
he would give the spy the two best horses in the Greek camp.</p>
<p>Now among the Trojans there was a young man named Dolon, the son
of a rich father, and he was the only boy in a family of five sisters.
He was ugly, but a very swift runner, and he cared for horses more than
for anything else in the world. Dolon arose and said, “If
you will swear to give me the horses and chariot of Achilles, son of
Peleus, I will steal to the hut of Agamemnon and listen and find out
whether the Greeks mean to fight or flee.” Hector swore
to give these horses, which were the best in the world, to Dolon, so
he took his bow and threw a grey wolf’s hide over his shoulders,
and ran towards the ships of the Greeks.</p>
<p>Now Ulysses saw Dolon as he came, and said to Diomede, “Let
us suffer him to pass us, and then do you keep driving him with your
spear towards the ships, and away from Troy.” So Ulysses
and Diomede lay down among the dead men who had fallen in the battle,
and Dolon ran on past them towards the Greeks. Then they rose
and chased him as two greyhounds course a hare, and, when Dolon was
near the sentinels, Diomede cried “Stand, or I will slay you with
my spear!” and he threw his spear just over Dolon’s shoulder.
So Dolon stood still, green with fear, and with his teeth chattering.
When the two came up, he cried, and said that his father was a rich
man, who would pay much gold, and bronze, and iron for his ransom.</p>
<p>Ulysses said, “Take heart, and put death out of your mind,
and tell us what you are doing here.” Dolon said that Hector
had promised him the horses of Achilles if he would go and spy on the
Greeks. “You set your hopes high,” said Ulysses, “for
the horses of Achilles are not earthly steeds, but divine; a gift of
the Gods, and Achilles alone can drive them. But, tell me, do
the Trojans keep good watch, and where is Hector with his horses?”
for Ulysses thought that it would be a great adventure to drive away
the horses of Hector.</p>
<p>“Hector is with the chiefs, holding council at the tomb of
Ilus,” said Dolon; “but no regular guard is set. The
people of Troy, indeed, are round their watch fires, for they have to
think of the safety of their wives and children; but the allies from
far lands keep no watch, for their wives and children are safe at home.”
Then he told where all the different peoples who fought for Priam had
their stations; but, said he, “if you want to steal horses, the
best are those of Rhesus, King of the Thracians, who has only joined
us to-night. He and his men are asleep at the furthest end of
the line, and his horses are the best and greatest that ever I saw:
tall, white as snow, and swift as the wind, and his chariot is adorned
with gold and silver, and golden is his armour. Now take me prisoner
to the ships, or bind me and leave me here while you go and try whether
I have told you truth or lies.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Diomede, “if I spare your life you may
come spying again,” and he drew his sword and smote off the head
of Dolon. They hid his cap and bow and spear where they could
find them easily, and marked the spot, and went through the night to
the dark camp of King Rhesus, who had no watch-fire and no guards.
Then Diomede silently stabbed each sleeping man to the heart, and Ulysses
seized the dead by the feet and threw them aside lest they should frighten
the horses, which had never been in battle, and would shy if they were
led over the bodies of dead men. Last of all Diomede killed King
Rhesus, and Ulysses led forth his horses, beating them with his bow,
for he had forgotten to take the whip from the chariot. Then Ulysses
and Diomede leaped on the backs of the horses, as they had not time
to bring away the chariot, and they galloped to the ships, stopping
to pick up the spear, and bow, and cap of Dolon. They rode to
the princes, who welcomed them, and all laughed for glee when they saw
the white horses and heard that King Rhesus was dead, for they guessed
that all his army would now go home to Thrace. This they must
have done, for we never hear of them in the battles that followed, so
Ulysses and Diomede deprived the Trojans of thousands of men.
The other princes went to bed in good spirits, but Ulysses and Diomede
took a swim in the sea, and then went into hot baths, and so to breakfast,
for rosy-fingered Dawn was coming up the sky.</p>
<h2>BATTLE AT THE SHIPS</h2>
<p>With dawn Agamemnon awoke, and fear had gone out of his heart.
He put on his armour, and arrayed the chiefs on foot in front of their
chariots, and behind them came the spearmen, with the bowmen and slingers
on the wings of the army. Then a great black cloud spread over
the sky, and red was the rain that fell from it. The Trojans gathered
on a height in the plain, and Hector, shining in armour, went here and
there, in front and rear, like a star that now gleams forth and now
is hidden in a cloud.</p>
<p>The armies rushed on each other and hewed each other down, as reapers
cut their way through a field of tall corn. Neither side gave
ground, though the helmets of the bravest Trojans might be seen deep
in the ranks of the Greeks; and the swords of the bravest Greeks rose
and fell in the ranks of the Trojans, and all the while the arrows showered
like rain. But at noon-day, when the weary woodman rests from
cutting trees, and takes his dinner in the quiet hills, the Greeks of
the first line made a charge, Agamemnon running in front of them, and
he speared two Trojans, and took their breastplates, which he laid in
his chariot, and then he speared one brother of Hector and struck another
down with his sword, and killed two more who vainly asked to be made
prisoners of war. Footmen slew footmen, and chariot men slew chariot
men, and they broke into the Trojan line as fire falls on a forest in
a windy day, leaping and roaring and racing through the trees.
Many an empty chariot did the horses hurry madly through the field,
for the charioteers were lying dead, with the greedy vultures hovering
above them, flapping their wide wings. Still Agamemnon followed
and slew the hindmost Trojans, but the rest fled till they came to the
gates, and the oak tree that grew outside the gates, and there they
stopped.</p>
<p>But Hector held his hands from fighting, for in the meantime he was
making his men face the enemy and form up in line and take breath, and
was encouraging them, for they had retreated from the wall of the Greeks
across the whole plain, past the hill that was the tomb of Ilus, a king
of old, and past the place of the wild fig-tree. Much ado had
Hector to rally the Trojans, but he knew that when men do turn again
they are hard to beat. So it proved, for when the Trojans had
rallied and formed in line, Agamemnon slew a Thracian chief who had
come to fight for Troy before King Rhesus came. But the eldest
brother of the slain man smote Agamemnon through the arm with his spear,
and, though Agamemnon slew him in turn, his wound bled much and he was
in great pain, so he leaped into his chariot and was driven back to
the ships.</p>
<p>Then Hector gave the word to charge, as a huntsman cries on his hounds
against a lion, and he rushed forward at the head of the Trojan line,
slaying as he went. Nine chiefs of the Greeks he slew, and fell
upon the spearmen and scattered them, as the spray of the waves is scattered
by the wandering wind.</p>
<p>Now the ranks of the Greeks were broken, and they would have been
driven among their ships and killed without mercy, had not Ulysses and
Diomede stood firm in the centre, and slain four Trojan leaders.
The Greeks began to come back and face their enemies in line of battle
again, though Hector, who had been fighting on the Trojan right, rushed
against them. But Diomede took good aim with his spear at the
helmet of Hector, and struck it fairly. The spear-point did not
go through the helmet, but Hector was stunned and fell; and, when he
came to himself, he leaped into his chariot, and his squire drove him
against the Pylians and Cretans, under Nestor and Idomeneus, who were
on the left wing of the Greek army. Then Diomede fought on till
Paris, who stood beside the pillar on the hillock that was the tomb
of old King Ilus, sent an arrow clean through his foot. Ulysses
went and stood in front of Diomede, who sat down, and Ulysses drew the
arrow from his foot, and Diomede stepped into his chariot and was driven
back to the ships.</p>
<p>Ulysses was now the only Greek chief that still fought in the centre.
The Greeks all fled, and he was alone in the crowd of Trojans, who rushed
on him as hounds and hunters press round a wild boar that stands at
bay in a wood. “They are cowards that flee from the fight,”
said Ulysses to himself; “but I will stand here, one man against
a multitude.” He covered the front of his body with his
great shield, that hung by a belt round his neck, and he smote four
Trojans and wounded a fifth. But the brother of the wounded man
drove a spear through the shield and breastplate of Ulysses, and tore
clean through his side. Then Ulysses turned on this Trojan, and
he fled, and Ulysses sent a spear through his shoulder and out at his
breast, and he died. Ulysses dragged from his own side the spear
that had wounded him, and called thrice with a great voice to the other
Greeks, and Menelaus and Aias rushed to rescue him, for many Trojans
were round him, like jackals round a wounded stag that a man has struck
with an arrow. But Aias ran and covered the wounded Ulysses with
his huge shield till he could climb into the chariot of Menelaus, who
drove him back to the ships.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Hector was slaying the Greeks on the left of their battle,
and Paris struck the Greek surgeon, Machaon, with an arrow; and Idomeneus
bade Nestor put Machaon in his chariot and drive him to Nestor’s
hut, where his wound might be tended. Meanwhile, Hector sped to
the centre of the line, where Aias was slaying the Trojans; but Eurypylus,
a Greek chief, was wounded by an arrow from the bow of Paris, and his
friends guarded him with their shields and spears.</p>
<p>Thus the best of the Greeks were wounded and out of the battle, save
Aias, and the spearmen were in flight. Meanwhile Achilles was
standing by the stern of his ship watching the defeat of the Greeks,
but when he saw Machaon being carried past, sorely wounded, in the chariot
of Nestor, he bade his friend Patroclus, whom he loved better than all
the rest, to go and ask how Machaon did. He was sitting drinking
wine with Nestor when Patroclus came, and Nestor told Patroclus how
many of the chiefs were wounded, and though Patroclus was in a hurry
Nestor began a very long story about his own great deeds of war, done
when he was a young man. At last he bade Patroclus tell Achilles
that, if he would not fight himself, he should at least send out his
men under Patroclus, who should wear the splendid armour of Achilles.
Then the Trojans would think that Achilles himself had returned to the
battle, and they would be afraid, for none of them dared to meet Achilles
hand to hand.</p>
<p>So Patroclus ran off to Achilles; but, on his way, he met the wounded
Eurypylus, and he took him to his hut and cut the arrow out of his thigh
with a knife, and washed the wound with warm water, and rubbed over
it a bitter root to take the pain away. Thus he waited for some
time with Eurypylus, but the advice of Nestor was in the end to cause
the death of Patroclus. The battle now raged more fiercely, while
Agamemnon and Diomede and Ulysses could only limp about leaning on their
spears; and again Agamemnon wished to moor the ships near shore, and
embark in the night and run away. But Ulysses was very angry with
him, and said: “You should lead some other inglorious army, not
us, who will fight on till every soul of us perish, rather than flee
like cowards! Be silent, lest the soldiers hear you speaking of
flight, such words as no man should utter. I wholly scorn your
counsel, for the Greeks will lose heart if, in the midst of battle,
you bid them launch the ships.”</p>
<p>Agamemnon was ashamed, and, by Diomede’s advice, the wounded
kings went down to the verge of the war to encourage the others, though
they were themselves unable to fight. They rallied the Greeks,
and Aias led them and struck Hector full in the breast with a great
rock, so that his friends carried him out of the battle to the river
side, where they poured water over him, but he lay fainting on the ground,
the black blood gushing up from his mouth. While Hector lay there,
and all men thought that he would die, Aias and Idomeneus were driving
back the Trojans, and it seemed that, even without Achilles and his
men, the Greeks were able to hold their own against the Trojans.
But the battle was never lost while Hector lived. People in those
days believed in “omens:” they thought that the appearance
of birds on the right or left hand meant good or bad luck. Once
during the battle a Trojan showed Hector an unlucky bird, and wanted
him to retreat into the town. But Hector said, “One omen
is the best: to fight for our own country.” While Hector
lay between death and life the Greeks were winning, for the Trojans
had no other great chief to lead them. But Hector awoke from his
faint, and leaped to his feet and ran here and there, encouraging the
men of Troy. Then the most of the Greeks fled when they saw him;
but Aias and Idomeneus, and the rest of the bravest, formed in a square
between the Trojans and the ships, and down on them came Hector and
Aeneas and Paris, throwing their spears, and slaying on every hand.
The Greeks turned and ran, and the Trojans would have stopped to strip
the armour from the slain men, but Hector cried: “Haste to the
ships and leave the spoils of war. I will slay any man who lags
behind!”</p>
<p>On this, all the Trojans drove their chariots down into the ditch
that guarded the ships of the Greeks, as when a great wave sweeps at
sea over the side of a vessel; and the Greeks were on the ship decks,
thrusting with very long spears, used in sea fights, and the Trojans
were boarding the ships, and striking with swords and axes. Hector
had a lighted torch and tried to set fire to the ship of Aias; but Aias
kept him back with the long spear, and slew a Trojan, whose lighted
torch fell from his hand. And Aias kept shouting: “Come
on, and drive away Hector; it is not to a dance that he is calling his
men, but to battle.”</p>
<p>The dead fell in heaps, and the living ran over them to mount the
heaps of slain and climb the ships. Hector rushed forward like
a sea wave against a great steep rock, but like the rock stood the Greeks;
still the Trojans charged past the beaks of the foremost ships, while
Aias, thrusting with a spear more than twenty feet long, leaped from
deck to deck like a man that drives four horses abreast, and leaps from
the back of one to the back of another. Hector seized with his
hand the stern of the ship of Protesilaus, the prince whom Paris shot
when he leaped ashore on the day when the Greeks first landed; and Hector
kept calling: “Bring fire!” and even Aias, in this strange
sea fight on land, left the decks and went below, thrusting with his
spear through the portholes. Twelve men lay dead who had brought
fire against the ship which Aias guarded.</p>
<h2>THE SLAYING AND AVENGING OF PATROCLUS</h2>
<p>At this moment, when torches were blazing round the ships, and all
seemed lost, Patroclus came out of the hut of Eurypylus, whose wound
he had been tending, and he saw that the Greeks were in great danger,
and ran weeping to Achilles. “Why do you weep,” said
Achilles, “like a little girl that runs by her mother’s
side, and plucks at her gown and looks at her with tears in her eyes,
till her mother takes her up in her arms? Is there bad news from
home that your father is dead, or mine; or are you sorry that the Greeks
are getting what they deserve for their folly?” Then Patroclus
told Achilles how Ulysses and many other princes were wounded and could
not fight, and begged to be allowed to put on Achilles’ armour
and lead his men, who were all fresh and unwearied, into the battle,
for a charge of two thousand fresh warriors might turn the fortune of
the day.</p>
<p>Then Achilles was sorry that he had sworn not to fight himself till
Hector brought fire to his own ships. He would lend Patroclus
his armour, and his horses, and his men; but Patroclus must only drive
the Trojans from the ships, and not pursue them. At this moment
Aias was weary, so many spears smote his armour, and he could hardly
hold up his great shield, and Hector cut off his spear-head with the
sword; the bronze head fell ringing on the ground, and Aias brandished
only the pointless shaft. So he shrank back and fire blazed all
over his ship; and Achilles saw it, and smote his thigh, and bade Patroclus
make haste. Patroclus armed himself in the shining armour of Achilles,
which all Trojans feared, and leaped into the chariot where Automedon,
the squire, had harnessed Xanthus and Balius, two horses that were the
children, men said, of the West Wind, and a led horse was harnessed
beside them in the side traces. Meanwhile the two thousand men
of Achilles, who were called Myrmidons, had met in armour, five companies
of four hundred apiece, under five chiefs of noble names. Forth
they came, as eager as a pack of wolves that have eaten a great red
deer and run to slake their thirst with the dark water of a well in
the hills.</p>
<p>So all in close array, helmet touching helmet and shield touching
shield, like a moving wall of shining bronze, the men of Achilles charged,
and Patroclus, in the chariot led the way. Down they came at full
speed on the flank of the Trojans, who saw the leader, and knew the
bright armour and the horses of the terrible Achilles, and thought that
he had returned to the war. Then each Trojan looked round to see
by what way he could escape, and when men do that in battle they soon
run by the way they have chosen. Patroclus rushed to the ship
of Protesilaus, and slew the leader of the Trojans there, and drove
them out, and quenched the fire; while they of Troy drew back from the
ships, and Aias and the other unwounded Greek princes leaped among them,
smiting with sword and spear. Well did Hector know that the break
in the battle had come again; but even so he stood, and did what he
might, while the Trojans were driven back in disorder across the ditch,
where the poles of many chariots were broken and the horses fled loose
across the plain.</p>
<p>The horses of Achilles cleared the ditch, and Patroclus drove them
between the Trojans and the wall of their own town, slaying many men,
and, chief of all, Sarpedon, king of the Lycians; and round the body
of Sarpedon the Trojans rallied under Hector, and the fight swayed this
way and that, and there was such a noise of spears and swords smiting
shields and helmets as when many woodcutters fell trees in a glen of
the hills. At last the Trojans gave way, and the Greeks stripped
the armour from the body of brave Sarpedon; but men say that Sleep and
Death, like two winged angels, bore his body away to his own country.
Now Patroclus forgot how Achilles had told him not to pursue the Trojans
across the plain, but to return when he had driven them from the ships.
On he raced, slaying as he went, even till he reached the foot of the
wall of Troy. Thrice he tried to climb it, but thrice he fell
back.</p>
<p>Hector was in his chariot in the gateway, and he bade his squire
lash his horses into the war, and struck at no other man, great or small,
but drove straight against Patroclus, who stood and threw a heavy stone
at Hector; which missed him, but killed his charioteer. Then Patroclus
leaped on the charioteer to strip his armour, but Hector stood over
the body, grasping it by the head, while Patroclus dragged at the feet,
and spears and arrows flew in clouds around the fallen man. At
last, towards sunset, the Greeks drew him out of the war, and Patroclus
thrice charged into the thick of the Trojans. But the helmet of
Achilles was loosened in the fight, and fell from the head of Patroclus,
and he was wounded from behind, and Hector, in front, drove his spear
clean through his body. With his last breath Patroclus prophesied:
“Death stands near thee, Hector, at the hands of noble Achilles.”
But Automedon was driving back the swift horses, carrying to Achilles
the news that his dearest friend was slain.</p>
<p>After Ulysses was wounded, early in this great battle, he was not
able to fight for several days, and, as the story is about Ulysses,
we must tell quite shortly how Achilles returned to the war to take
vengeance for Patroclus, and how he slew Hector. When Patroclus
fell, Hector seized the armour which the Gods had given to Peleus, and
Peleus to his son Achilles, while Achilles had lent it to Patroclus
that he might terrify the Trojans. Retiring out of reach of spears,
Hector took off his own armour and put on that of Achilles, and Greeks
and Trojans fought for the dead body of Patroclus. Then Zeus,
the chief of the Gods, looked down and said that Hector should never
come home out of the battle to his wife, Andromache. But Hector
returned into the fight around the dead Patroclus, and here all the
best men fought, and even Automedon, who had been driving the chariot
of Patroclus. Now when the Trojans seemed to have the better of
the fight, the Greeks sent Antilochus, a son of old Nestor, to tell
Achilles that his friend was slain, and Antilochus ran, and Aias and
his brother protected the Greeks who were trying to carry the body of
Patroclus back to the ships.</p>
<p>Swiftly Antilochus came running to Achilles, saying: “Fallen
is Patroclus, and they are fighting round his naked body, for Hector
has his armour.” Then Achilles said never a word, but fell
on the floor of his hut, and threw black ashes on his yellow hair, till
Antilochus seized his hands, fearing that he would cut his own throat
with his dagger, for very sorrow. His mother, Thetis, arose from
the sea to comfort him, but he said that he desired to die if he could
not slay Hector, who had slain his friend. Then Thetis told him
that he could not fight without armour, and now he had none; but she
would go to the God of armour-making and bring from him such a shield
and helmet and breastplate as had never been seen by men.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the fight raged round the dead body of Patroclus, which
was defiled with blood and dust, near the ships, and was being dragged
this way and that, and torn and wounded. Achilles could not bear
this sight, yet his mother had warned him not to enter without armour
the battle where stones and arrows and spears were flying like hail;
and he was so tall and broad that he could put on the arms of no other
man. So he went down to the ditch as he was, unarmed, and as he
stood high above it, against the red sunset, fire seemed to flow from
his golden hair like the beacon blaze that soars into the dark sky when
an island town is attacked at night, and men light beacons that their
neighbours may see them and come to their help from other isles.
There Achilles stood in a splendour of fire, and he shouted aloud, as
clear as a clarion rings when men fall on to attack a besieged city
wall. Thrice Achilles shouted mightily, and thrice the horses
of the Trojans shuddered for fear and turned back from the onslaught,—and
thrice the men of Troy were confounded and shaken with terror.
Then the Greeks drew the body of Patroclus out of the dust and the arrows,
and laid him on a bier, and Achilles followed, weeping, for he had sent
his friend with chariot and horses to the war; but home again he welcomed
him never more. Then the sun set and it was night.</p>
<p>Now one of the Trojans wished Hector to retire within the walls of
Troy, for certainly Achilles would to-morrow be foremost in the war.
But Hector said, “Have ye not had your fill of being shut up behind
walls? Let Achilles fight; I will meet him in the open field.”
The Trojans cheered, and they camped in the plain, while in the hut
of Achilles women washed the dead body of Patroclus, and Achilles swore
that he would slay Hector.</p>
<p>In the dawn came Thetis, bearing to Achilles the new splendid armour
that the God had made for him. Then Achilles put on that armour,
and roused his men; but Ulysses, who knew all the rules of honour, would
not let him fight till peace had been made, with a sacrifice and other
ceremonies, between him and Agamemnon, and till Agamemnon had given
him all the presents which Achilles had before refused. Achilles
did not want them; he wanted only to fight, but Ulysses made him obey,
and do what was usual. Then the gifts were brought, and Agamemnon
stood up, and said that he was sorry for his insolence, and the men
took breakfast, but Achilles would neither eat nor drink. He mounted
his chariot, but the horse Xanthus bowed his head till his long mane
touched the ground, and, being a fairy horse, the child of the West
Wind, he spoke (or so men said), and these were his words: “We
shall bear thee swiftly and speedily, but thou shalt be slain in fight,
and thy dying day is near at hand.” “Well I know it,”
said Achilles, “but I will not cease from fighting till I have
given the Trojans their fill of war.”</p>
<p>So all that day he chased and slew the Trojans. He drove them
into the river, and, though the river came down in a red flood, he crossed,
and slew them on the plain. The plain caught fire, the bushes
and long dry grass blazed round him, but he fought his way through the
fire, and drove the Trojans to their walls. The gates were thrown
open, and the Trojans rushed through like frightened fawns, and then
they climbed to the battlements, and looked down in safety, while the
whole Greek army advanced in line under their shields.</p>
<p>But Hector stood still, alone, in front of the gate, and old Priam,
who saw Achilles rushing on, shining like a star in his new armour,
called with tears to Hector, “Come within the gate! This
man has slain many of my sons, and if he slays thee whom have I to help
me in my old age?” His mother also called to Hector, but
he stood firm, waiting for Achilles. Now the story says that he
was afraid, and ran thrice in full armour round Troy, with Achilles
in pursuit. But this cannot be true, for no mortal men could run
thrice, in heavy armour, with great shields that clanked against their
ankles, round the town of Troy: moreover Hector was the bravest of men,
and all the Trojan women were looking down at him from the walls.</p>
<p>We cannot believe that he ran away, and the story goes on to tell
that he asked Achilles to make an agreement with him. The conqueror
in the fight should give back the body of the fallen to be buried by
his friends, but should keep his armour. But Achilles said that
he could make no agreement with Hector, and threw his spear, which flew
over Hector’s shoulder. Then Hector threw his spear, but
it could not pierce the shield which the God had made for Achilles.
Hector had no other spear, and Achilles had one, so Hector cried, “Let
me not die without honour!” and drew his sword, and rushed at
Achilles, who sprang to meet him, but before Hector could come within
a sword-stroke Achilles had sent his spear clean through the neck of
Hector. He fell in the dust and Achilles said, “Dogs and
birds shall tear your flesh unburied.” With his dying breath
Hector prayed him to take gold from Priam, and give back his body to
be burned in Troy. But Achilles said, “Hound! would that
I could bring myself to carve and eat thy raw flesh, but dogs shall
devour it, even if thy father offered me thy weight in gold.”
With his last words Hector prophesied and said, “Remember me in
the day when Paris shall slay thee in the Scaean gate.”
Then his brave soul went to the land of the Dead, which the Greeks called
Hades. To that land Ulysses sailed while he was still a living
man, as the story tells later.</p>
<p>Then Achilles did a dreadful deed; he slit the feet of dead Hector
from heel to ankle, and thrust thongs through, and bound him by the
thongs to his chariot and trailed the body in the dust. All the
women of Troy who were on the walls raised a shriek, and Hector’s
wife, Andromache, heard the sound. She had been in an inner room
of her house, weaving a purple web, and embroidering flowers on it,
and she was calling her bower maidens to make ready a bath for Hector
when he should come back tired from battle. But when she heard
the cry from the wall she trembled, and the shuttle with which she was
weaving fell from her hands. “Surely I heard the cry of
my husband’s mother,” she said, and she bade two of her
maidens come with her to see why the people lamented.</p>
<p>She ran swiftly, and reached the battlements, and thence she saw
her dear husband’s body being whirled through the dust towards
the ships, behind the chariot of Achilles. Then night came over
her eyes and she fainted. But when she returned to herself she
cried out that now none would defend her little boy, and other children
would push him away from feasts, saying, “Out with you; no father
of thine is at our table,” and his father, Hector, would lie naked
at the ships, unclad, unburned, unlamented. To be unburned and
unburied was thought the greatest of misfortunes, because the dead man
unburned could not go into the House of Hades, God of the Dead, but
must always wander, alone and comfortless, in the dark borderland between
the dead and the living.</p>
<h2>THE CRUELTY OF ACHILLES, AND THE RANSOMING OF HECTOR</h2>
<p>When Achilles was asleep that night the ghost of Patroclus came,
saying, “Why dost thou not burn and bury me? for the other shadows
of dead men suffer me not to come near them, and lonely I wander along
the dark dwelling of Hades.” Then Achilles awoke, and he
sent men to cut down trees, and make a huge pile of fagots and logs.
On this they laid Patroclus, covered with white linen, and then they
slew many cattle, and Achilles cut the throats of twelve Trojan prisoners
of war, meaning to burn them with Patroclus to do him honour.
This was a deed of shame, for Achilles was mad with sorrow and anger
for the death of his friend. Then they drenched with wine the
great pile of wood, which was thirty yards long and broad, and set fire
to it, and the fire blazed all through the night and died down in the
morning. They put the white bones of Patroclus in a golden casket,
and laid it in the hut of Achilles, who said that, when he died, they
must burn his body, and mix the ashes with the ashes of his friend,
and build over it a chamber of stone, and cover the chamber with a great
hill of earth, and set a pillar of stone above it. This is one
of the hills on the plain of Troy, but the pillar has fallen from the
tomb, long ago.</p>
<p>Then, as the custom was, Achilles held games—chariot races,
foot races, boxing, wrestling, and archery—in honour of Patroclus.
Ulysses won the prize for the foot race, and for the wrestling, so now
his wound must have been healed.</p>
<p>But Achilles still kept trailing Hector’s dead body each day
round the hill that had been raised for the tomb of Patroclus, till
the Gods in heaven were angry, and bade Thetis tell her son that he
must give back the dead body to Priam, and take ransom for it, and they
sent a messenger to Priam to bid him redeem the body of his son.
It was terrible for Priam to have to go and humble himself before Achilles,
whose hands had been red with the blood of his sons, but he did not
disobey the Gods. He opened his chests, and took out twenty-four
beautiful embroidered changes of raiment; and he weighed out ten heavy
bars, or talents, of gold, and chose a beautiful golden cup, and he
called nine of his sons, Paris, and Helenus, and Deiphobus, and the
rest, saying, “Go, ye bad sons, my shame; would that Hector lived
and all of you were dead!” for sorrow made him angry; “go,
and get ready for me a wain, and lay on it these treasures.”
So they harnessed mules to the wain, and placed in it the treasures,
and, after praying, Priam drove through the night to the hut of Achilles.
In he went, when no man looked for him, and kneeled to Achilles, and
kissed his terrible death-dealing hands. “Have pity on me,
and fear the Gods, and give me back my dead son,” he said, “and
remember thine own father. Have pity on me, who have endured to
do what no man born has ever done before, to kiss the hands that slew
my sons.”</p>
<p>Then Achilles remembered his own father, far away, who now was old
and weak: and he wept, and Priam wept with him, and then Achilles raised
Priam from his knees and spoke kindly to him, admiring how beautiful
he still was in his old age, and Priam himself wondered at the beauty
of Achilles. And Achilles thought how Priam had long been rich
and happy, like his own father, Peleus, and now old age and weakness
and sorrow were laid upon both of them, for Achilles knew that his own
day of death was at hand, even at the doors. So Achilles bade
the women make ready the body of Hector for burial, and they clothed
him in a white mantle that Priam had brought, and laid him in the wain;
and supper was made ready, and Priam and Achilles ate and drank together,
and the women spread a bed for Priam, who would not stay long, but stole
away back to Troy while Achilles was asleep.</p>
<p>All the women came out to meet him, and to lament for Hector.
They carried the body into the house of Andromache and laid it on a
bed, and the women gathered around, and each in turn sang her song over
the great dead warrior. His mother bewailed him, and his wife,
and Helen of the fair hands, clad in dark mourning raiment, lifted up
her white arms, and said: “Hector, of all my brethren in Troy
thou wert the dearest, since Paris brought me hither. Would that
ere that day I had died! For this is now the twentieth year since
I came, and in all these twenty years never heard I a word from thee
that was bitter and unkind; others might upbraid me, thy sisters or
thy mother, for thy father was good to me as if he had been my own;
but then thou wouldst restrain them that spoke evil by the courtesy
of thy heart and thy gentle words. Ah! woe for thee, and woe for
me, whom all men shudder at, for there is now none in wide Troyland
to be my friend like thee, my brother and my friend!”</p>
<p>So Helen lamented, but now was done all that men might do; a great
pile of wood was raised, and Hector was burned, and his ashes were placed
in a golden urn, in a dark chamber of stone, within a hollow hill.</p>
<h2>HOW ULYSSES STOLE THE LUCK OF TROY</h2>
<p>After Hector was buried, the siege went on slowly, as it had done
during the first nine years of the war. The Greeks did not know
at that time how to besiege a city, as we saw, by way of digging trenches
and building towers, and battering the walls with machines that threw
heavy stones. The Trojans had lost courage, and dared not go into
the open plain, and they were waiting for the coming up of new armies
of allies—the Amazons, who were girl warriors from far away, and
an Eastern people called the Khita, whose king was Memnon, the son of
the Bright Dawn.</p>
<p>Now everyone knew that, in the temple of the Goddess Pallas Athênê,
in Troy, was a sacred image, which fell from heaven, called the Palladium,
and this very ancient image was the Luck of Troy. While it remained
safe in the temple people believed that Troy could never be taken, but
as it was in a guarded temple in the middle of the town, and was watched
by priestesses day and night, it seemed impossible that the Greeks should
ever enter the city secretly and steal the Luck away.</p>
<p>As Ulysses was the grandson of Autolycus, the Master Thief, he often
wished that the old man was with the Greeks, for if there was a thing
to steal Autolycus could steal it. But by this time Autolycus
was dead, and so Ulysses could only puzzle over the way to steal the
Luck of Troy, and wonder how his grandfather would have set about it.
He prayed for help secretly to Hermes, the God of Thieves, when he sacrificed
goats to him, and at last he had a plan.</p>
<p>There was a story that Anius, the King of the Isle of Delos, had
three daughters, named Œno, Spermo, and Elais, and that Œno
could turn water into wine, while Spermo could turn stones into bread,
and Elais could change mud into olive oil. Those fairy gifts,
people said, were given to the maidens by the Wine God, Dionysus, and
by the Goddess of Corn, Demeter. Now corn, and wine, and oil were
sorely needed by the Greeks, who were tired of paying much gold and
bronze to the Phoenician merchants for their supplies. Ulysses
therefore went to Agamemnon one day, and asked leave to take his ship
and voyage to Delos, to bring, if he could, the three maidens to the
camp, if indeed they could do these miracles. As no fighting was
going on, Agamemnon gave Ulysses leave to depart, so he went on board
his ship, with a crew of fifty men of Ithaca, and away they sailed,
promising to return in a month.</p>
<p>Two or three days after that, a dirty old beggar man began to be
seen in the Greek camp. He had crawled in late one evening, dressed
in a dirty smock and a very dirty old cloak, full of holes, and stained
with smoke. Over everything he wore the skin of a stag, with half
the hair worn off, and he carried a staff, and a filthy tattered wallet,
to put food in, which swung from his neck by a cord. He came crouching
and smiling up to the door of the hut of Diomede, and sat down just
within the doorway, where beggars still sit in the East. Diomede
saw him, and sent him a loaf and two handfuls of flesh, which the beggar
laid on his wallet, between his feet, and he made his supper greedily,
gnawing a bone like a dog.</p>
<p>After supper Diomede asked him who he was and whence he came, and
he told a long story about how he had been a Cretan pirate, and had
been taken prisoner by the Egyptians when he was robbing there, and
how he had worked for many years in their stone quarries, where the
sun had burned him brown, and had escaped by hiding among the great
stones, carried down the Nile in a raft, for building a temple on the
seashore. The raft arrived at night, and the beggar said that
he stole out from it in the dark and found a Phoenician ship in the
harbour, and the Phoenicians took him on board, meaning to sell him
somewhere as a slave. But a tempest came on and wrecked the ship
off the Isle of Tenedos, which is near Troy, and the beggar alone escaped
to the island on a plank of the ship. From Tenedos he had come
to Troy in a fisher’s boat, hoping to make himself useful in the
camp, and earn enough to keep body and soul together till he could find
a ship sailing to Crete.</p>
<p>He made his story rather amusing, describing the strange ways of
the Egyptians; how they worshipped cats and bulls, and did everything
in just the opposite of the Greek way of doing things. So Diomede
let him have a rug and blankets to sleep on in the portico of the hut,
and next day the old wretch went begging about the camp and talking
with the soldiers. Now he was a most impudent and annoying old
vagabond, and was always in quarrels. If there was a disagreeable
story about the father or grandfather of any of the princes, he knew
it and told it, so that he got a blow from the baton of Agamemnon, and
Aias gave him a kick, and Idomeneus drubbed him with the butt of his
spear for a tale about his grandmother, and everybody hated him and
called him a nuisance. He was for ever jeering at Ulysses, who
was far away, and telling tales about Autolycus, and at last he stole
a gold cup, a very large cup, with two handles, and a dove sitting on
each handle, from the hut of Nestor. The old chief was fond of
this cup, which he had brought from home, and, when it was found in
the beggar’s dirty wallet, everybody cried that he must be driven
out of the camp and well whipped. So Nestor’s son, young
Thrasymedes, with other young men, laughing and shouting, pushed and
dragged the beggar close up to the Scaean gate of Troy, where Thrasymedes
called with a loud voice, “O Trojans, we are sick of this shameless
beggar. First we shall whip him well, and if he comes back we
shall put out his eyes and cut off his hands and feet, and give him
to the dogs to eat. He may go to you, if he likes; if not, he
must wander till he dies of hunger.”</p>
<p>The young men of Troy heard this and laughed, and a crowd gathered
on the wall to see the beggar punished. So Thrasymedes whipped
him with his bowstring till he was tired, and they did not leave off
beating the beggar till he ceased howling and fell, all bleeding, and
lay still. Then Thrasymedes gave him a parting kick, and went
away with his friends. The beggar lay quiet for some time, then
he began to stir, and sat up, wiping the tears from his eyes, and shouting
curses and bad words after the Greeks, praying that they might be speared
in the back, and eaten by dogs.</p>
<p>At last he tried to stand up, but fell down again, and began to crawl
on hands and knees towards the Scaean gate. There he sat down,
within the two side walls of the gate, where he cried and lamented.
Now Helen of the fair hands came down from the gate tower, being sorry
to see any man treated so much worse than a beast, and she spoke to
the beggar and asked him why he had been used in this cruel way?</p>
<p>At first he only moaned, and rubbed his sore sides, but at last he
said that he was an unhappy man, who had been shipwrecked, and was begging
his way home, and that the Greeks suspected him of being a spy sent
out by the Trojans. But he had been in Lacedaemon, her own country,
he said, and could tell her about her father, if she were, as he supposed,
the beautiful Helen, and about her brothers, Castor and Polydeuces,
and her little daughter, Hermione.</p>
<p>“But perhaps,” he said, “you are no mortal woman,
but some goddess who favours the Trojans, and if indeed you are a goddess
then I liken you to Aphrodite, for beauty, and stature, and shapeliness.”
Then Helen wept; for many a year had passed since she had heard any
word of her father, and daughter, and her brothers, who were dead, though
she knew it not. So she stretched out her white hand, and raised
the beggar, who was kneeling at her feet, and bade him follow her to
her own house, within the palace garden of King Priam.</p>
<p>Helen walked forward, with a bower maiden at either side, and the
beggar crawling after her. When she had entered her house, Paris
was not there, so she ordered the bath to be filled with warm water,
and new clothes to be brought, and she herself washed the old beggar
and anointed him with oil. This appears very strange to us, for
though Saint Elizabeth of Hungary used to wash and clothe beggars, we
are surprised that Helen should do so, who was not a saint. But
long afterwards she herself told the son of Ulysses, Telemachus, that
she had washed his father when he came into Troy disguised as a beggar
who had been sorely beaten.</p>
<p>You must have guessed that the beggar was Ulysses, who had not gone
to Delos in his ship, but stolen back in a boat, and appeared disguised
among the Greeks. He did all this to make sure that nobody could
recognise him, and he behaved so as to deserve a whipping that he might
not be suspected as a Greek spy by the Trojans, but rather be pitied
by them. Certainly he deserved his name of “the much-enduring
Ulysses.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile he sat in his bath and Helen washed his feet. But
when she had done, and had anointed his wounds with olive oil, and when
she had clothed him in a white tunic and a purple mantle, then she opened
her lips to cry out with amazement, for she knew Ulysses; but he laid
his finger on her lips, saying “Hush!” Then she remembered
how great danger he was in, for the Trojans, if they found him, would
put him to some cruel death, and she sat down, trembling and weeping,
while he watched her.</p>
<p>“Oh thou strange one,” she said, “how enduring
is thy heart and how cunning beyond measure! How hast thou borne
to be thus beaten and disgraced, and to come within the walls of Troy?
Well it is for thee that Paris, my lord, is far from home, having gone
to guide Penthesilea, the Queen of the warrior maids whom men call Amazons,
who is on her way to help the Trojans.”</p>
<p>Then Ulysses smiled, and Helen saw that she had said a word which
she ought not to have spoken, and had revealed the secret hope of the
Trojans. Then she wept, and said, “Oh cruel and cunning!
You have made me betray the people with whom I live, though woe is me
that ever I left my own people, and my husband dear, and my child!
And now if you escape alive out of Troy, you will tell the Greeks, and
they will lie in ambush by night for the Amazons on the way to Troy
and will slay them all. If you and I were not friends long ago,
I would tell the Trojans that you are here, and they would give your
body to the dogs to eat, and fix your head on the palisade above the
wall. Woe is me that ever I was born.”</p>
<p>Ulysses answered, “Lady, as you have said, we two are friends
from of old, and your friend I will be till the last, when the Greeks
break into Troy, and slay the men, and carry the women captives.
If I live till that hour no man shall harm you, but safely and in honour
you shall come to your palace in Lacedaemon of the rifted hills.
Moreover, I swear to you a great oath, by Zeus above, and by Them that
under earth punish the souls of men who swear falsely, that I shall
tell no man the thing which you have spoken.”</p>
<p>So when he had sworn and done that oath, Helen was comforted and
dried her tears. Then she told him how unhappy she was, and how
she had lost her last comfort when Hector died. “Always
am I wretched,” she said, “save when sweet sleep falls on
me. Now the wife of Thon, King of Egypt, gave me this gift when
we were in Egypt, on our way to Troy, namely, a drug that brings sleep
even to the most unhappy, and it is pressed from the poppy heads of
the garland of the God of Sleep.” Then she showed him strange
phials of gold, full of this drug: phials wrought by the Egyptians,
and covered with magic spells and shapes of beasts and flowers.
“One of these I will give you,” she said, “that even
from Troy town you may not go without a gift in memory of the hands
of Helen.” So Ulysses took the phial of gold, and was glad
in his heart, and Helen set before him meat and wine. When he
had eaten and drunk, and his strength had come back to him, he said:</p>
<p>“Now I must dress me again in my old rags, and take my wallet,
and my staff, and go forth, and beg through Troy town. For here
I must abide for some days as a beggar man, lest if I now escape from
your house in the night the Trojans may think that you have told me
the secrets of their counsel, which I am carrying to the Greeks, and
may be angry with you.” So he clothed himself again as a
beggar, and took his staff, and hid the phial of gold with the Egyptian
drug in his rags, and in his wallet also he put the new clothes that
Helen had given him, and a sword, and he took farewell, saying, “Be
of good heart, for the end of your sorrows is at hand. But if
you see me among the beggars in the street, or by the well, take no
heed of me, only I will salute you as a beggar who has been kindly treated
by a Queen.”</p>
<p>So they parted, and Ulysses went out, and when it was day he was
with the beggars in the streets, but by night he commonly slept near
the fire of a smithy forge, as is the way of beggars. So for some
days he begged, saying that he was gathering food to eat while he walked
to some town far away that was at peace, where he might find work to
do. He was not impudent now, and did not go to rich men’s
houses or tell evil tales, or laugh, but he was much in the temples,
praying to the Gods, and above all in the temple of Pallas Athênê.
The Trojans thought that he was a pious man for a beggar.</p>
<p>Now there was a custom in these times that men and women who were
sick or in distress, should sleep at night on the floors of the temples.
They did this hoping that the God would send them a dream to show them
how their diseases might be cured, or how they might find what they
had lost, or might escape from their distresses.</p>
<p>Ulysses slept in more than one temple, and once in that of Pallas
Athênê, and the priests and priestesses were kind to him,
and gave him food in the morning when the gates of the temple were opened.</p>
<p>In the temple of Pallas Athênê, where the Luck of Troy
lay always on her altar, the custom was that priestesses kept watch,
each for two hours, all through the night, and soldiers kept guard within
call. So one night Ulysses slept there, on the floor, with other
distressed people, seeking for dreams from the Gods. He lay still
all through the night till the turn of the last priestess came to watch.
The priestess used to walk up and down with bare feet among the dreaming
people, having a torch in her hand, and muttering hymns to the Goddess.
Then Ulysses, when her back was turned, slipped the gold phial out of
his rags, and let it lie on the polished floor beside him. When
the priestess came back again, the light from her torch fell on the
glittering phial, and she stooped and picked it up, and looked at it
curiously. There came from it a sweet fragrance, and she opened
it, and tasted the drug. It seemed to her the sweetest thing that
ever she had tasted, and she took more and more, and then closed the
phial and laid it down, and went along murmuring her hymn.</p>
<p>But soon a great drowsiness came over her, and she sat down on the
step of the altar, and fell sound asleep, and the torch sunk in her
hand, and went out, and all was dark. Then Ulysses put the phial
in his wallet, and crept very cautiously to the altar, in the dark,
and stole the Luck of Troy. It was only a small black mass of
what is now called meteoric iron, which sometimes comes down with meteorites
from the sky, but it was shaped like a shield, and the people thought
it an image of the warlike shielded Goddess, fallen from Heaven.
Such sacred shields, made of glass and ivory, are found deep in the
earth in the ruined cities of Ulysses’ time. Swiftly Ulysses
hid the Luck in his rags and left in its place on the altar a copy of
the Luck, which he had made of blackened clay. Then he stole back
to the place where he had lain, and remained there till dawn appeared,
and the sleepers who sought for dreams awoke, and the temple gates were
opened, and Ulysses walked out with the rest of them.</p>
<p>He stole down a lane, where as yet no people were stirring, and crept
along, leaning on his staff, till he came to the eastern gate, at the
back of the city, which the Greeks never attacked, for they had never
drawn their army in a circle round the town. There Ulysses explained
to the sentinels that he had gathered food enough to last for a long
journey to some other town, and opened his bag, which seemed full of
bread and broken meat. The soldiers said he was a lucky beggar,
and let him out. He walked slowly along the waggon road by which
wood was brought into Troy from the forests on Mount Ida, and when he
found that nobody was within sight he slipped into the forest, and stole
into a dark thicket, hiding beneath the tangled boughs. Here he
lay and slept till evening, and then took the new clothes which Helen
had given him out of his wallet, and put them on, and threw the belt
of the sword over his shoulder, and hid the Luck of Troy in his bosom.
He washed himself clean in a mountain brook, and now all who saw him
must have known that he was no beggar, but Ulysses of Ithaca, Laertes’
son.</p>
<p>So he walked cautiously down the side of the brook which ran between
high banks deep in trees, and followed it till it reached the river
Xanthus, on the left of the Greek lines. Here he found Greek sentinels
set to guard the camp, who cried aloud in joy and surprise, for his
ship had not yet returned from Delos, and they could not guess how Ulysses
had come back alone across the sea. So two of the sentinels guarded
Ulysses to the hut of Agamemnon, where he and Achilles and all the chiefs
were sitting at a feast. They all leaped up, but when Ulysses
took the Luck of Troy from within his mantle, they cried that this was
the bravest deed that had been done in the war, and they sacrificed
ten oxen to Zeus.</p>
<p>“So you were the old beggar,” said young Thrasymedes.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ulysses, “and when next you beat a
beggar, Thrasymedes, do not strike so hard and so long.”</p>
<p>That night all the Greeks were full of hope, for now they had the
Luck of Troy, but the Trojans were in despair, and guessed that the
beggar was the thief, and that Ulysses had been the beggar. The
priestess, Theano, could tell them nothing; they found her, with the
extinguished torch drooping in her hand, asleep, as she sat on the step
of the altar, and she never woke again.</p>
<h2>THE BATTLES WITH THE AMAZONS AND MEMNON—THE DEATH OF ACHILLES</h2>
<p>Ulysses thought much and often of Helen, without whose kindness he
could not have saved the Greeks by stealing the Luck of Troy.
He saw that, though she remained as beautiful as when the princes all
sought her hand, she was most unhappy, knowing herself to be the cause
of so much misery, and fearing what the future might bring. Ulysses
told nobody about the secret which she had let fall, the coming of the
Amazons.</p>
<p>The Amazons were a race of warlike maids, who lived far away on the
banks of the river Thermodon. They had fought against Troy in
former times, and one of the great hill-graves on the plain of Troy
covered the ashes of an Amazon, swift-footed Myrinê. People
believed that they were the daughters of the God of War, and they were
reckoned equal in battle to the bravest men. Their young Queen,
Penthesilea, had two reasons for coming to fight at Troy: one was her
ambition to win renown, and the other her sleepless sorrow for having
accidentally killed her sister, Hippolytê, when hunting.
The spear which she threw at a stag struck Hippolytê and slew
her, and Penthesilea cared no longer for her own life, and desired to
fall gloriously in battle. So Penthesilea and her bodyguard of
twelve Amazons set forth from the wide streams of Thermodon, and rode
into Troy. The story says that they did not drive in chariots,
like all the Greek and Trojan chiefs, but rode horses, which must have
been the manner of their country.</p>
<p>Penthesilea was the tallest and most beautiful of the Amazons, and
shone among her twelve maidens like the moon among the stars, or the
bright Dawn among the Hours which follow her chariot wheels. The
Trojans rejoiced when they beheld her, for she looked both terrible
and beautiful, with a frown on her brow, and fair shining eyes, and
a blush on her cheeks. To the Trojans she came like Iris, the
Rainbow, after a storm, and they gathered round her cheering, and throwing
flowers and kissing her stirrup, as the people of Orleans welcomed Joan
of Arc when she came to deliver them. Even Priam was glad, as
is a man long blind, when he has been healed, and again looks upon the
light of the sun. Priam held a great feast, and gave to Penthesilea
many beautiful gifts: cups of gold, and embroideries, and a sword with
a hilt of silver, and she vowed that she would slay Achilles.
But when Andromache, the wife of Hector, heard her she said within herself,
“Ah, unhappy girl, what is this boast of thine! Thou hast
not the strength to fight the unconquerable son of Peleus, for if Hector
could not slay him, what chance hast thou? But the piled-up earth
covers Hector!”</p>
<p>In the morning Penthesilea sprang up from sleep and put on her glorious
armour, with spear in hand, and sword at side, and bow and quiver hung
behind her back, and her great shield covering her side from neck to
stirrup, and mounted her horse, and galloped to the plain. Beside
her charged the twelve maidens of her bodyguard, and all the company
of Hector’s brothers and kinsfolk. These headed the Trojan
lines, and they rushed towards the ships of the Greeks.</p>
<p>Then the Greeks asked each other, “Who is this that leads the
Trojans as Hector led them, surely some God rides in the van of the
charioteers!” Ulysses could have told them who the new leader
of the Trojans was, but it seems that he had not the heart to fight
against women, for his name is not mentioned in this day’s battle.
So the two lines clashed, and the plain of Troy ran red with blood,
for Penthesilea slew Molios, and Persinoos, and Eilissos, and Antiphates,
and Lernos high of heart, and Hippalmos of the loud warcry, and Haemonides,
and strong Elasippus, while her maidens Derinoê and Cloniê
slew each a chief of the Greeks. But Cloniê fell beneath
the spear of Podarkes, whose hand Penthesilea cut off with the sword,
while Idomeneus speared the Amazon Bremousa, and Meriones of Crete slew
Evadrê, and Diomede killed Alcibiê and Derimacheia in close
fight with the sword, so the company of the Twelve were thinned, the
bodyguard of Penthesilea.</p>
<p>The Trojans and Greeks kept slaying each other, but Penthesilea avenged
her maidens, driving the ranks of Greece as a lioness drives the cattle
on the hills, for they could not stand before her. Then she shouted,
“Dogs! to-day shall you pay for the sorrows of Priam! Where
is Diomede, where is Achilles, where is Aias, that, men say, are your
bravest? Will none of them stand before my spear?”
Then she charged again, at the head of the Household of Priam, brothers
and kinsmen of Hector, and where they came the Greeks fell like yellow
leaves before the wind of autumn. The white horse that Penthesilea
rode, a gift from the wife of the North Wind, flashed like lightning
through a dark cloud among the companies of the Greeks, and the chariots
that followed the charge of the Amazon rocked as they swept over the
bodies of the slain. Then the old Trojans, watching from the walls,
cried: “This is no mortal maiden but a Goddess, and to-day she
will burn the ships of the Greeks, and they will all perish in Troyland,
and see Greece never more again.”</p>
<p>Now it so was that Aias and Achilles had not heard the din and the
cry of war, for both had gone to weep over the great new grave of Patroclus.
Penthesilea and the Trojans had driven back the Greeks within their
ditch, and they were hiding here and there among the ships, and torches
were blazing in men’s hands to burn the ships, as in the day of
the valour of Hector: when Aias heard the din of battle, and called
to Achilles to make speed towards the ships.</p>
<p>So they ran swiftly to their huts, and armed themselves, and Aias
fell smiting and slaying upon the Trojans, but Achilles slew five of
the bodyguard of Penthesilea. She, beholding her maidens fallen,
rode straight against Aias and Achilles, like a dove defying two falcons,
and cast her spear, but it fell back blunted from the glorious shield
that the God had made for the son of Peleus. Then she threw another
spear at Aias, crying, “I am the daughter of the God of War,”
but his armour kept out the spear, and he and Achilles laughed aloud.
Aias paid no more heed to the Amazon, but rushed against the Trojan
men; while Achilles raised the heavy spear that none but he could throw,
and drove it down through breastplate and breast of Penthesilea, yet
still her hand grasped her sword-hilt. But, ere she could draw
her sword, Achilles speared her horse, and horse and rider fell, and
died in their fall.</p>
<p>There lay fair Penthesilea in the dust, like a tall poplar tree that
the wind has overthrown, and her helmet fell, and the Greeks who gathered
round marvelled to see her lie so beautiful in death, like Artemis,
the Goddess of the Woods, when she sleeps alone, weary with hunting
on the hills. Then the heart of Achilles was pierced with pity
and sorrow, thinking how she might have been his wife in his own country,
had he spared her, but he was never to see pleasant Phthia, his native
land, again. So Achilles stood and wept over Penthesilea dead.</p>
<p>Now the Greeks, in pity and sorrow, held their hands, and did not
pursue the Trojans who had fled, nor did they strip the armour from
Penthesilea and her twelve maidens, but laid the bodies on biers, and
sent them back in peace to Priam. Then the Trojans burned Penthesilea
in the midst of her dead maidens, on a great pile of dry wood, and placed
their ashes in a golden casket, and buried them all in the great hill-grave
of Laomedon, an ancient King of Troy, while the Greeks with lamentation
buried them whom the Amazon had slain.</p>
<p>The old men of Troy and the chiefs now held a council, and Priam
said that they must not yet despair, for, if they had lost many of their
bravest warriors, many of the Greeks had also fallen. Their best
plan was to fight only with arrows from the walls and towers, till King
Memnon came to their rescue with a great army of Aethiopes. Now
Memnon was the son of the bright Dawn, a beautiful Goddess who had loved
and married a mortal man, Tithonus. She had asked Zeus, the chief
of the Gods, to make her lover immortal, and her prayer was granted.
Tithonus could not die, but he began to grow grey, and then white haired,
with a long white beard, and very weak, till nothing of him seemed to
be left but his voice, always feebly chattering like the grasshoppers
on a summer day.</p>
<p>Memnon was the most beautiful of men, except Paris and Achilles,
and his home was in a country that borders on the land of sunrising.
There he was reared by the lily maidens called Hesperides, till he came
to his full strength, and commanded the whole army of the Aethiopes.
For their arrival Priam wished to wait, but Polydamas advised that the
Trojans should give back Helen to the Greeks, with jewels twice as valuable
as those which she had brought from the house of Menelaus. Then
Paris was very angry, and said that Polydamas was a coward, for it was
little to Paris that Troy should be taken and burned in a month if for
a month he could keep Helen of the fair hands.</p>
<p>At length Memnon came, leading a great army of men who had nothing
white about them but the teeth, so fiercely the sun burned on them in
their own country. The Trojans had all the more hopes of Memnon
because, on his long journey from the land of sunrising, and the river
Oceanus that girdles the round world, he had been obliged to cross the
country of the Solymi. Now the Solymi were the fiercest of men
and rose up against Memnon, but he and his army fought them for a whole
day, and defeated them, and drove them to the hills. When Memnon
came, Priam gave him a great cup of gold, full of wine to the brim,
and Memnon drank the wine at one draught. But he did not make
great boasts of what he could do, like poor Penthesilea, “for,”
said he, “whether I am a good man at arms will be known in battle,
where the strength of men is tried. So now let us turn to sleep,
for to wake and drink wine all through the night is an ill beginning
of war.”</p>
<p>Then Priam praised his wisdom, and all men betook them to bed, but
the bright Dawn rose unwillingly next day, to throw light on the battle
where her son was to risk his fife. Then Memnon led out the dark
clouds of his men into the plain, and the Greeks foreboded evil when
they saw so great a new army of fresh and unwearied warriors, but Achilles,
leading them in his shining armour, gave them courage. Memnon
fell upon the left wing of the Greeks, and on the men of Nestor, and
first he slew Ereuthus, and then attacked Nestor’s young son,
Antilochus, who, now that Patroclus had fallen, was the dearest friend
of Achilles. On him Memnon leaped, like a lion on a kid, but Antilochus
lifted a huge stone from the plain, a pillar that had been set on the
tomb of some great warrior long ago, and the stone smote full on the
helmet of Memnon, who reeled beneath the stroke. But Memnon seized
his heavy spear, and drove it through shield and corselet of Antilochus,
even into his heart, and he fell and died beneath his father’s
eyes. Then Nestor in great sorrow and anger strode across the
body of Antilochus and called to his other son, Thrasymedes, “Come
and drive afar this man that has slain thy brother, for if fear be in
thy heart thou art no son of mine, nor of the race of Periclymenus,
who stood up in battle even against the strong man Heracles!”</p>
<p>But Memnon was too strong for Thrasymedes, and drove him off, while
old Nestor himself charged sword in hand, though Memnon bade him begone,
for he was not minded to strike so aged a man, and Nestor drew back,
for he was weak with age. Then Memnon and his army charged the
Greeks, slaying and stripping the dead. But Nestor had mounted
his chariot and driven to Achilles, weeping, and imploring him to come
swiftly and save the body of Antilochus, and he sped to meet Memnon,
who lifted a great stone, the landmark of a field, and drove it against
the shield of the son of Peleus. But Achilles was not shaken by
the blow; he ran forward, and wounded Memnon over the rim of his shield.
Yet wounded as he was Memnon fought on and struck his spear through
the arm of Achilles, for the Greeks fought with no sleeves of bronze
to protect their arms.</p>
<p>Then Achilles drew his great sword, and flew on Memnon, and with
sword-strokes they lashed at each other on shield and helmet, and the
long horsehair crests of the helmets were shorn off, and flew down the
wind, and their shields rang terribly beneath the sword strokes.
They thrust at each others’ throats between shield and visor of
the helmet, they smote at knee, and thrust at breast, and the armour
rang about their bodies, and the dust from beneath their feet rose up
in a cloud around them, like mist round the falls of a great river in
flood. So they fought, neither of them yielding a step, till Achilles
made so rapid a thrust that Memnon could not parry it, and the bronze
sword passed clean through his body beneath the breast-bone, and he
fell, and his armour clashed as he fell.</p>
<p>Then Achilles, wounded as he was and weak from loss of blood, did
not stay to strip the golden armour of Memnon, but shouted his warcry,
and pressed on, for he hoped to enter the gate of Troy with the fleeing
Trojans, and all the Greeks followed after him. So they pursued,
slaying as they went, and the Scaean gate was choked with the crowd
of men, pursuing and pursued. In that hour would the Greeks have
entered Troy, and burned the city, and taken the women captive, but
Paris stood on the tower above the gate, and in his mind was anger for
the death of his brother Hector. He tried the string of his bow,
and found it frayed, for all day he had showered his arrows on the Greeks;
so he chose a new bowstring, and fitted it, and strung the bow, and
chose an arrow from his quiver, and aimed at the ankle of Achilles,
where it was bare beneath the greave, or leg-guard of metal, that the
God had fashioned for him. Through the ankle flew the arrow, and
Achilles wheeled round, weak as he was, and stumbled, and fell, and
the armour that the God had wrought was defiled with dust and blood.</p>
<p>Then Achilles rose again, and cried: “What coward has smitten
me with a secret arrow from afar? Let him stand forth and meet
me with sword and spear!” So speaking he seized the shaft
with his strong hands and tore it out of the wound, and much blood gushed,
and darkness came over his eyes. Yet he staggered forward, striking
blindly, and smote Orythaon, a dear friend of Hector, through the helmet,
and others he smote, but now his force failed him, and he leaned on
his spear, and cried his warcry, and said, “Cowards of Troy, ye
shall not all escape my spear, dying as I am.” But as he
spoke he fell, and all his armour rang around him, yet the Trojans stood
apart and watched; and as hunters watch a dying lion not daring to go
nigh him, so the Trojans stood in fear till Achilles drew his latest
breath. Then from the wall the Trojan women raised a great cry
of joy over him who had slain the noble Hector: and thus was fulfilled
the prophecy of Hector, that Achilles should fall in the Scaean gateway,
by the hand of Paris.</p>
<p>Then the best of the Trojans rushed forth from the gate to seize
the body of Achilles, and his glorious armour, but the Greeks were as
eager to carry the body to the ships that it might have due burial.
Round the dead Achilles men fought long and sore, and both sides were
mixed, Greeks and Trojans, so that men dared not shoot arrows from the
walls of Troy lest they should kill their own friends. Paris,
and Aeneas, and Glaucus, who had been the friend of Sarpedon, led the
Trojans, and Aias and Ulysses led the Greeks, for we are not told that
Agamemnon was fighting in this great battle of the war. Now as
angry wild bees flock round a man who is taking their honeycombs, so
the Trojans gathered round Aias, striving to stab him, but he set his
great shield in front, and smote and slew all that came within reach
of his spear. Ulysses, too, struck down many, and though a spear
was thrown and pierced his leg near the knee he stood firm, protecting
the body of Achilles. At last Ulysses caught the body of Achilles
by the hands, and heaved it upon his back, and so limped towards the
ships, but Aias and the men of Aias followed, turning round if ever
the Trojans ventured to come near, and charging into the midst of them.
Thus very slowly they bore the dead Achilles across the plain, through
the bodies of the fallen and the blood, till they met Nestor in his
chariot and placed Achilles therein, and swiftly Nestor drove to the
ships.</p>
<p>There the women, weeping, washed Achilles’ comely body, and
laid him on a bier with a great white mantle over him, and all the women
lamented and sang dirges, and the first was Briseis, who loved Achilles
better than her own country, and her father, and her brothers whom he
had slain in war. The Greek princes, too, stood round the body,
weeping and cutting off their long locks of yellow hair, a token of
grief and an offering to the dead.</p>
<p>Men say that forth from the sea came Thetis of the silver feet, the
mother of Achilles, with her ladies, the deathless maidens of the waters.
They rose up from their glassy chambers below the sea, moving on, many
and beautiful, like the waves on a summer day, and their sweet song
echoed along the shores, and fear came upon the Greeks. Then they
would have fled, but Nestor cried: “Hold, flee not, young lords
of the Achaeans! Lo, she that comes from the sea is his mother,
with the deathless maidens of the waters, to look on the face of her
dead son.” Then the sea nymphs stood around the dead Achilles
and clothed him in the garments of the Gods, fragrant raiment, and all
the Nine Muses, one to the other replying with sweet voices, began their
lament.</p>
<p>Next the Greeks made a great pile of dry wood, and laid Achilles
on it, and set fire to it, till the flames had consumed his body except
the white ashes. These they placed in a great golden cup and mingled
with them the ashes of Patroclus, and above all they built a tomb like
a hill, high on a headland above the sea, that men for all time may
see it as they go sailing by, and may remember Achilles. Next
they held in his honour foot races and chariot races, and other games,
and Thetis gave splendid prizes. Last of all, when the games were
ended, Thetis placed before the chiefs the glorious armour that the
God had made for her son on the night after the slaying of Patroclus
by Hector. “Let these arms be the prize of the best of the
Greeks,” she said, “and of him that saved the body of Achilles
out of the hands of the Trojans.”</p>
<p>Then stood up on one side Aias and on the other Ulysses, for these
two had rescued the body, and neither thought himself a worse warrior
than the other. Both were the bravest of the brave, and if Aias
was the taller and stronger, and upheld the fight at the ships on the
day of the valour of Hector; Ulysses had alone withstood the Trojans,
and refused to retreat even when wounded, and his courage and cunning
had won for the Greeks the Luck of Troy. Therefore old Nestor
arose and said: "This is a luckless day, when the best of the Greeks
are rivals for such a prize. He who is not the winner will be
heavy at heart, and will not stand firm by us in battle, as of old,
and hence will come great loss to the Greeks. Who can be a just
judge in this question, for some men will love Aias better, and some
will prefer Ulysses, and thus will arise disputes among ourselves.
Lo! have we not here among us many Trojan prisoners, waiting till their
friends pay their ransom in cattle and gold and bronze and iron?
These hate all the Greeks alike, and will favour neither Aias nor Ulysses.
Let <i>them</i> be the judges, and decide who is the best of the Greeks,
and the man who has done most harm to the Trojans.”</p>
<p>Agamemnon said that Nestor had spoken wisely. The Trojans were
then made to sit as judges in the midst of the Assembly, and Aias and
Ulysses spoke, and told the stories of their own great deeds, of which
we have heard already, but Aias spoke roughly and discourteously, calling
Ulysses a coward and a weakling. “Perhaps the Trojans know,”
said Ulysses quietly, “whether they think that I deserve what
Aias has said about me, that I am a coward; and perhaps Aias may remember
that he did not find me so weak when we wrestled for a prize at the
funeral of Patroclus.”</p>
<p>Then the Trojans all with one voice said that Ulysses was the best
man among the Greeks, and the most feared by them, both for his courage
and his skill in stratagems of war. On this, the blood of Aias
flew into his face, and he stood silent and unmoving, and could not
speak a word, till his friends came round him and led him away to his
hut, and there he sat down and would not eat or drink, and the night
fell.</p>
<p>Long he sat, musing in his mind, and then rose and put on all his
armour, and seized a sword that Hector had given him one day when they
two fought in a gentle passage of arms, and took courteous farewell
of each other, and Aias had given Hector a broad sword-belt, wrought
with gold. This sword, Hector’s gift, Aias took, and went
towards the hut of Ulysses, meaning to carve him limb from limb, for
madness had come upon him in his great grief. Rushing through
the night to slay Ulysses he fell upon the flock of sheep that the Greeks
kept for their meat. And up and down among them he went, smiting
blindly till the dawn came, and, lo! his senses returned to him, and
he saw that he had not smitten Ulysses, but stood in a pool of blood
among the sheep that he had slain. He could not endure the disgrace
of his madness, and he fixed the sword, Hector’s gift, with its
hilt firmly in the ground, and went back a little way, and ran and fell
upon the sword, which pierced his heart, and so died the great Aias,
choosing death before a dishonoured life.</p>
<h2>ULYSSES SAILS TO SEEK THE SON OF ACHILLES.—THE VALOUR OF EURYPYLUS</h2>
<p>When the Greeks found Aias lying dead, slain by his own hand, they
made great lament, and above all the brother of Aias, and his wife Tecmessa
bewailed him, and the shores of the sea rang with their sorrow.
But of all no man was more grieved than Ulysses, and he stood up and
said: “Would that the sons of the Trojans had never awarded to
me the arms of Achilles, for far rather would I have given them to Aias
than that this loss should have befallen the whole army of the Greeks.
Let no man blame me, or be angry with me, for I have not sought for
wealth, to enrich myself, but for honour only, and to win a name that
will be remembered among men in times to come.” Then they
made a great fire of wood, and burned the body of Aias, lamenting him
as they had sorrowed for Achilles.</p>
<p>Now it seemed that though the Greeks had won the Luck of Troy and
had defeated the Amazons and the army of Memnon, they were no nearer
taking Troy than ever. They had slain Hector, indeed, and many
other Trojans, but they had lost the great Achilles, and Aias, and Patroclus,
and Antilochus, with the princes whom Penthesilea and Memnon slew, and
the bands of the dead chiefs were weary of fighting, and eager to go
home. The chiefs met in council, and Menelaus arose and said that
his heart was wasted with sorrow for the death of so many brave men
who had sailed to Troy for his sake. “Would that death had
come upon me before I gathered this host,” he said, “but
come, let the rest of us launch our swift ships, and return each to
our own country.”</p>
<p>He spoke thus to try the Greeks, and see of what courage they were,
for his desire was still to burn Troy town and to slay Paris with his
own hand. Then up rose Diomede, and swore that never would the
Greeks turn cowards. No! he bade them sharpen their swords, and
make ready for battle. The prophet Calchas, too, arose and reminded
the Greeks how he had always foretold that they would take Troy in the
tenth year of the siege, and how the tenth year had come, and victory
was almost in their hands. Next Ulysses stood up and said that,
though Achilles was dead, and there was no prince to lead his men, yet
a son had been born to Achilles, while he was in the isle of Scyros,
and that son he would bring to fill his father’s place.</p>
<p>“Surely he will come, and for a token I will carry to him those
unhappy arms of the great Achilles. Unworthy am I to wear them,
and they bring back to my mind our sorrow for Aias. But his son
will wear them, in the front of the spearmen of Greece and in the thickest
ranks of Troy shall the helmet of Achilles shine, as it was wont to
do, for always he fought among the foremost.” Thus Ulysses
spoke, and he and Diomede, with fifty oarsmen, went on board a swift
ship, and sitting all in order on the benches they smote the grey sea
into foam, and Ulysses held the helm and steered them towards the isle
of Scyros.</p>
<p>Now the Trojans had rest from war for a while, and Priam, with a
heavy heart, bade men take his chief treasure, the great golden vine,
with leaves and clusters of gold, and carry it to the mother of Eurypylus,
the king of the people who dwell where the wide marshlands of the river
Cayster clang with the cries of the cranes and herons and wild swans.
For the mother of Eurypylus had sworn that never would she let her son
go to the war unless Priam sent her the vine of gold, a gift of the
gods to an ancient King of Troy.</p>
<p>With a heavy heart, then, Priam sent the golden vine, but Eurypylus
was glad when he saw it, and bade all his men arm, and harness the horses
to the chariots, and glad were the Trojans when the long line of the
new army wound along the road and into the town. Then Paris welcomed
Eurypylus who was his nephew, son of his sister Astyochê, a daughter
of Priam; but the grandfather of Eurypylus was the famous Heracles,
the strongest man who ever lived on earth. So Paris brought Eurypylus
to his house, where Helen sat working at her embroideries with her four
bower maidens, and Eurypylus marvelled when he saw her, she was so beautiful.
But the Khita, the people of Eurypylus, feasted in the open air among
the Trojans, by the light of great fires burning, and to the music of
pipes and flutes. The Greeks saw the fires, and heard the merry
music, and they watched all night lest the Trojans should attack the
ships before the dawn. But in the dawn Eurypylus rose from sleep
and put on his armour, and hung from his neck by the belt the great
shield on which were fashioned, in gold of many colours and in silver,
the Twelve Adventures of Heracles, his grandfather; strange deeds that
he did, fighting with monsters and giants and with the Hound of Hades,
who guards the dwellings of the dead. Then Eurypylus led on his
whole army, and with the brothers of Hector he charged against the Greeks,
who were led by Agamemnon.</p>
<p>In that battle Eurypylus first smote Nireus, who was the most beautiful
of the Greeks now that Achilles had fallen. There lay Nireus,
like an apple tree, all covered with blossoms red and white, that the
wind has overthrown in a rich man’s orchard. Then Eurypylus
would have stripped off his armour, but Machaon rushed in, Machaon who
had been wounded and taken to the tent of Nestor, on the day of the
Valour of Hector, when he brought fire against the ships. Machaon
drove his spear through the left shoulder of Eurypylus, but Eurypylus
struck at his shoulder with his sword, and the blood flowed; nevertheless,
Machaon stooped, and grasped a great stone, and sent it against the
helmet of Eurypylus. He was shaken, but he did not fall, he drove
his spear through breastplate and breast of Machaon, who fell and died.
With his last breath he said, “Thou, too, shalt fall,” but
Eurypylus made answer, “So let it be! Men cannot live for
ever, and such is the fortune of war.”</p>
<p>Thus the battle rang, and shone, and shifted, till few of the Greeks
kept steadfast, except those with Menelaus and Agamemnon, for Diomede
and Ulysses were far away upon the sea, bringing from Scyros the son
of Achilles. But Teucer slew Polydamas, who had warned Hector
to come within the walls of Troy; and Menelaus wounded Deiphobus, the
bravest of the sons of Priam who were still in arms, for many had fallen;
and Agamemnon slew certain spearmen of the Trojans. Round Eurypylus
fought Paris, and Aeneas, who wounded Teucer with a great stone, breaking
in his helmet, but he drove back in his chariot to the ships.
Menelaus and Agamemnon stood alone and fought in the crowd of Trojans,
like two wild boars that a circle of hunters surrounds with spears,
so fiercely they stood at bay. There they would both have fallen,
but Idomeneus, and Meriones of Crete, and Thrasymedes, Nestor’s
son, ran to their rescue, and fiercer grew the fighting. Eurypylus
desired to slay Agamemnon and Menelaus, and end the war, but, as the
spears of the Scots encompassed King James at Flodden Field till he
ran forward, and fell within a lance’s length of the English general,
so the men of Crete and Pylos guarded the two princes with their spears.</p>
<p>There Paris was wounded in the thigh with a spear, and he retreated
a little way, and showered his arrows among the Greeks; and Idomeneus
lifted and hurled a great stone at Eurypylus which struck his spear
out of his hand, and he went back to find it, and Menelaus and Agamemnon
had a breathing space in the battle. But soon Eurypylus returned,
crying on his men, and they drove back foot by foot the ring of spears
round Agamemnon, and Aeneas and Paris slew men of Crete and of Mycenae
till the Greeks were pushed to the ditch round the camp; and then great
stones and spears and arrows rained down on the Trojans and the people
of Eurypylus from the battlements and towers of the Grecian wall.
Now night fell, and Eurypylus knew that he could not win the wall in
the dark, so he withdrew his men, and they built great fires, and camped
upon the plain.</p>
<p>The case of the Greeks was now like that of the Trojans after the
death of Hector. They buried Machaon and the other chiefs who
had fallen, and they remained within their ditch and their wall, for
they dared not come out into the open plain. They knew not whether
Ulysses and Diomede had come safely to Scyros, or whether their ship
had been wrecked or driven into unknown seas. So they sent a herald
to Eurypylus, asking for a truce, that they might gather their dead
and burn them, and the Trojans and Khita also buried their dead.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the swift ship of Ulysses had swept through the sea to
Scyros, and to the palace of King Lycomedes. There they found
Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles, in the court before the doors.
He was as tall as his father, and very like him in face and shape, and
he was practising the throwing of the spear at a mark. Right glad
were Ulysses and Diomede to behold him, and Ulysses told Neoptolemus
who they were, and why they came, and implored him to take pity on the
Greeks and help them.</p>
<p>“My friend is Diomede, Prince of Argos,” said Ulysses,
“and I am Ulysses of Ithaca. Come with us, and we Greeks
will give you countless gifts, and I myself will present you with the
armour of your father, such as it is not lawful for any other mortal
man to wear, seeing that it is golden, and wrought by the hands of a
God. Moreover, when we have taken Troy, and gone home, Menelaus
will give you his daughter, the beautiful Hermione, to be your wife,
with gold in great plenty.”</p>
<p>Then Neoptolemus answered: “It is enough that the Greeks need
my sword. To-morrow we shall sail for Troy.” He led
them into the palace to dine, and there they found his mother, beautiful
Deidamia, in mourning raiment, and she wept when she heard that they
had come to take her son away. But Neoptolemus comforted her,
promising to return safely with the spoils of Troy, “or, even
if I fall,” he said, “it will be after doing deeds worthy
of my father’s name.” So next day they sailed, leaving
Deidamia mournful, like a swallow whose nest a serpent has found, and
has killed her young ones; even so she wailed, and went up and down
in the house. But the ship ran swiftly on her way, cleaving the
dark waves till Ulysses showed Neoptolemus the far off snowy crest of
Mount Ida; and Tenedos, the island near Troy; and they passed the plain
where the tomb of Achilles stands, but Ulysses did not tell the son
that it was his father’s tomb.</p>
<p>Now all this time the Greeks, shut up within their wall and fighting
from their towers, were looking back across the sea, eager to spy the
ship of Ulysses, like men wrecked on a desert island, who keep watch
every day for a sail afar off, hoping that the seamen will touch at
their isle and have pity upon them, and carry them home, so the Greeks
kept watch for the ship bearing Neoptolemus.</p>
<p>Diomede, too, had been watching the shore, and when they came in
sight of the ships of the Greeks, he saw that they were being besieged
by the Trojans, and that all the Greek army was penned up within the
wall, and was fighting from the towers. Then he cried aloud to
Ulysses and Neoptolemus, “Make haste, friends, let us arm before
we land, for some great evil has fallen upon the Greeks. The Trojans
are attacking our wall, and soon they will burn our ships, and for us
there will be no return.”</p>
<p>Then all the men on the ship of Ulysses armed themselves, and Neoptolemus,
in the splendid armour of his father, was the first to leap ashore.
The Greeks could not come from the wall to welcome him, for they were
fighting hard and hand-to-hand with Eurypylus and his men. But
they glanced back over their shoulders and it seemed to them that they
saw Achilles himself, spear and sword in hand, rushing to help them.
They raised a great battle-cry, and, when Neoptolemus reached the battlements,
he and Ulysses, and Diomede leaped down to the plain, the Greeks following
them, and they all charged at once on the men of Eurypylus, with levelled
spears, and drove them from the wall.</p>
<p>Then the Trojans trembled, for they knew the shields of Diomede and
Ulysses, and they thought that the tall chief in the armour of Achilles
was Achilles himself, come back from the land of the dead to take vengeance
for Antilochus. The Trojans fled, and gathered round Eurypylus,
as in a thunderstorm little children, afraid of the lightning and the
noise, run and cluster round their father, and hide their faces on his
knees.</p>
<p>But Neoptolemus was spearing the Trojans, as a man who carries at
night a beacon of fire in his boat on the sea spears the fishes that
flock around, drawn by the blaze of the flame. Cruelly he avenged
his father’s death on many a Trojan, and the men whom Achilles
had led followed Achilles’ son, slaying to right and left, and
smiting the Trojans, as they ran, between the shoulders with the spear.
Thus they fought and followed while daylight lasted, but when night
fell, they led Neoptolemus to his father’s hut, where the women
washed him in the bath, and then he was taken to feast with Agamemnon
and Menelaus and the princes. They all welcomed him, and gave
him glorious gifts, swords with silver hilts, and cups of gold and silver,
and they were glad, for they had driven the Trojans from their wall,
and hoped that to-morrow they would slay Eurypylus, and take Troy town.</p>
<p>But their hope was not to be fulfilled, for though next day Eurypylus
met Neoptolemus in the battle, and was slain by him, when the Greeks
chased the Trojans into their city so great a storm of lightning and
thunder and rain fell upon them that they retreated again to their camp.
They believed that Zeus, the chief of the Gods, was angry with them,
and the days went by, and Troy still stood unconquered.</p>
<h2>THE SLAYING OF PARIS</h2>
<p>When the Greeks were disheartened, as they often were, they consulted
Calchas the prophet. He usually found that they must do something,
or send for somebody, and in doing so they diverted their minds from
their many misfortunes. Now, as the Trojans were fighting more
bravely than before, under Deiphobus, a brother of Hector, the Greeks
went to Calchas for advice, and he told them that they must send Ulysses
and Diomede to bring Philoctetes the bowman from the isle of Lemnos.
This was an unhappy deserted island, in which the married women, some
years before, had murdered all their husbands, out of jealousy, in a
single night. The Greeks had landed in Lemnos, on their way to
Troy, and there Philoctetes had shot an arrow at a great water dragon
which lived in a well within a cave in the lonely hills. But when
he entered the cave the dragon bit him, and, though he killed it at
last, its poisonous teeth wounded his foot. The wound never healed,
but dripped with venom, and Philoctetes, in terrible pain, kept all
the camp awake at night by his cries.</p>
<p>The Greeks were sorry for him, but he was not a pleasant companion,
shrieking as he did, and exuding poison wherever he came. So they
left him on the lonely island, and did not know whether he was alive
or dead. Calchas ought to have told the Greeks not to desert Philoctetes
at the time, if he was so important that Troy, as the prophet now said,
could not be taken without him. But now, as he must give some
advice, Calchas said that Philoctetes must be brought back, so Ulysses
and Diomede went to bring him. They sailed to Lemnos, a melancholy
place they found it, with no smoke rising from the ruinous houses along
the shore. As they were landing they learned that Philoctetes
was not dead, for his dismal old cries of pain, <i>ototototoi, ai, ai;
pheu, pheu; ototototoi</i>, came echoing from a cave on the beach.
To this cave the princes went, and found a terrible-looking man, with
long, dirty, dry hair and beard; he was worn to a skeleton, with hollow
eyes, and lay moaning in a mass of the feathers of sea birds.
His great bow and his arrows lay ready to his hand: with these he used
to shoot the sea birds, which were all that he had to eat, and their
feathers littered all the floor of his cave, and they were none the
better for the poison that dripped from his wounded foot.</p>
<p>When this horrible creature saw Ulysses and Diomede coming near,
he seized his bow and fitted a poisonous arrow to the string, for he
hated the Greeks, because they had left him in the desert isle.
But the princes held up their hands in sign of peace, and cried out
that they had come to do him kindness, so he laid down his bow, and
they came in and sat on the rocks, and promised that his wound should
be healed, for the Greeks were very much ashamed of having deserted
him. It was difficult to resist Ulysses when he wished to persuade
any one, and at last Philoctetes consented to sail with them to Troy.
The oarsmen carried him down to the ship on a litter, and there his
dreadful wound was washed with warm water, and oil was poured into it,
and it was bound up with soft linen, so that his pain grew less fierce,
and they gave him a good supper and wine enough, which he had not tasted
for many years.</p>
<p>Next morning they sailed, and had a fair west wind, so that they
soon landed among the Greeks and carried Philoctetes on shore.
Here Podaleirius, the brother of Machaon, being a physician, did all
that could be done to heal the wound, and the pain left Philoctetes.
He was taken to the hut of Agamemnon, who welcomed him, and said that
the Greeks repented of their cruelty. They gave him seven female
slaves to take care of him, and twenty swift horses, and twelve great
vessels of bronze, and told him that he was always to live with the
greatest chiefs and feed at their table. So he was bathed, and
his hair was cut and combed and anointed with oil, and soon he was eager
and ready to fight, and to use his great bow and poisoned arrows on
the Trojans. The use of poisoned arrow-tips was thought unfair,
but Philoctetes had no scruples.</p>
<p>Now in the next battle Paris was shooting down the Greeks with his
arrows, when Philoctetes saw him, and cried: “Dog, you are proud
of your archery and of the arrow that slew the great Achilles.
But, behold, I am a better bowman than you, by far, and the bow in my
hands was borne by the strong man Heracles!” So he cried
and drew the bowstring to his breast and the poisoned arrowhead to the
bow, and the bowstring rang, and the arrow flew, and did but graze the
hand of Paris. Then the bitter pain of the poison came upon him,
and the Trojans carried him into their city, where the physicians tended
him all night. But he never slept, and lay tossing in agony till
dawn, when he said: “There is but one hope. Take me to Œnone,
the nymph of Mount Ida!”</p>
<p>Then his friends laid Paris on a litter, and bore him up the steep
path to Mount Ida. Often had he climbed it swiftly, when he was
young, and went to see the nymph who loved him; but for many a day he
had not trod the path where he was now carried in great pain and fear,
for the poison turned his blood to fire. Little hope he had, for
he knew how cruelly he had deserted Œnone, and he saw that all
the birds which were disturbed in the wood flew away to the left hand,
an omen of evil.</p>
<p>At last the bearers reached the cave where the nymph Œnone
lived, and they smelled the sweet fragrance of the cedar fire that burned
on the floor of the cave, and they heard the nymph singing a melancholy
song. Then Paris called to her in the voice which she had once
loved to hear, and she grew very pale, and rose up, saying to herself,
“The day has come for which I have prayed. He is sore hurt,
and has come to bid me heal his wound.” So she came and
stood in the doorway of the dark cave, white against the darkness, and
the bearers laid Paris on the litter at the feet of Œnone, and
he stretched forth his hands to touch her knees, as was the manner of
suppliants. But she drew back and gathered her robe about her,
that he might not touch it with his hands.</p>
<p>Then he said: “Lady, despise me not, and hate me not, for my
pain is more than I can bear. Truly it was by no will of mine
that I left you lonely here, for the Fates that no man may escape led
me to Helen. Would that I had died in your arms before I saw her
face! But now I beseech you in the name of the Gods, and for the
memory of our love, that you will have pity on me and heal my hurt,
and not refuse your grace and let me die here at your feet.”</p>
<p>Then Œnone answered scornfully: “Why have you come here
to me? Surely for years you have not come this way, where the
path was once worn with your feet. But long ago you left me lonely
and lamenting, for the love of Helen of the fair hands. Surely
she is much more beautiful than the love of your youth, and far more
able to help you, for men say that she can never know old age and death.
Go home to Helen and let her take away your pain.”</p>
<p>Thus Œnone spoke, and went within the cave, where she threw
herself down among the ashes of the hearth and sobbed for anger and
sorrow. In a little while she rose and went to the door of the
cave, thinking that Paris had not been borne away back to Troy, but
she found him not; for his bearers had carried him by another path,
till he died beneath the boughs of the oak trees. Then his bearers
carried him swiftly down to Troy, where his mother bewailed him, and
Helen sang over him as she had sung over Hector, remembering many things,
and fearing to think of what her own end might be. But the Trojans
hastily built a great pile of dry wood, and thereon laid the body of
Paris and set fire to it, and the flame went up through the darkness,
for now night had fallen.</p>
<p>But Œnone was roaming in the dark woods, crying and calling
after Paris, like a lioness whose cubs the hunters have carried away.
The moon rose to give her light, and the flame of the funeral fire shone
against the sky, and then Œnone knew that Paris had died—beautiful
Paris—and that the Trojans were burning his body on the plain
at the foot of Mount Ida. Then she cried that now Paris was all
her own, and that Helen had no more hold on him: “And though when
he was living he left me, in death we shall not be divided,” she
said, and she sped down the hill, and through the thickets where the
wood nymphs were wailing for Paris, and she reached the plain, and,
covering her head with her veil like a bride, she rushed through the
throng of Trojans. She leaped upon the burning pile of wood, she
clasped the body of Paris in her arms, and the flame of fire consumed
the bridegroom and the bride, and their ashes mingled. No man
could divide them any more, and the ashes were placed in a golden cup,
within a chamber of stone, and the earth was mounded above them.
On that grave the wood nymphs planted two rose trees, and their branches
met and plaited together.</p>
<p>This was the end of Paris and Œnone.</p>
<h2>HOW ULYSSES INVENTED THE DEVICE OF THE HORSE OF TREE</h2>
<p>After Paris died, Helen was not given back to Menelaus. We
are often told that only fear of the anger of Paris had prevented the
Trojans from surrendering Helen and making peace. Now Paris could
not terrify them, yet for all that the men of the town would not part
with Helen, whether because she was so beautiful, or because they thought
it dishonourable to yield her to the Greeks, who might put her to a
cruel death. So Helen was taken by Deiphobus, the brother of Paris,
to live in his own house, and Deiphobus was at this time the best warrior
and the chief captain of the men of Troy.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the Greeks made an assault against the Trojan walls and
fought long and hardily; but, being safe behind the battlements, and
shooting through loopholes, the Trojans drove them back with loss of
many of their men. It was in vain that Philoctetes shot his poisoned
arrows, they fell back from the stone walls, or stuck in the palisades
of wood above the walls, and the Greeks who tried to climb over were
speared, or crushed with heavy stones. When night fell, they retreated
to the ships and held a council, and, as usual, they asked the advice
of the prophet Calchas. It was the business of Calchas to go about
looking at birds, and taking omens from what he saw them doing, a way
of prophesying which the Romans also used, and some savages do the same
to this day. Calchas said that yesterday he had seen a hawk pursuing
a dove, which hid herself in a hole in a rocky cliff. For a long
while the hawk tried to find the hole, and follow the dove into it,
but he could not reach her. So he flew away for a short distance
and hid himself; then the dove fluttered out into the sunlight, and
the hawk swooped on her and killed her.</p>
<p>The Greeks, said Calchas, ought to learn a lesson from the hawk,
and take Troy by cunning, as by force they could do nothing. Then
Ulysses stood up and described a trick which it is not easy to understand.
The Greeks, he said, ought to make an enormous hollow horse of wood,
and place the bravest men in the horse. Then all the rest of the
Greeks should embark in their ships and sail to the Isle of Tenedos,
and lie hidden behind the island. The Trojans would then come
out of the city, like the dove out of her hole in the rock, and would
wander about the Greek camp, and wonder why the great horse of tree
had been made, and why it had been left behind. Lest they should
set fire to the horse, when they would soon have found out the warriors
hidden in it, a cunning Greek, whom the Trojans did not know by sight,
should be left in the camp or near it. He would tell the Trojans
that the Greeks had given up all hope and gone home, and he was to say
that they feared the Goddess Pallas was angry with them, because they
had stolen her image that fell from heaven, and was called the Luck
of Troy. To soothe Pallas and prevent her from sending great storms
against the ships, the Trojans (so the man was to say) had built this
wooden horse as an offering to the Goddess. The Trojans, believing
this story, would drag the horse into Troy, and, in the night, the princes
would come out, set fire to the city, and open the gates to the army,
which would return from Tenedos as soon as darkness came on.</p>
<p>The prophet was much pleased with the plan of Ulysses, and, as two
birds happened to fly away on the right hand, he declared that the stratagem
would certainly be lucky. Neoptolemus, on the other hand, voted
for taking Troy, without any trick, by sheer hard fighting. Ulysses
replied that if Achilles could not do that, it could not be done at
all, and that Epeius, a famous carpenter, had better set about making
the horse at once.</p>
<p>Next day half the army, with axes in their hands, were sent to cut
down trees on Mount Ida, and thousands of planks were cut from the trees
by Epeius and his workmen, and in three days he had finished the horse.
Ulysses then asked the best of the Greeks to come forward and go inside
the machine; while one, whom the Greeks did not know by sight, should
volunteer to stay behind in the camp and deceive the Trojans.
Then a young man called Sinon stood up and said that he would risk himself
and take the chance that the Trojans might disbelieve him, and burn
him alive. Certainly, none of the Greeks did anything more courageous,
yet Sinon had not been considered brave.</p>
<p>Had he fought in the front ranks, the Trojans would have known him;
but there were many brave fighters who would not have dared to do what
Sinon undertook.</p>
<p>Then old Nestor was the first that volunteered to go into the horse;
but Neoptolemus said that, brave as he was, he was too old, and that
he must depart with the army to Tenedos. Neoptolemus himself would
go into the horse, for he would rather die than turn his back on Troy.
So Neoptolemus armed himself and climbed into the horse, as did Menelaus,
Ulysses, Diomede, Thrasymedes (Nestor’s son), Idomeneus, Philoctetes,
Meriones, and all the best men except Agamemnon, while Epeius himself
entered last of all. Agamemnon was not allowed by the other Greeks
to share their adventure, as he was to command the army when they returned
from Tenedos. They meanwhile launched their ships and sailed away.</p>
<p>But first Menelaus had led Ulysses apart, and told him that if they
took Troy (and now they must either take it or die at the hands of the
Trojans), he would owe to Ulysses the glory. When they came back
to Greece, he wished to give Ulysses one of his own cities, that they
might always be near each other. Ulysses smiled and shook his
head; he could not leave Ithaca, his own rough island kingdom.
“But if we both live through the night that is coming,”
he said, “I may ask you for one gift, and giving it will make
you none the poorer.” Then Menelaus swore by the splendour
of Zeus that Ulysses could ask him for no gift that he would not gladly
give; so they embraced, and both armed themselves and went up into the
horse. With them were all the chiefs except Nestor, whom they
would not allow to come, and Agamemnon, who, as chief general, had to
command the army. They swathed themselves and their arms in soft
silks, that they might not ring and clash, when the Trojans, if they
were so foolish, dragged the horse up into their town, and there they
sat in the dark waiting. Meanwhile, the army burned their huts
and launched their ships, and with oars and sails made their way to
the back of the isle of Tenedos.</p>
<h2>THE END OF TROY AND THE SAVING OF HELEN</h2>
<p>From the walls the Trojans saw the black smoke go up thick into the
sky, and the whole fleet of the Greeks sailing out to sea. Never
were men so glad, and they armed themselves for fear of an ambush, and
went cautiously, sending forth scouts in front of them, down to the
seashore. Here they found the huts burned down and the camp deserted,
and some of the scouts also caught Sinon, who had hid himself in a place
where he was likely to be found. They rushed on him with fierce
cries, and bound his hands with a rope, and kicked and dragged him along
to the place where Priam and the princes were wondering at the great
horse of tree. Sinon looked round upon them, while some were saying
that he ought to be tortured with fire to make him tell all the truth
about the horse. The chiefs in the horse must have trembled for
fear lest torture should wring the truth out of Sinon, for then the
Trojans would simply burn the machine and them within it.</p>
<p>But Sinon said: “Miserable man that I am, whom the Greeks hate
and the Trojans are eager to slay!” When the Trojans heard
that the Greeks hated him, they were curious, and asked who he was,
and how he came to be there. “I will tell you all, oh King!”
he answered Priam. “I was a friend and squire of an unhappy
chief, Palamedes, whom the wicked Ulysses hated and slew secretly one
day, when he found him alone, fishing in the sea. I was angry,
and in my folly I did not hide my anger, and my words came to the ears
of Ulysses. From that hour he sought occasion to slay me.
Then Calchas—” here he stopped, saying: “But why tell
a long tale? If you hate all Greeks alike, then slay me; this
is what Agamemnon and Ulysses desire; Menelaus would thank you for my
head.”</p>
<p>The Trojans were now more curious than before. They bade him
go on, and he said that the Greeks had consulted an Oracle, which advised
them to sacrifice one of their army to appease the anger of the Gods
and gain a fair wind homewards. “But who was to be sacrificed?
They asked Calchas, who for fifteen days refused to speak. At
last, being bribed by Ulysses, he pointed to me, Sinon, and said that
I must be the victim. I was bound and kept in prison, while they
built their great horse as a present for Pallas Athênê the
Goddess. They made it so large that you Trojans might never be
able to drag it into your city; while, if you destroyed it, the Goddess
might turn her anger against you. And now they have gone home
to bring back the image that fell from heaven, which they had sent to
Greece, and to restore it to the Temple of Pallas Athênê,
when they have taken your town, for the Goddess is angry with them for
that theft of Ulysses.”</p>
<p>The Trojans were foolish enough to believe the story of Sinon, and
they pitied him and unbound his hands. Then they tied ropes to
the wooden horse, and laid rollers in front of it, like men launching
a ship, and they all took turns to drag the horse up to the Scaean gate.
Children and women put their hands to the ropes and hauled, and with
shouts and dances, and hymns they toiled, till about nightfall the horse
stood in the courtyard of the inmost castle.</p>
<p>Then all the people of Troy began to dance, and drink, and sing.
Such sentinels as were set at the gates got as drunk as all the rest,
who danced about the city till after midnight, and then they went to
their homes and slept heavily.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Greek ships were returning from behind Tenedos as fast
as the oarsmen could row them.</p>
<p>One Trojan did not drink or sleep; this was Deiphobus, at whose house
Helen was now living. He bade her come with them, for he knew
that she was able to speak in the very voice of all men and women whom
she had ever seen, and he armed a few of his friends and went with them
to the citadel. Then he stood beside the horse, holding Helen’s
hand, and whispered to her that she must call each of the chiefs in
the voice of his wife. She was obliged to obey, and she called
Menelaus in her own voice, and Diomede in the voice of his wife, and
Ulysses in the very voice of Penelope. Then Menelaus and Diomede
were eager to answer, but Ulysses grasped their hands and whispered
the word “Echo!” Then they remembered that this was
a name of Helen, because she could speak in all voices, and they were
silent; but Anticlus was still eager to answer, till Ulysses held his
strong hand over his mouth. There was only silence, and Deiphobus
led Helen back to his house. When they had gone away Epeius opened
the side of the horse, and all the chiefs let themselves down softly
to the ground. Some rushed to the gate, to open it, and they killed
the sleeping sentinels and let in the Greeks. Others sped with
torches to burn the houses of the Trojan princes, and terrible was the
slaughter of men, unarmed and half awake, and loud were the cries of
the women. But Ulysses had slipped away at the first, none knew
where. Neoptolemus ran to the palace of Priam, who was sitting
at the altar in his courtyard, praying vainly to the Gods, for Neoptolemus
slew the old man cruelly, and his white hair was dabbled in his blood.
All through the city was fighting and slaying; but Menelaus went to
the house of Deiphobus, knowing that Helen was there.</p>
<p>In the doorway he found Deiphobus lying dead in all his armour, a
spear standing in his breast. There were footprints marked in
blood, leading through the portico and into the hall. There Menelaus
went, and found Ulysses leaning, wounded, against one of the central
pillars of the great chamber, the firelight shining on his armour.</p>
<p>“Why hast thou slain Deiphobus and robbed me of my revenge?”
said Menelaus. “You swore to give me a gift,” said
Ulysses, “and will you keep your oath?” “Ask
what you will,” said Menelaus; “it is yours and my oath
cannot be broken.” “I ask the life of Helen of the
fair hands,” said Ulysses “this is my own life-price that
I pay back to her, for she saved my life when I took the Luck of Troy,
and I swore that hers should be saved.”</p>
<p>Then Helen stole, glimmering in white robes, from a recess in the
dark hall, and fell at the feet of Menelaus; her golden hair lay in
the dust of the hearth, and her hands moved to touch his knees.
His drawn sword fell from the hands of Menelaus, and pity and love came
into his heart, and he raised her from the dust and her white arms were
round his neck, and they both wept. That night Menelaus fought
no more, but they tended the wound of Ulysses, for the sword of Deiphobus
had bitten through his helmet.</p>
<p>When dawn came Troy lay in ashes, and the women were being driven
with spear shafts to the ships, and the men were left unburied, a prey
to dogs and all manner of birds. Thus the grey city fell, that
had lorded it for many centuries. All the gold and silver and
rich embroideries, and ivory and amber, the horses and chariots, were
divided among the army; all but a treasure of silver and gold, hidden
in a chest within a hollow of the wall, and this treasure was found,
not very many years ago, by men digging deep on the hill where Troy
once stood. The women, too, were given to the princes, and Neoptolemus
took Andromache to his home in Argos, to draw water from the well and
to be the slave of a master, and Agamemnon carried beautiful Cassandra,
the daughter of Priam, to his palace in Mycenae, where they were both
slain in one night. Only Helen was led with honour to the ship
of Menelaus.</p>
<p>The story of all that happened to Ulysses on his way home from Troy
is told in another book, “Tales of the Greek Seas.”</p>
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