Metamorphoses

Ovid

Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.

  1. Sadly his father, Priam, mourned for him,
  2. not knowing that young Aesacus had assumed
  3. wings on his shoulders, and was yet alive.
  4. Then also Hector with his brothers made
  5. complete but unavailing sacrifice,
  6. upon a tomb which bore his carved name.
  7. Paris was absent. But soon afterwards,
  8. he brought into that land a ravished wife,
  9. Helen, the cause of a disastrous war,
  10. together with a thousand ships, and all
  11. the great Pelasgian nation.
  12. Vengeance would
  13. not long have been delayed, but the fierce winds
  14. raged over seas impassable, and held
  15. the ships at fishy Aulis. They could not
  16. be moved from the Boeotian land. Here, when
  17. a sacrifice had been prepared to Jove,
  18. according to the custom of their land,
  19. and when the ancient altar glowed with fire,
  20. the Greeks observed an azure colored snake
  21. crawling up in a plane tree near the place
  22. where they had just begun their sacrifice.
  23. Among the highest branches was a nest,
  24. with twice four birds—and those the serpent seized
  25. together with the mother-bird as she
  26. was fluttering round her loss. And every bird
  27. the serpent buried in his greedy maw.
  28. All stood amazed: but Calchas, who perceived
  29. the truth, exclaimed, “Rejoice Pelasgian men,
  30. for we shall conquer; Troy will fall; although
  31. the toil of war must long continue—so
  32. the nine birds equal nine long years of war.”
  33. And while he prophesied, the serpent, coiled
  34. about the tree, was transformed to a stone,
  35. curled crooked as a snake.
  36. but Nereus stormed
  37. in those Aonian waves, and not a ship
  38. moved forward. Some declared that Neptune thus
  39. was aiding Troy, because he built the walls
  40. of that great city. Not so Calchas, son
  41. of Thestor! He knew all the truth, and told
  42. them plainly that a virgin's blood
  43. alone might end a virgin goddess' wrath.
  44. The public good at last prevailed above
  45. affection, and the duty of a king
  46. at last proved stronger than a father's love:
  47. when Iphigenia as a sacrifice,
  48. stood by the altar with her weeping maids
  49. and was about to offer her chaste blood,
  50. the goddess, moved by pity, spread a mist
  51. before their eyes, amid the sacred rites
  52. and mournful supplications. It is said
  53. she left a hind there in the maiden's place
  54. and carried Iphigenia away. The hind,
  55. as it was fitting, calmed Diana's rage
  56. and also calmed the anger of the sea.
  57. The thousand ships received the winds astern
  58. and gained the Phrygian shore.
  59. There is a spot
  60. convenient in the center of the world,
  61. between the land and sea and the wide heavens,
  62. the meeting of the threefold universe.
  63. From there is seen all things that anywhere
  64. exist, although in distant regions far;
  65. and there all sounds of earth and space are heard.
  66. Fame is possessor of this chosen place,
  67. and has her habitation in a tower,
  68. which aids her view from that exalted highs.
  69. And she has fixed there numerous avenues,
  70. and openings, a thousand, to her tower
  71. and no gates with closed entrance, for the house
  72. is open, night and day, of sounding brass,
  73. reechoing the tones of every voice.
  74. It must repeat whatever it may hear;
  75. and there's no rest, and silence in no part.
  76. There is no clamor; but the murmuring sound
  77. of subdued voices, such as may arise
  78. from waves of a far sea, which one may hear
  79. who listens at a distance; or the sound
  80. which ends a thunderclap, when Jupiter
  81. has clashed black clouds together. Fickle crowds
  82. are always in that hall, that come and go,
  83. and myriad rumors—false tales mixed with true—
  84. are circulated in confusing words.
  85. Some fill their empty ears with all this talk,
  86. and some spread elsewhere all that's told to them.
  87. The volume of wild fiction grows apace,
  88. and each narrator adds to what he hears.
  89. Credulity is there and rash Mistake,
  90. and empty Joy, and coward Fear alarmed
  91. by quick Sedition, and soft Whisper—all
  92. of doubtful life. Fame sees what things are done
  93. in heaven and on the sea, and on the earth.
  94. She spies all things in the wide universe.
  1. Fame now had spread the tidings, a great fleet
  2. of Greek ships was at that time on its way,
  3. an army of brave men. The Trojans stood,
  4. all ready to prevent the hostile Greeks
  5. from landing on their shores. By the decree
  6. of Fate, the first man killed of the invaders' force
  7. was strong Protesilaus, by the spear
  8. of valiant Hector, whose unthought-of power
  9. at that time was discovered by the Greeks
  10. to their great cost. The Phyrgians also learned,
  11. at no small cost of blood, what warlike strength
  12. came from the Grecian land. The Sigean shores
  13. grew red with death-blood: Cygnus, Neptune's son,
  14. there slew a thousand men: for which, in wrath,
  15. Achilles pressed his rapid chariot
  16. straight through the Trojan army; making a lane
  17. with his great spear, shaped from a Pelion tree.
  18. And as he sought through the fierce battle's press,
  19. either for Cygnus or for Hector, he
  20. met Cygnus and engaged at once with him
  21. (Fate had preserved great Hector from such foe
  22. till ten years from that day).
  23. Cheering his steeds,
  24. their white necks pressed upon the straining yoke,
  25. he steered the chariot towards his foe,
  26. and, brandishing the spear with his strong arm,
  27. he cried, “Whoever you may be, you have
  28. the consolation of a glorious death
  29. you die by me, Haemonian Achilles!”
  30. His heavy spear flew after the fierce words.
  31. Although the spear was whirled direct and true,
  32. yet nothing it availed with sharpened point.
  33. It only bruised, as with a blunted stroke,
  34. the breast of Cygnus! “By report we knew
  35. of you before this battle, goddess born.”
  36. The other answered him, “But why are you
  37. surprised that I escape the threatened wound?”
  38. (Achilles was surprised). “This helmet crowned,
  39. great with its tawny horse-hair, and this shield,
  40. broad-hollowed, on my left arm, are not held
  41. for help in war: they are but ornament,
  42. as Mars wears armor. All of them shall be
  43. put off, and I will fight with you unhurt.
  44. It is a privilege that I was born
  45. not as you, of a Nereid but of him
  46. whose powerful rule is over Nereus,
  47. his daughters and their ocean.” So, he spoke.
  48. Immediately he threw his spear against Achilles,
  49. destined to pierce the curving shield through brass,
  50. and through nine folds of tough bull's hide.
  51. It stopped there, for it could not pierce the tenth.
  52. The hero wrenched it out, and hurled again
  53. a quivering spear at Cygnus, with great strength.
  54. The Trojan stood unwounded and unharmed.
  55. Nor did a third spear injure Cygnus, though
  56. he stood there with his body all exposed.
  57. Achilles raged at this, as a wild bull
  58. in open circus, when with dreadful horns
  59. he butts against the hanging purple robes
  60. which stir his wrath and there observes how they
  61. evade him, quite unharmed by his attack.
  62. Achilles then examined his good spear,
  63. to see if by some chance the iron point
  64. was broken from it, but the point was firm,
  65. fixed on the wooden shaft. “My hand is weak,”
  66. he said, “but is it possible its strength
  67. forsook me though it never has before?
  68. For surely I had my accustomed strength,
  69. when first I overthrew Lyrnessus' walls,
  70. or when I won the isle of Tenedos
  71. or Thebes (then under King Eetion)
  72. and I drenched both with their own peoples' blood,
  73. or when the river Caycus ran red
  74. with slaughter of its people, or, when twice
  75. Telephus felt the virtue of my spear.
  76. On this field also, where such heaps lie slain,
  77. my right hand surely has proved its true might;
  78. and it is mighty.”
  79. So he spoke of strength,
  80. remembered. But as if in proof against
  81. his own distrust, he hurled a spear against
  82. Menoetes, a soldier in the Lycian ranks.
  83. The sharp spear tore the victim's coat of mail
  84. and pierced his breast beneath. Achilles, when
  85. he saw his dying head strike on the earth
  86. wrenched the same spear from out the reeking wound,
  87. and said, “This is the hand, and this the spear
  88. I conquered with; and I will use the same
  89. against him who in luck escaped their power;
  90. and the result should favor as I pray
  91. the helpful gods.”
  92. And, as he said such words,
  93. in haste he hurled his ashen spear, again
  94. at Cygnus. It went straight and struck unshunned.
  95. Resounding on the shoulder of that foe,
  96. it bounced back as if it hit a wall
  97. or solid cliff. Yet when Achilles saw
  98. just where the spear struck, Cygnus there
  99. was stained with blood. He instantly rejoiced;
  100. but vainly, for it was Menoetes' blood!
  101. Then in a sudden rage, Achilles leaped
  102. down headlong from his lofty chariot;
  103. and, seeking his god-favored foe, he struck
  104. in conflict fiercely, with his gleaming sword.
  105. Although he saw that he had pierced both shield
  106. and helmet through, he did not harm the foe—
  107. his sword was even blunted on the flesh.
  108. Achilles could not hold himself for rage,
  109. but furious, with his sword-hilt and his shield
  110. he battered wildly the uncovered face
  111. and hollow-temples of his Trojan foe.
  112. Cygnus gave way; Achilles rushed on him,
  113. buffeting fiercely, so that he could not
  114. recover from the shock. Fear seized upon
  115. Cygnus, and darkness swam before his eyes.
  116. Then, as he moved back with retreating steps,
  117. a large stone hindered him and blocked his way.
  118. His back pushed against this, Achilles seized
  119. and dashed him violently to the ground.
  120. Then pressing with buckler and hard knees the breast
  121. of Cygnus, he unlaced the helmet thongs,
  122. wound them about the foeman's neck and drew
  123. them tightly under his chin, till Cygnus' throat
  124. could take no breath of life. Achilles rose
  125. eager to strip his conquered foe but found
  126. his empty armor, for the god of ocean
  127. had changed the victim into that white bird
  128. whose name he lately bore.
  1. There was a truce
  2. for many days after this opening fight
  3. while both sides resting, laid aside their arms.
  4. A watchful guard patroled the Phrygian walls;
  5. the Grecian trenches had their watchful guard.
  6. Then, on a festal day, Achilles gave
  7. the blood of a slain heifer to obtain
  8. the favor of Athena for their cause.
  9. The entrails burned upon the altar, while
  10. the odor, grateful to the deities,
  11. was mounting to the skies. When sacred rites
  12. were done, a banquet for the heroes was
  13. served on their tables. There the Grecian chiefs
  14. reclined on couches; while they satisfied
  15. themselves with roasted flesh, and banished cares:
  16. and thirst with wine. Nor harp nor singing voice
  17. nor long pipe made of boxwood pierced with holes,
  18. delighted them. They talked of their own deeds
  19. and valor, all that thrilling night: and even
  20. the strength of enemies whom they had met
  21. and overcome. What else could they admit
  22. or think of, while the great Achilles spoke
  23. or listened to them? But especially
  24. the recent victory over Cygnus held
  25. them ardent. Wonderful it seemed to them
  26. that such a youth could be composed of flesh
  27. not penetrable by the sharpest spear;
  28. of flesh which blunted even hardened steel,
  29. and never could be wounded. All the Greeks,
  30. and even Achilles wondered at the thought.
  31. Then Nestor said to them: “During your time,
  32. Cygnus has been the only man you knew
  33. who could despise all weapons and whose flesh
  34. could not be pierced by thrust of sword or spear.
  35. But long ago I saw another man
  36. able to bear unharmed a thousand strokes,
  37. Caeneus of Thessaly, Caeneus who lived
  38. upon Mt. Othrys. He was famed in war
  39. yet, strange to say, by birth he was a woman!”
  40. Then all expressed the greatest wonderment,
  41. and begged to hear the story of his life.
  42. Achilles cried, “O eloquent old man!
  43. The wisdom of our age! All of us wish
  44. to hear, who was this Caeneus? Why was he
  45. changed to the other sex? in what campaigns,
  46. and in what wars was he so known to you?
  47. Who conquered him, if any ever did?”
  48. The aged man replied to them with care:—
  49. “Although my great age is a harm to me,
  50. and many actions of my early days
  51. escape my memory; yet, most of them
  52. are well remembered. Nothing of old days,
  53. amid so many deeds of war and peace,
  54. can be more firmly fixed upon my mind
  55. than the strange story I shall tell of him.
  56. “If long extent of years made anyone
  57. a witness of most wonderful events
  58. and many, truly I may say to you
  59. that I have lived two hundred years; and now
  60. have entered my third century.
  61. The daughter of Elatus, Caenis, was
  62. remarkable for charm—most beautiful
  63. of all Thessalian maidens—many sighed
  64. for her in vain through all the neighboring towns
  65. and yours, Achilles, for that was her home.
  66. But Peleus did not try to win her love,
  67. for he was either married at that time
  68. to your dear mother, or was pledged to her.
  69. “Caenis never became the willing bride
  70. of any suitor; but report declares,
  71. while she was walking on a lonely shore,
  72. the god of ocean saw and ravished her.
  73. And in the joy of that love Neptune said,
  74. ‘Request of me whatever you desire,
  75. and nothing shall deny your dearest wish!’—
  76. the story tells us that he made this pledge.
  77. And Caenis said to Neptune, ‘The great wrong,
  78. which I have suffered from you justifies
  79. the wonderful request that I must make;
  80. I ask that I may never suffer such
  81. an injury again. Grant I may be
  82. no longer woman, and I'll ask no more.’
  83. while she was speaking to him, the last words
  84. of her strange prayer were uttered in so deep,
  85. in such a manly tone, it seemed indeed
  86. they must be from a man.—That was a fact:
  87. Neptune not only had allowed her prayer
  88. but made the new man proof against all wounds
  89. of spear or sword. Rejoicing in the gift
  90. he went his way as Caeneus Atracides,
  91. spent years in every manful exercise,
  92. and roamed the plains of northern Thessaly.
  1. “The son of bold Ixion, Pirithous
  2. wedding Hippodame, had asked as guests
  3. the cloud-born centaurs to recline around
  4. the ordered tables, in a cool cave, set
  5. under some shading trees. Thessalian chiefs
  6. were there and I myself was with them there.
  7. The festal place resounded with the rout
  8. in noisy clamor, singing nuptial verse;
  9. and in the great room, filled with smoking fire,
  10. the maiden came escorted by a crowd
  11. of matrons and young married women; she
  12. most beautiful of all that lovely throng.
  13. “And so Pirithous, the fortunate son,
  14. of bold Ixion, was so praised by all,
  15. for his pure joy and lovely wife,
  16. it seemed his very blessings must have led
  17. to fatal harm: for savage Eurytus,
  18. wildest of the wild centaurs, now inflamed
  19. with sudden envy, drunkenness, and lust,
  20. upset the tables and made havoc there
  21. so dreadful, that the banquet suddenly
  22. was changed from love to uproar. Seized by the hair,
  23. the bride was violently dragged away.
  24. When Eurytus caught up Hippodame
  25. each one of all the centaurs took at will
  26. the maid or matron that he longed for most.
  27. The palace, seeming like a captured town,
  28. resounded with affrighted shrieks of women.
  29. At once we all sprang up. And Theseus cried,
  30. “What madness, Eurytus, has driven you
  31. to this vile wickedness! While I have life,
  32. you dare attack Pirithous. You know
  33. not what you do, for one wrong injures both!’
  34. The valiant hero did not merely talk:
  35. he pushed them off as they were pressing on,
  36. and rescued her whom Eurytus had seized.
  37. Since Eurytus could not defend such deeds
  38. with words, he turned and beat with violent hands
  39. the face of him who saved the bride and struck
  40. his generous breast. By chance, an ancient bowl
  41. was near at hand. This rough with figures carved,
  42. the son of Aegeus caught and hurled it full
  43. in that vile centaur's face. He, spouting out
  44. thick gouts of blood, and bleeding from his wounds—
  45. his brains and wine mixed,—kicked the blood-soaked sand.
  46. His double membered centaur brothers, wild
  47. with passion at his death, all shouted out,
  48. ‘To arms! to arms!’ Their courage raised by wine!
  49. In their first onset, hurled cups flew about,
  50. and shattered wine casks, hollow basins—things
  51. before adapted to a banquet, now
  52. for death and carnage in the furious fight.
  53. Amycus first (Opinion's son) began to spoil
  54. the inner sanctuary of its gifts.
  55. He snatched up from that shrine a chandelier,
  56. adorned with glittering lamps, and lifted high,
  57. with all the force of one who strives to break
  58. the bull s white neck with sacrificial axe,
  59. he dashed it at the head of Celadon,
  60. one of the Lapithae, and crushed his skull
  61. into the features of his face. His eyes
  62. leaped from his sockets, and the shattered bones
  63. of his smashed face gave way so that his nose
  64. was driven back and fastened in his throat.
  65. But Belates of Pella tore away
  66. a table-leg of maple wood and felled
  67. Amycus to the ground; his sunken chin
  68. cast down upon his breast; and, as he spat
  69. his teeth out mixed with blood, a second blow
  70. despatched him to the shades of Tartarus.
  71. “Gryneus, seeing a smoking altar, cried,
  72. ‘Good use for this,’ with which words he raised up
  73. that heavy, blazing altar. Hurling it
  74. into the middle of the Lapithae,
  75. he struck down Broteas and Orius:
  76. Mycale, mother of that Orius,
  77. was famous for her incantations,
  78. which she had often used to conjure down
  79. the shining twin-horns of the unwilling moon.
  80. Exadius threatened, ‘You shall not escape!
  81. Let me but have a weapon!’ And with that,
  82. he whirled the antlers of a votive stag,
  83. which he found there, hung on a tall pine-tree;
  84. and with that double-branching horn he pierced
  85. the eyes of Gryneus, and he gouged them out.
  86. One eye stuck to the horn; the other rolled
  87. down on his beard, to which it strictly clung
  88. in dreadful clotted gore.
  89. Then Rhoetus snatched
  90. a blazing brand of plum-wood from an altar
  91. and whirling it upon the right, smashed through
  92. the temples of Charaxus, wonderful
  93. with golden hair. Seized by the violent flames,
  94. his yellow locks burned fiercely, as a field
  95. of autumn grain; and even the scorching blood
  96. gave from the sore wound a terrific noise
  97. as a red-hot iron in pincers which the smith
  98. lifts out and plunges in the tepid pool,
  99. hissing and sizzling. Charaxus shook
  100. the fire from his burnt locks; and heaved up on
  101. his shoulders a large threshold stone torn from
  102. the ground—a weight sufficient for a team
  103. of oxen. The vast weight impeded him,
  104. so that it could not even touch his foe—
  105. and yet, the massive stone did hit his friend,
  106. Cometes, who was standing near to him,
  107. and crushed him down. Then Rhoetus, crazed with joy,
  108. exulting yelled, ‘I pray that all of you
  109. may be so strong!’ Wielding his half-burnt stake
  110. with heavy blows again and again, he broke
  111. the sutures of his enemy's skull, until
  112. the bones were mingled with his oozing brains.
  113. “Victorious, then rushed he upon Evagrus,
  114. and Corythus and Dryas. First of these
  115. was youthful Corythus, whose cheeks were then
  116. just covered with soft down. When he fell dead,
  117. Evagrus cried, ‘What glory do you get,
  118. killing a boy?’ But Rhoetus did not give
  119. him time for uttering one word more. He pushed
  120. the red hot stake into the foeman's mouth,
  121. while he still spoke, and down into his lungs.
  122. He then pursued the savage Dryas, while
  123. whirling the red fire fast about his head;
  124. but not with like success, for, while he still
  125. rejoiced in killings, Dryas turned and pierced
  126. him with a stake where neck and shoulder meet.
  127. “Rhoetus groaned and with a great effort pulled
  128. the stake out from the bone, then fled away,
  129. drenched in his blood. And Orneus followed him.
  130. Lycabas fled, and Medon with a wound
  131. in his right shoulder. Thaumas and Pisenor
  132. and Mermerus fled with them. Mermerus,
  133. who used to excell all others in a race,
  134. ran slowly, crippled by a recent wound.
  135. Pholus and Melaneus ran for their lives
  136. and with them Abas, hunter of wild boars
  137. and Asbolus, the augur, who in vain
  138. had urged his friends to shun that hapless fight.
  139. As Nessus joined the rout, he said to him,
  140. ‘You need not flee, for you shall be reserved
  141. a victim for the bow of Hercules!’
  142. but neither Lycidas, Eurynomus
  143. nor Areos, nor Imbreus had escaped
  144. from death: for all of these the strong right hand
  145. of Dryas pierced, as they confronted him.
  146. Crenaeus there received a wound in front.
  147. Although he turned in flight, as he looked back,
  148. a heavy javelin between his eyes
  149. pierced through him, where his nose and forehead joined.
  1. “In all this uproar, Aphidas lay flat,
  2. in endless slumber from the wine he drank,
  3. incessant, and his nerveless hand still held
  4. the cup of mixed wine, as he lay full stretched,
  5. upon a shaggy bear-skin from Mount Ossa.
  6. When Phorbas saw him, harmless in that sleep,
  7. he laid his fingers in his javelin's thong,
  8. and shouted loudly, ‘Mix your wine, down there,
  9. with waters of the Styx!’ And stopping talk,
  10. let fly his javelin at the sleeping youth—
  11. the ashen shaft, iron-tipped, was driven through
  12. his neck, exposed, as he by chance lay there—
  13. his head thrown back. He did not even feel
  14. a touch of death—and from his deep-pierced throat
  15. his crimson blood flowed out upon the couch,
  16. and in the wine-bowl still grasped in his hand.
  17. “I saw Petraeus when he strove to tear
  18. up from the earth, an acorn-bearing oak.
  19. And, while he struggled with it, back and forth,
  20. and was just ready to wrench up the trunk,
  21. Pirithous hurled a well aimed spear at him,
  22. transfixed his ribs, and pinned his body tight,
  23. writhing, to that hard oak: and Lycus fell
  24. and Chromis fell, before Pirithous.
  25. “They gave less glory to the conqueror
  26. than Helops or than Dictys. Helops was
  27. killed by a javelin, which pierced his temples
  28. from the right side, clear through to his left ear.
  29. And Dictys, running in a desperate haste,
  30. hoping in vain, to escape Ixion's son,
  31. slipped on the steep edge of a precipice;
  32. and, as he fell down headlong crashed into
  33. the top of a huge ash-tree, which impaled
  34. his dying body on its broken spikes.
  35. “Aphareus, eager to avenge him tried
  36. to lift a rock from that steep mountain side;
  37. but as he heaved, the son of Aegeus struck
  38. him squarely with an oaken club; and smashed,
  39. and broke the huge bones of that centaur's arm.
  40. He has no time, and does not want to give
  41. that useless foe to death. He leaps upon
  42. the back of tall Bienor, never trained
  43. to carry riders, and he fixed his knees
  44. firm in the centaur's ribs, and holding tight
  45. to the long hair, seized by his left hand, struck
  46. and shattered the hard features and fierce face
  47. and bony temples with his club of gnarled
  48. strong oak. And with it, he struck to the ground
  49. Nedymnus and Lycopes, dart expert,
  50. and Hippasus, whose beard hid all his breast.
  51. And Rhipheus taller than the highest trees
  52. and Thereus, who would carry home alive
  53. the raging bears, caught in Thessalian hills.
  54. Demoleon could no longer stand and look
  55. on Theseus and his unrestrained success.
  56. He struggled with vast effort to tear up
  57. an old pine, trunk and all, with its long roots,
  58. and, failing shortly in that first attempt,
  59. he broke it off and hurled it at his foe.
  60. But Theseus saw the pine tree in its flight
  61. and, warned by Pallas, got beyond its range—
  62. his boast was, Pallas had directed him!
  63. And yet, the missle was not launched in vain.
  64. It sheared the left shoulder and the breast
  65. from tall Crantor. He, Achilles, was
  66. your father's armor bearer and was given
  67. by King Amyntor, when he sued for peace.
  68. “When Peleus at a distance saw him torn
  69. and mangled, he exclaimed, ‘At least receive
  70. this sacrifice, O Crantor! most beloved!
  71. Dearest of young men!’ And with sturdy arm
  72. and all his strength of soul as well, he hurled
  73. his ashen lance against Demoleon,
  74. which piercing through his shivered ribs, hung there
  75. and quivered in the bones. The centaur wrenched
  76. the wooden shaft out, with his frenzied hands,
  77. but could not move the pointed head, which stuck
  78. within his lungs. His very anguish gave
  79. him such a desperation, that he rose
  80. against his foe and trampled and beat down
  81. the hero with his hoofs, Peleus allowed
  82. the blows to fall on helm and ringing shield.
  83. Protected so, he watched his time and thrust
  84. up through the centaur's shoulder. By one stroke
  85. he pierced two breasts, where horse and man-form met.
  86. Before this, Peleus with the spear had killed
  87. both Myles and Phlegraeus and with the sword
  88. Iphinous and Clanis. Now he killed
  89. Dorylas, who was clad in a wolfskin cap
  90. and fought with curving bull's horns dripping blood.
  91. “To him I said, for courage gave me strength,
  92. ‘Your horns! how much inferior to my steel!’—
  93. and threw my spear. Since he could not avoid
  94. the gleaming point, he held up his right hand
  95. to shield his forehead from the threatened wound.
  96. His hand was pierced and pinned against his forehead.
  97. He shouted madly. Peleus, near him while
  98. he stood there pinned and helpless with his wound,
  99. struck him with sharp sword in the belly deep.
  100. He leaped forth fiercely, as he trailed his bowels
  101. upon the ground, with his entangled legs
  102. treading upon them, bursting them, he fell
  103. with empty belly, lifeless to the earth.
  104. “Cyllarus, beauty did not save your life—
  105. if beauty is in any of your tribe—
  106. your golden beard was in its early growth,
  107. your golden hair came flowing to your shoulders.
  108. in your bright face there was a pleasing glance.
  109. The neck and shoulders and the hands and breast,:
  110. and every aspect of his human form
  111. resembled those admired statues which
  112. our gifted artists carve. Even the shape
  113. of the fine horse beneath the human form
  114. was perfect too. Give him the head and neck
  115. of a full-blooded horse, and he would seem
  116. a steed for Castor, for his back was shaped
  117. so comfortable to be sat upon
  118. and muscle swelled upon his arching chest.
  119. His lustrous body was as black as pitch,
  120. and yet his legs and flowing tail
  121. were white as snow.
  122. Many a female of his kind
  123. loved him, but only Hylonome gained
  124. his love. There was no other centaur maid
  125. so beautiful as she within the woods.
  126. By coaxing ways she had won Cyllarus,
  127. by loving and confessing love. By daintiness,
  128. so far as that was possible in one
  129. of such a form, she held his love; for now
  130. she smoothed her long locks with a comb; and now
  131. she decked herself with rosemary and now
  132. with violets or with roses in her hair;
  133. and sometimes she wore lilies, white as snow;
  134. and twice each day she bathed her lovely face,
  135. in the sweet stream that falls down from the height
  136. of wooded Pagasa; and daily, twice
  137. she dipped her body in the stream. She wore
  138. upon her shoulders and left side a skin,
  139. greatly becoming, of selected worth.
  140. “Their love was equal, and together they
  141. would wander over mountain-sides, and rest
  142. together in cool caves; and so it was,
  143. they went together to that palace-cave,
  144. known to the Lapithae. Together they
  145. fought fiercely in this battle, side by side.
  146. Thrown by an unknown hand, a javelin pierced
  147. Cyllarus, just below the fatal spot
  148. where the chest rises to the neck—his heart,
  149. though only slightly wounded, grew quite cold,
  150. and his whole body felt cold, afterwards,
  151. as quickly as the weapon was drawn out.
  152. Then Hylonome held in her embrace
  153. the dying body; fondled the dread wound
  154. and, fixing her lips closely to his lips
  155. endeavored to hold back his dying breath.
  156. But soon she saw that he indeed was dead.
  157. With mourning words, which clamor of the fight
  158. prevented me from hearing, she threw herself
  159. on the spear that pierced her Cyllarus and fell
  160. upon his breast, embracing him in death.
  1. “Another sight still comes before my eyes,
  2. the centaur Phaeocomes with his log.
  3. He wore six lion skins well wrapped around
  4. his body, and with fixed connecting knots
  5. they covered him, both horse and man. He hurled
  6. a trunk two yokes of oxen scarce could move
  7. and struck the hapless son of Olenus
  8. a crushing blow upon the head. The broad
  9. round dome was shattered, and his dying brains
  10. oozed out through hollow nostrils, mouth, and ears,
  11. as curdled milk seeps down through oaken twigs;
  12. or other liquors, crushed out under weights,
  13. flow through a well-pierced sieve and, thick,
  14. squeeze out through numerous holes.
  15. As he began
  16. to spoil his victim—and your father can
  17. affirm the truth of this—I thrust my sword
  18. deep in the wretch's groin. Chthonius, too,
  19. and Teleboas fell there by my sword.
  20. The former had a two-pronged stick as his
  21. sole weapon, and the other had a spear,
  22. with which the wounded me. You see the scar.
  23. The old scar still is surely visible!
  24. “Those were my days of youth and strength, and then
  25. I ought to have warred against the citadel
  26. of Pergama. I could have checked, or even
  27. vanquished, the arms of Hector: but, alas,
  28. Hector had not been born, or was perhaps
  29. a boy. Old age has dulled my youthful strength.
  30. What use is it, to speak of Periphas,
  31. who overcame Pyretus, double-formed?
  32. Why tell of Ampyx, who with pointless shaft,
  33. victorious thrust Echeclus through the face?
  34. Macareus, hurling a heavy crowbar pierced
  35. Erigdupus and laid him low.
  36. A hunting spear that Nessus strongly hurled,
  37. was buried in the groin of Cymelus.
  38. Do not believe that Mopsus, son of Ampycus,
  39. was merely a prophet of events to come,
  40. he slew a daring two-formed monster there.
  41. Hodites tried in vain to speak, before
  42. his death, but could not, for his tongue was nailed
  43. against his chin, his chin against his throat.
  44. “Five of the centaurs Caeneus put to death:
  45. Styphelus, Bromus, and Antimachus,
  46. Elymus, and Pyracmos with his axe.
  47. I have forgot their wounds but noted well
  48. their names and number. Latreus, huge of limb,
  49. had killed and stripped Emathian Halesus.
  50. Now in his armor he came rushing out,
  51. in years he was between old age and youth;
  52. but he retained the vigor of his youth;
  53. his temples showed his hair was mixed with grey.
  54. Conspicuous for his Macedonian lance
  55. and sword and shield, facing both sides—each way,
  56. he insolently clashed his arms; and while
  57. he rode poured out these words in empty air.
  58. “ ‘Shall I put up with one like you, O Caeneus?
  59. For you are still a woman in my sight.
  60. Have you forgot your birth or that disgrace
  61. by which you won reward—at what a price
  62. you got the false resemblance to a man?!
  63. Consider both your birth, and what you have
  64. submitted to! Take up a distaff, and
  65. wool basket! Twist your threads with practiced thumb!
  66. Leave warfare to your men!’
  67. “While puffed-up pride
  68. was vaunting out such nonsense, Caeneus hurled
  69. a spear and pierced the stretched out running side,
  70. just where the man was joined upon the horse.
  71. “The Centaur, Latreus, raved with pain and struck
  72. with his great pike, the face of Caeneus.
  73. His pike rebounded as the hail that slants
  74. up from the roof; or as a pebble might
  75. rebound from hollow drum. Then coming near,
  76. he tried to drive a sword into the hard side
  77. of Caeneus, but it could not make a wound.
  78. ‘Aha!’ he cried, ‘this will not get you off.
  79. The good edge of my sword will take your life,
  80. although the point is blunt!’ He turned the edge
  81. against the flank of Caeneus and swung round
  82. the hero's loins with his long, curving arm.
  83. The flesh resounded like a marble block,
  84. the keen blade shattered on the unyielding skin.
  85. “And, after Caeneus had exposed his limbs
  86. unhurt to Latreus, who stood there amazed,
  87. ‘Come now,’ he said, ‘and let us try my steel
  88. against your body!’ And, clear to the hilt,
  89. down through the monster's shoulder-blade he plunged
  90. his deadly sword and, turning it again,
  91. deep in the Centaur's entrails, made new wounds
  92. within his wound.
  93. “Then, quite beside themselves,
  94. the double-natured monsters rushed against
  95. that single-handed youth with huge uproar,
  96. and thrust and hurled their weapons all at him.
  97. Their blunted weapons fell and he remained
  98. unharmed and without even a mark.”
  99. “That strange sight left them speechless. ‘Oh what shame!’
  100. at length cried Monychus, ‘Our mighty host,—
  101. a nation of us, are defeated and defied
  102. by one who hardly is a man. Although
  103. indeed, he is a man, and we have proved,
  104. by our weak actions, we are certainly
  105. what he was! Shame on us! Oh, what if we
  106. have twofold strength, of what avail our huge
  107. and mighty limbs, doubly united in
  108. the strongest, hugest bodies in this world?
  109. And how can I believe that we were born
  110. of any goddess? It is surely vain
  111. to claim descent of great Ixion, who
  112. high-souled, sought Juno for his mighty mate;
  113. imagine it, while we are conquered by
  114. an enemy, who is but half a man!
  115. Wake up! and let us heap tree-trunks and stones
  116. and mountains on him! Crush his stubborn life!
  117. Let forests smother him to death! Their weight
  118. will be as deadly as a hundred wounds!’
  119. “While he was raving, by some chance he found
  120. a tree thrown down there by the boisterous wind:
  121. example to the rest, he threw that tree
  122. against the powerful foe; and in short time
  123. Othrys was bare of trees, and Pelion had no shade.
  124. Buried under that mountainous forest heap,
  125. Caeneus heaved up against the weight of oaks
  126. upon his brawny shoulders piled. But, as
  127. the load increased above his face and head,
  128. he could not draw a breath. Gasping for life,
  129. he strove to lift his head into the air,
  130. and sometimes he convulsed the towering mass,
  131. as if great Ida, now before our eyes,
  132. should tremble with some heaving of the earth.
  133. “What happened to him could not well be known.
  134. Some thought his body was borne down by weight
  135. into the vast expanse of Tartarus.
  136. The son of Ampycus did not agree,
  137. for from the middle of the pile we saw
  138. a bird with golden wings mount high in air.
  139. Before or since, I never saw the like.
  140. “When Mopsus was aware of that bird's flight—
  141. it circled round the camp on rustling wings—
  142. with eyes and mind he followed it and shouted aloud:
  143. ‘Hail, glory of the Lapithaean race,
  144. their greatest hero, now a bird unique!’
  145. and we believed the verdict of the seer.
  146. “Our grief increased resentment, and we bore
  147. it with disgust that one was overwhelmed
  148. by such a multitude. Then in revenge
  149. we plied our swords, till half our foes were dead,
  150. and only flight and darkness saved the rest.”
  1. Nestor had hardly told this marvellous tale
  2. of bitter strife betwixt the Lapithae
  3. and those half-human, vanquished Centaurs, when
  4. Tlepolemus, incensed because no word
  5. of praise was given to Hercules, replied
  6. in this way; “Old sir, it is very strange,
  7. you have neglected to say one good word
  8. in praise of Hercules. My father told
  9. me often, that he overcame in battle
  10. those cloud born centaurs.”
  11. Nestor, very loth,
  12. replied, “Why force me to recall old wrongs,
  13. to uncover sorrow buried by the years,
  14. that made me hate your father? It is true
  15. his deeds were wonderful beyond belief,
  16. heaven knows, and filled the earth with well earned praise
  17. which I should rather wish might be denied.
  18. Deiphobus, the wise Polydamas, and even
  19. great Hector get no praise from me.
  20. Your father, I recall once overthrew
  21. Messene's walls and with no cause destroyed
  22. Elis and Pylos and with fire and sword
  23. ruined my own loved home. I cannot name
  24. all whom he killed. But there were twelve of us,
  25. the sons of Neleus and all warrior youths,
  26. and all those twelve but me alone he killed.
  27. Ten of them met the common fate of war,
  28. but sadder was the death of Periclymenus.
  29. “Neptune, the founder of my family,
  30. had granted him a power to assume
  31. whatever shape he chose, and when he wished
  32. to lay that shape aside. When he, in vain,
  33. had been transformed to many other shapes
  34. he turned into the form of that bird, which
  35. is wont to carry in his crooked talons
  36. the forked lightnings, favorite bird of Jove.
  37. With wings and crooked bill and sharp-hooked talons,
  38. he assailed and tore the face of Hercules.
  39. But, when he soared away on eagle wings
  40. up to the clouds and hovered, poised in air,
  41. that hero aimed his too unerring bow
  42. and hit him where the new wing joined his side.
  43. The wound was not large, but his sinews cut
  44. failed to uphold him, and denied his wings
  45. their strength and motion. He fell down to earth;
  46. his weakened pinions could not catch the air.
  47. And the sharp arrow, which had lightly pierced
  48. the wing, was driven upward through the side
  49. into the left part of my brother's neck.
  50. “O noble leader of the Rhodian fleet,
  51. why should I sing the praise of Hercules?
  52. But for my brothers I take no revenge
  53. except withholding praise of his great deeds.
  54. With you, my friendship will remain secure.”
  55. When Nestor with his honied tongue had told
  56. these tales of old, they all took wine again
  57. and they arose and gave the night to sleep.
  1. But Neptune, who commands the ocean waves,
  2. lamented with a father's grief his son,
  3. whose person he had changed into a bird—
  4. the swan of Phaethon, and towards Achilles,
  5. grim victor in the fight, his lasting hate
  6. made him pursue resentment far beyond
  7. the ordinary manner of the gods.
  8. After nine years of war he spoke these words,
  9. addressing long haired Sminthean Apollo:
  10. “O nephew the most dear to me of all
  11. my brother's sons, with me you built in vain
  12. the walls of Troy: you must be lost in grief,
  13. when you look on those towers so soon to fall?
  14. Or do you not lament the multitudes
  15. slain in defence of them—To name but one:
  16. “Does not the ghost of Hector, dragged around
  17. his Pergama, appear to you? And yet
  18. the fierce Achilles, who is bloodstained more
  19. than slaughtering war, lives on this earth,
  20. for the destruction of our toil. Let him
  21. once get into my power, and I will make
  22. him feel the action of my triple spear.
  23. But, since I may not meet him face to face,
  24. do you with sudden arrow give him death.”
  25. The Delian god, Apollo, gave assent,
  26. both for his own hate and his uncle's rage.
  27. Veiled in a cloud, he found the Trojan host
  28. and, there, while bloody strife went on, he saw
  29. the hero Paris shoot at intervals
  30. his arrows at the nameless host of Greeks.
  31. Revealing his divinity, he said:
  32. “Why spend your arrows on the common men
  33. if you would serve your people, take good aim
  34. at great Achilles and at last avenge
  35. your hapless brothers whom he gave to death.”
  36. He pointed out Achilles—laying low
  37. the Trojan warriors with his mighty spear.
  38. On him he turned the Trojan's willing bow
  39. and guided with his hand the fatal shaft.
  40. It was the first joy that old Priam knew
  41. since Hector's death. So then Achilles you,
  42. who overcame the mighty, were subdued
  43. by a coward who seduced a Grecian wife!
  44. Ah, if you could not die by manly hands,
  45. your choice had been the axe.
  46. Now that great terror of the Trojan race,
  47. the glory and defence of the Pelasgians,
  48. Achilles, first in war, lay on the pyre.
  49. The god of Fire first armed, then burned, his limbs.
  50. And now he is but ashes; and of him, so great,
  51. renowned and mighty, but a pitiful
  52. handful of small dust insufficient for
  53. a little urn! But all his glory lives
  54. enough to fill the world—a great reward.
  55. And in that glory is his real life:
  56. in a true sense he will never know the void
  57. of Tartarus.
  58. But soon his very shield—
  59. that men might know to whom it had belonged—
  60. brings war, and arms are taken for his arms.
  61. Neither Diomed nor Ajax called the less
  62. ventured to claim the hero's mighty shield.
  63. Menelaus and other warlike chiefs,
  64. even Agamemnon, all withdrew their claims.
  65. Only the greater Ajax and Ulysses
  66. had such assurance that they dared contest
  67. for that great prize. Then Agamemnon chose
  68. to avoid the odium of preferring one.
  69. He bade the Argolic chieftains take their seats
  70. within the camp and left to all of them
  71. the hearing and decision of the cause.
  1. The chiefs were seated, and the soldiers form
  2. a circle round them. Then Ajax, the approved
  3. lord of the seven-fold shield, arose and spoke.
  4. Impatient in his wrath, he looked with stern,
  5. set features, out over Sigaean shores,
  6. and over the fleet of ships upon the beach,
  7. and, stretching out his hands, he said,
  8. “We plead,
  9. O Jupiter, our cause before the ships,—
  10. Ulysses vies with me! He did not shrink
  11. from giving way before the flames of Hector,
  12. when I withstood them and I saved the fleet.
  13. 'Tis safer then to fight with lying words
  14. than with his hands. I am not prompt to speak,
  15. nor he to act. I am as good in war
  16. and deadly battle as he is in talk.
  17. Pelasgians, I do not suppose my deeds
  18. must here be mentioned: you have witnessed them
  19. but let Ulysses tell of deeds which he
  20. performed without a witness and which Night
  21. alone is conscious of. I own the prize
  22. we seek is great, but such a rival makes
  23. it small. To Ajax there s no cause for pride
  24. in having any prize, however great,
  25. for which Ulysses hoped. But he has won
  26. reward enough already. He can boast,
  27. when vanquished, that he strove with me.
  28. “I, even if my merit were in doubt
  29. should still excell in birth. I am the son
  30. of Telamon, who with great Hercules
  31. brought low the power of Troy and in the ship
  32. of Jason voyaged even to the Colchian shores.
  33. His father, Aeacus, now is a judge
  34. among the silent shades—where Sisyphus
  35. toils and is mocked forever with the stone.
  36. Great Jove himself calls Aeacus his son.
  37. Thus, Ajax is the third from Jupiter.
  38. But, Greeks, let not this line of my descent
  39. avail me, if I do not share it with
  40. my cousin, great Achilles. I demand
  41. these arms now due me as a cousin. Why
  42. should this one, from the blood of Sisyphus,
  43. and like him for his thefts and frauds, intrude
  44. the names of that loathed family upon
  45. honored descendants of brave Aeacus?
  46. “Will you deny me arms because I took
  47. arms earlier, no man prompting me,
  48. and call this man the better, who last of all
  49. took up arms, and, pretending he was mad,
  50. declined war, till the son of Naplius
  51. more shrewd than he (but to his future cost)
  52. discovered the contrivance of the fraud
  53. and had the coward dragged forth to the arms
  54. he had avoided. And shall this man have
  55. the world's best arms, who wanted none?
  56. Shall I lack honor and my cousin's gift
  57. because I faced the danger with the first?
  58. “Would that his madness had been real, or
  59. had been accepted as reality
  60. and that he never had attended us,
  61. as our companion to the Phrygian towers,
  62. this counsellor of evil! Then, good son
  63. of Poeas, Lemnos would not hold you now,
  64. exposed through guilt of ours! You, as men say,
  65. hidden in forest lairs, are moving with your groans
  66. the very rocks and asking for Ulysses
  67. what he so well deserves—what, if indeed
  68. there still are gods, you shall not ask in vain.
  69. And now, one of our leaders, he that was
  70. sworn to the same arms with ourselves! by whom
  71. the arrows of great Hercules are used,
  72. as his successor; broken by disease
  73. and famine, clothed with feathers, now must feed
  74. on birds and squander for his wretched fare
  75. the arrows destined for the wreck of Troy.
  76. “At least he lives, because he has not stayed
  77. too near Ulysses. Hapless Palamedes
  78. might wish that he too had been left behind,
  79. then he would live or would have met a death
  80. without dishonor. For this man, who well
  81. remembered the unfortunate discovery
  82. of his feigned madness, made a fraudulent
  83. attack on Palamedes, who he said
  84. betrayed the Grecian interest. He proved
  85. his false charge to the Greeks by showing them
  86. the gold which he himself hid in the ground.
  87. By exile or by death he has decreased
  88. the true strength of the Greeks. And so he fights,
  89. for such things men have cause to fear Ulysses!
  90. “Should he excel the faithful Nestor by
  91. his eloquence, I'd yet be well convinced
  92. the way he forsook Nestor was a crime,
  93. old Nestor, who implored in vain his aid,
  94. when he was hindered by his wounded steed
  95. and wearied with the years of his old age,
  96. was then deserted by that scheming man.
  97. The charge that I have made is strictly true,
  98. and the son of Tydeus knows it all too well;
  99. for he at that time called him by his name,
  100. rebuked him and upbraided his weak friend
  101. for coward flight.
  102. “The gods above behold
  103. the affairs of men with justice. That same man
  104. who would not help a friend now calls for help;
  105. he who forsook a friend, should be forsaken,
  106. the law he made returns upon himself.
  107. He called aloud on his companions;
  108. I came and saw him trembling, pale with fear,
  109. and shuddering, at the thought of coming death.
  110. I held my shield above him where he lay,
  111. and that way saved the villain's dastard life,
  112. and little praise I have deserved for that.
  113. If you still wish to claim this armor, let
  114. us both return to that place and restore
  115. the enemy, your wound, and usual fear—
  116. there hide behind my shield, and under that
  117. contend with me! Yet, when I faced the foe,
  118. he, whom his wound had left no power to stand,
  119. forgot the wound and took to headlong flight.
  120. “Hector approached, and brought the gods with him
  121. to battle; and, wherever he rushed on,
  122. not only this Ulysses was alarmed,
  123. but even the valiant, for so great the fear
  124. he caused them. Hector, proud in his success
  125. in blood and slaughter, I then dared to meet
  126. and with a huge: stone from a distance hurled
  127. I laid him flat. When he demanded one
  128. to fight with, I engaged him quite alone,
  129. for you my Greek friends, prayed the lot
  130. might fall upon me, and your prayers prevailed.
  131. If you should ask me of this fight, I will
  132. declare I was not vanquished there by him.
  133. “Behold, the Trojans brought forth fire and sword
  134. and Jove, as well, against the Grecian fleet,
  135. where now has eloquent Ulysses gone?
  136. Truly, I did protect a thousand ships
  137. with my breast, saving the hopes of your return.—
  138. for all these many ships, award me arms!
  139. But, let me speak the truth, the arms will gain
  140. more fame than I, for they will share my glory.
  141. And they need Ajax, Ajax needs not them.
  1. Let the Ithacan compare with deeds like mine
  2. his sleeping Rhesus, his unwarlike Dolon,
  3. Helenus taken, and Pallas gained by theft—
  4. all done by night and all with Diomed.
  5. If you must give these arms for deeds so mean,
  6. then give the greater share to Diomed.
  7. “Why give arms to Ulysses, who by stealth
  8. and quite unarmed, has always done his work,
  9. deceiving his unwary enemy
  10. by stratagems? This brilliant helmet, rich
  11. with sparkling gold, will certainly betray
  12. his plans, and will discover him when hid.
  13. His soft Dulichian head beneath the helm
  14. of great Achilles will not bear the weight;
  15. Achilles' heavy spear from Pelion must
  16. be burdensome for his unwarlike hands:
  17. nor will the shield, graven with the vasty world
  18. beseem a dastard left hand, smooth for theft.
  19. “Why caitiff, will you beg them for a gift,
  20. which will but weaken you? If by mistake,
  21. the Grecian people should award you this,
  22. it would not fright the foe but offer spoils
  23. and that swift flight (in which alone you have
  24. excelled all others, dastard wretch!) would soon
  25. grow laggard, dragging such a weight. And that
  26. good shield of yours, which has but rarely felt
  27. a conflict, is unhurt; for mine, agape
  28. with wounds a thousand from swift-striking darts,
  29. a new one must be found.
  30. “In short, what need
  31. is there for words? Let us be tried in war.
  32. Let all the arms of brave Achilles now
  33. be thrown among the foe; order them all
  34. to be retrieved; and decorate for war
  35. whoever brings them back, a worthy prize.”
  36. Ajax, the son of Telamon, stopped speech,
  37. and murmuring among the multitude
  38. followed his closing words, until Ulysses,
  39. Laertian hero, stood up there and fixed
  40. his eyes a short time on the ground; then raised
  41. them towards the chiefs; and with his opening words,
  42. which they awaited, the grace of his art
  43. was not found wanting to his eloquence.
  44. “If my desire and yours could have prevailed,
  45. O noble Greeks, the man who should receive
  46. a prize so valued, would not be in doubt,
  47. and you would now enjoy your arms, and we
  48. enjoy you, great Achilles. Since unjust
  49. fate has denied him both to me and you,
  50. (and here he wiped his eyes dry with his hands,
  51. as though then shedding tears,) who could succeed
  52. the great Achilles better than the one
  53. through whom the great Achilles joined the Greeks?
  54. Let Ajax win no votes because he seems
  55. to be as stupid as the truth declares.
  56. Let not my talents, which were always used
  57. for service of the Greeks, increase my harm:
  58. and let this eloquence of mine (if such
  59. we call it) which is pleading now for me,
  60. as it has pleaded many times for you,
  61. awake no envy. Let each man show his best.
  62. “Now as for ancestors and noble birth
  63. and deeds we have not done ourselves, all these
  64. I hardly call them ours. But, if he boasts
  65. because he is the great grandson of Jove,
  66. the founder of my family, you know,
  67. is Jupiter; by birth I am just the same
  68. degree removed from Jupiter as he.
  69. Laertes is my father, my grandsire is
  70. Arcesius; and my great grandsire is Jove,
  71. and my line: has no banished criminal.
  72. My mother's grandsire, Mercury, would give
  73. me further claims of birth—on either side a god.
  74. “But not because my mother's line is better
  75. and not because my father certainly,
  76. is innocent of his own brother's blood,
  77. have I advanced my claim to own those arms.
  78. Let personal merit weigh the cause alone.
  79. Let Ajax win no credit from the fact
  80. that Telamon, was brother unto Peleus.
  81. Let not his merit be that he is near by blood,
  82. may honor of manhood weigh in your award!
  83. “But, if you seek the heir and next of kin,
  84. Peleus is father, and Pyrrhus is the son
  85. of great Achilles. Where is Ajax then?
  86. These arms might go to Phthia or to Scyros!
  87. Teucer might claim the prize because he is
  88. Achilles' cousin. Does he seek these arms?
  89. And, if he did, would you allow his claim?
  90. “Since then the contest lies in deeds alone,
  91. though I have done more than may be well told,
  92. I will recall them as they have occurred.
  93. “Achilles' Nereid mother, who foresaw
  94. his death, concealed her son by change of dress.
  95. By that disguise Ajax, among the rest,
  96. was well deceived. I showed with women's wares
  97. arms that might win the spirit of a man.
  98. The hero still wore clothing of a girl,
  99. when, as he held a shield and spear, I said
  100. ‘Son of a goddess! Pergama but waits
  101. to fall by you, why do you hesitate
  102. to assure the overthrow of mighty Troy?’
  103. With these bold words, I laid my hand on him—
  104. and to: brave actions I sent forth the brave:
  105. his deeds of Bravery are therefore mine
  106. it was my power that conquered Telephus,
  107. as he fought with his lance; it was through me
  108. that, vanquished and suppliant? he at last was healed.
  109. I caused the fall of Thebes; believe me, I
  110. took Lesbos, Tenedos, Chryse and Cilla—
  111. the cities of Apollo; and I took
  112. Scyros; think too, of the Lyrnesian wall
  113. as shaken by my hand, destroyed, and thrown
  114. down level with the ground. Let this suffice:
  115. I found the man who caused fierce Hector's death,
  116. through me the famous Hector now, lies low!
  117. And for those arms which made Achilles known
  118. I now demand these arms. To him alive
  119. I gave them—at his death they should be mine.
  120. “After the grief of one had reached all Greece,
  121. and ships a thousand, filled Euboean Aulis;
  122. the breezes long expected would not blow
  123. or adverse held the helpless fleet ashore.
  124. Then ruthless oracles gave their command,
  125. that Agamemnon should make sacrifice
  126. of his loved daughter and so satisfy
  127. Diana's cruel heart. The father stood
  128. up resolute, enraged against the gods,
  129. a parent even though a king. I turned,
  130. by tactful! words, a father's tender heart
  131. to the great issue of the public weal.
  132. I will confess it, and when I have confessed,
  133. may the son of Atreus pardon: I had to plead
  134. a difficult case before a partial judge.
  135. The people's good, his brother's, and stern duty,
  136. that followed his great office, won his ear,
  137. till royal honor outweighed claims of blood.
  138. I sought the mother, who could not be won
  139. by pleading but must be deceived by craft.
  140. Had Ajax gone to her, our thousand sails
  141. would still droop, waiting for the favoring breeze.
  142. “As a bold envoy I was even sent
  143. off to the towers of Ilium, and there
  144. I saw the senate-house of lofty Troy,
  145. and, fearless, entered it, while it was full
  146. of heroes. There, undaunted, I spoke for
  147. the cause which all the Greeks had given me.
  148. Accusing Paris, I demanded back
  149. the gold and stolen Helen, and I moved
  150. both Priam and Antenor. All the while
  151. Paris, his brothers, and their robber crew
  152. could scarce withhold their wicked hands from me.
  153. And all this, Menelaus, is well known to you:
  154. that was the first danger I shared with you.
  1. “I need not linger over the many things
  2. which by my counsel and my bravery
  3. I have accomplished through this long-drawn war.
  4. “A long time, after the first battle clash,
  5. the foe lay quiet within city walls,
  6. giving no challenge for an open fight—
  7. he stood nine years of siege before we fought
  8. what were you doing all that tedious time,
  9. what use were you, good only in a fight?
  10. If you will make inquiry of my deeds:
  11. I fashioned ambuscades for enemies;
  12. and circled our defenses with a trench;
  13. I cheered allies so they might all endure
  14. with patient minds a long, protracted war;
  15. I showed how our own army might subsist
  16. and how it could be armed; and I was sent
  17. wherever the necessity required.
  18. “Then, at the wish of Jove, our king, deceive
  19. by A false dream, bids us give up the war—
  20. he could excuse his order by the cause.
  21. Let Ajax tell him Troy must be laid low
  22. or let him fight—at least he can do that!
  23. Why does he fail to stop the fugitives?
  24. Why not take arms and tell the wavering crowd
  25. to rally round him? Would that be too much
  26. for one who never speaks except to boast?
  27. But now words fail me: Ajax turns and flees!
  28. I witnessed it and was ashamed to see
  29. you turn disgraced, preparing sails for flight.
  30. With exclamations and without delay,
  31. I said, ‘What are you doing? O my friends,
  32. has madness seized you that you will quit Troy,
  33. which is as good as taken? What can you
  34. bear home, after ten years, but your disgrace?’
  35. “With these commanding words, which grief itself
  36. gave eloquence, I brought resisting Greeks
  37. back from their purposed flight. Atrides called
  38. together his allies, all terror struck.
  39. Even then, Ajax the son of Telamon
  40. dared not vouchsafe one word. But impudent
  41. Thersites hurled vile words against the kings,
  42. and, thanks to me, he did not miss reproof.
  43. I rose and spoke to my disheartened friends,
  44. reviving their lost courage with my words
  45. from that time forth, whatever deeds this man,
  46. my rival, may have done, belong to me.
  47. 'Twas I who stayed his flight and brought him back.
  48. “Which of the noble Greeks has given you praise
  49. or sought your company? Yet Diomed
  50. has shared his deeds with me and praises me,
  51. and, while Ulysses is with him, is brave
  52. and confident. 'Tis worthy of regard,
  53. when out of many thousands of the Greeks,
  54. a man becomes the choice of Diomed!
  55. “It was not lot that ordered me to go;
  56. and yet, despising dangers of the night,
  57. despising dangers of the enemy,
  58. I slew one, Dolon, of the Phrygian race,
  59. who dared to do the very things we dared,
  60. but not before I had prevailed on him
  61. to tell me everything, by which I learned
  62. perfidious actions which Troy had designed.
  63. “Of such things now, I had discovered all
  64. that should be found out, and I might have then
  65. returned to enjoy the praise I had deserved.
  66. But not content with that, I sought the tent
  67. of Rhesus, and within his camp I slew
  68. him and his proved attendants. Having thus
  69. gained as a conqueror my own desires,
  70. I drove back in a captured chariot,—
  71. a joyous triumph. Well, deny me, then.
  72. The arms of him whose steeds the enemy
  73. demanded as the price of one night's aid.
  74. Ajax himself has been more generous.
  75. “Why should I name Sarpedon's Lycian troops
  76. among whom I made havoc with my sword?
  77. I left Coeranos dead and streaming blood,
  78. with the sword I killed Alastor, Chromius,
  79. Alcander, Prytanis, Halius, and Noemon,
  80. Thoon and Charops with Chersidamas,
  81. and Ennomus—all driven by cruel fate,
  82. not reckoning humbler men whom I laid low,
  83. battling beneath the shadow of the city walls.
  84. And fellow citizens, I have my wounds
  85. honorable in the front. Do not believe
  86. my word alone. Look for yourselves and see!”
  87. Then with one hand, he drew his robe aside.
  88. “Here is a breast,” he cried, “that bled for you!
  89. But Ajax never shed a drop of blood
  90. to aid his friends, in all these many years,
  91. and has a body free of any wound.
  92. “What does it prove, if he declares that he
  93. fought for our ships against both Troy and Jove?
  94. I grant he did, for it is not my wont
  95. with malice to belittle other's deeds.
  96. But let him not claim for himself alone
  97. an honor in which all may have a share,
  98. let him concede some credit due to you.
  99. Disguised within the fear inspiring arms
  100. of great Achilles, Actor's son drove back
  101. the host of Trojans from our threatened fleet
  102. or ships and Ajax would have burned together.
  103. “Unmindful of the king, the chiefs, and me,
  104. he dreams that he alone dared to engage
  105. in single fight with Hector—he the ninth
  106. to volunteer and chosen just by lot.
  107. But yet, O brave chief! What availed the fight?
  108. Hector returned, not injured by a wound.
  109. “Ah, bitter fate, with how much grief I am
  110. compelled to recollect the time, when brave
  111. Achilles, bulwark of the Greeks, was slain.
  112. Nor tears, nor grief, nor fear, could hinder me:
  113. I carried his dead body from the ground,
  114. uplifted on these shoulders, I repeat,
  115. upon these shoulders from that ground
  116. I bore off dead Achilles, and those arms
  117. which now I want to bear away again.
  118. I have the strength to walk beneath their weight,
  119. I have a mind to understand their worth.
  120. Did the hero's mother, goddess of the sea,
  121. win for her son these arms, made by a god,
  122. a work of wondrous art, to have them clothe
  123. a rude soldier, who has no mind at all?
  124. He never could be made to understand
  125. the rich engravings, pictured on the shield—
  126. the ocean, earth, and stars in lofty skies;
  127. the Pleiades, and Hyades, the Bear,
  128. which touches not the ocean, far beyond
  129. the varied planets, and the fire-bright sword
  130. of high Orion. He demands a prize,
  131. which, if he had it, would be lost on him.
  132. “What of his taunting me, because I shrank
  133. from hardships of this war and I was slow
  134. to join the expedition? Does he not see,
  135. that he reviles the great Achilles too?
  136. Was my pretense a crime? then so was his.
  137. Was our delay a fault? mine was the less,
  138. for I came sooner; me a loving wife
  139. detained from war, a loving mother him.
  140. Some hours we gave to them, the rest to you.
  141. Why should I be alarmed, if now I am
  142. unable to defend myself against
  143. this accusation, which is just the same
  144. as you have brought against so great a man?
  145. Yet he was found by the dexterity
  146. of me, Ulysses, and Ulysses was
  147. not found by the dexterity of Ajax.
  148. “It is no wonder that he pours on me
  149. reproaches of his silly tongue, because
  150. he charges you with what is worthy shame.
  151. Am I depraved because this Palamedes has
  152. improperly been charged with crime by me?
  153. Then was it honorable for all of you,
  154. if you condemned him? Only think, that he,
  155. the son of Naplius, made no defence
  156. against the crime, so great, so manifest:
  157. nor did you only hear the charges brought
  158. against him, but you saw the proof yourselves,
  159. and in the gold his villainy was shown.