<h3> BOOK IX </h3>
<p class="intro">
The Embassy to Achilles.</p>
<p>THUS did the Trojans watch. But Panic, comrade of blood-stained Rout, had
taken fast hold of the Achaeans, and their princes were all of them in
despair. As when the two winds that blow from Thrace—the north and
the northwest—spring up of a sudden and rouse the fury of the main—in
a moment the dark waves uprear their heads and scatter their sea-wrack in
all directions—even thus troubled were the hearts of the Achaeans.</p>
<p>The son of Atreus in dismay bade the heralds call the people to a council
man by man, but not to cry the matter aloud; he made haste also himself to
call them, and they sat sorry at heart in their assembly. Agamemnon shed
tears as it were a running stream or cataract on the side of some sheer
cliff; and thus, with many a heavy sigh he spoke to the Achaeans. "My
friends," said he, "princes and councillors of the Argives, the hand of
heaven has been laid heavily upon me. Cruel Jove gave me his solemn
promise that I should sack the city of Troy before returning, but he has
played me false, and is now bidding me go ingloriously back to Argos with
the loss of much people. Such is the will of Jove, who has laid many a
proud city in the dust as he will yet lay others, for his power is above
all. Now, therefore, let us all do as I say and sail back to our own
country, for we shall not take Troy."</p>
<p>Thus he spoke, and the sons of the Achaeans for a long while sat sorrowful
there, but they all held their peace, till at last Diomed of the loud
battle-cry made answer saying, "Son of Atreus, I will chide your folly, as
is my right in council. Be not then aggrieved that I should do so. In the
first place you attacked me before all the Danaans and said that I was a
coward and no soldier. The Argives young and old know that you did so. But
the son of scheming Saturn endowed you by halves only. He gave you honour
as the chief ruler over us, but valour, which is the highest both right
and might he did not give you. Sir, think you that the sons of the
Achaeans are indeed as unwarlike and cowardly as you say they are? If your
own mind is set upon going home—go—the way is open to you; the
many ships that followed you from Mycene stand ranged upon the seashore;
but the rest of us stay here till we have sacked Troy. Nay though these
too should turn homeward with their ships, Sthenelus and myself will still
fight on till we reach the goal of Ilius, for heaven was with us when we
came."</p>
<p>The sons of the Achaeans shouted applause at the words of Diomed, and
presently Nestor rose to speak. "Son of Tydeus," said he, "in war your
prowess is beyond question, and in council you excel all who are of your
own years; no one of the Achaeans can make light of what you say nor
gainsay it, but you have not yet come to the end of the whole matter. You
are still young—you might be the youngest of my own children—still
you have spoken wisely and have counselled the chief of the Achaeans not
without discretion; nevertheless I am older than you and I will tell you
everything; therefore let no man, not even King Agamemnon, disregard my
saying, for he that foments civil discord is a clanless, hearthless
outlaw.</p>
<p>"Now, however, let us obey the behests of night and get our suppers, but
let the sentinels every man of them camp by the trench that is without the
wall. I am giving these instructions to the young men; when they have been
attended to, do you, son of Atreus, give your orders, for you are the most
royal among us all. Prepare a feast for your councillors; it is right and
reasonable that you should do so; there is abundance of wine in your
tents, which the ships of the Achaeans bring from Thrace daily. You have
everything at your disposal wherewith to entertain guests, and you have
many subjects. When many are got together, you can be guided by him whose
counsel is wisest—and sorely do we need shrewd and prudent counsel,
for the foe has lit his watchfires hard by our ships. Who can be other
than dismayed? This night will either be the ruin of our host, or save
it."</p>
<p>Thus did he speak, and they did even as he had said. The sentinels went
out in their armour under command of Nestor's son Thrasymedes, a captain
of the host, and of the bold warriors Ascalaphus and Ialmenus: there were
also Meriones, Aphareus and Deipyrus, and the son of Creion, noble
Lycomedes. There were seven captains of the sentinels, and with each there
went a hundred youths armed with long spears: they took their places
midway between the trench and the wall, and when they had done so they lit
their fires and got every man his supper.</p>
<p>The son of Atreus then bade many councillors of the Achaeans to his
quarters and prepared a great feast in their honour. They laid their hands
on the good things that were before them, and as soon as they had enough
to eat and drink, old Nestor, whose counsel was ever truest, was the first
to lay his mind before them. He, therefore, with all sincerity and
goodwill addressed them thus.</p>
<p>"With yourself, most noble son of Atreus, king of men, Agamemnon, will I
both begin my speech and end it, for you are king over much people. Jove,
moreover, has vouchsafed you to wield the sceptre and to uphold
righteousness, that you may take thought for your people under you;
therefore it behooves you above all others both to speak and to give ear,
and to out the counsel of another who shall have been minded to speak
wisely. All turns on you and on your commands, therefore I will say what I
think will be best. No man will be of a truer mind than that which has
been mine from the hour when you, sir, angered Achilles by taking the girl
Briseis from his tent against my judgment. I urged you not to do so, but
you yielded to your own pride, and dishonoured a hero whom heaven itself
had honoured—for you still hold the prize that had been awarded to
him. Now, however, let us think how we may appease him, both with presents
and fair speeches that may conciliate him."</p>
<p>And King Agamemnon answered, "Sir, you have reproved my folly justly. I
was wrong. I own it. One whom heaven befriends is in himself a host, and
Jove has shown that he befriends this man by destroying much people of the
Achaeans. I was blinded with passion and yielded to my worser mind;
therefore I will make amends, and will give him great gifts by way of
atonement. I will tell them in the presence of you all. I will give him
seven tripods that have never yet been on the fire, and ten talents of
gold. I will give him twenty iron cauldrons and twelve strong horses that
have won races and carried off prizes. Rich, indeed, both in land and gold
is he that has as many prizes as my horses have won me. I will give him
seven excellent workwomen, Lesbians, whom I chose for myself when he took
Lesbos—all of surpassing beauty. I will give him these, and with
them her whom I erewhile took from him, the daughter of Briseus; and I
swear a great oath that I never went up into her couch, nor have been with
her after the manner of men and women.</p>
<p>"All these things will I give him now, and if hereafter the gods vouchsafe
me to sack the city of Priam, let him come when we Achaeans are dividing
the spoil, and load his ship with gold and bronze to his liking;
furthermore let him take twenty Trojan women, the loveliest after Helen
herself. Then, when we reach Achaean Argos, wealthiest of all lands, he
shall be my son-in-law and I will show him like honour with my own dear
son Orestes, who is being nurtured in all abundance. I have three
daughters, Chrysothemis, Laodice, and Iphianassa, let him take the one of
his choice, freely and without gifts of wooing, to the house of Peleus; I
will add such dower to boot as no man ever yet gave his daughter, and will
give him seven well established cities, Cardamyle, Enope, and Hire, where
there is grass; holy Pherae and the rich meadows of Anthea; Aepea also,
and the vine-clad slopes of Pedasus, all near the sea, and on the borders
of sandy Pylos. The men that dwell there are rich in cattle and sheep;
they will honour him with gifts as though he were a god, and be obedient
to his comfortable ordinances. All this will I do if he will now forgo his
anger. Let him then yield; it is only Hades who is utterly ruthless and
unyielding—and hence he is of all gods the one most hateful to
mankind. Moreover I am older and more royal than himself. Therefore, let
him now obey me."</p>
<p>Then Nestor answered, "Most noble son of Atreus, king of men, Agamemnon.
The gifts you offer are no small ones, let us then send chosen messengers,
who may go to the tent of Achilles son of Peleus without delay. Let those
go whom I shall name. Let Phoenix, dear to Jove, lead the way; let Ajax
and Ulysses follow, and let the heralds Odius and Eurybates go with them.
Now bring water for our hands, and bid all keep silence while we pray to
Jove the son of Saturn, if so be that he may have mercy upon us."</p>
<p>Thus did he speak, and his saying pleased them well. Men-servants poured
water over the hands of the guests, while pages filled the mixing-bowls
with wine and water, and handed it round after giving every man his
drink-offering; then, when they had made their offerings, and had drunk
each as much as he was minded, the envoys set out from the tent of
Agamemnon son of Atreus; and Nestor, looking first to one and then to
another, but most especially at Ulysses, was instant with them that they
should prevail with the noble son of Peleus.</p>
<p>They went their way by the shore of the sounding sea, and prayed earnestly
to earth-encircling Neptune that the high spirit of the son of Aeacus
might incline favourably towards them. When they reached the ships and
tents of the Myrmidons, they found Achilles playing on a lyre, fair, of
cunning workmanship, and its cross-bar was of silver. It was part of the
spoils which he had taken when he sacked the city of Eetion, and he was
now diverting himself with it and singing the feats of heroes. He was
alone with Patroclus, who sat opposite to him and said nothing, waiting
till he should cease singing. Ulysses and Ajax now came in—Ulysses
leading the way—and stood before him. Achilles sprang from his seat
with the lyre still in his hand, and Patroclus, when he saw the strangers,
rose also. Achilles then greeted them saying, "All hail and welcome—you
must come upon some great matter, you, who for all my anger are still
dearest to me of the Achaeans."</p>
<p>With this he led them forward, and bade them sit on seats covered with
purple rugs; then he said to Patroclus who was close by him, "Son of
Menoetius, set a larger bowl upon the table, mix less water with the wine,
and give every man his cup, for these are very dear friends, who are now
under my roof."</p>
<p>Patroclus did as his comrade bade him; he set the chopping-block in front
of the fire, and on it he laid the loin of a sheep, the loin also of a
goat, and the chine of a fat hog. Automedon held the meat while Achilles
chopped it; he then sliced the pieces and put them on spits while the son
of Menoetius made the fire burn high. When the flame had died down, he
spread the embers, laid the spits on top of them, lifting them up and
setting them upon the spit-racks; and he sprinkled them with salt. When
the meat was roasted, he set it on platters, and handed bread round the
table in fair baskets, while Achilles dealt them their portions. Then
Achilles took his seat facing Ulysses against the opposite wall, and bade
his comrade Patroclus offer sacrifice to the gods; so he cast the
offerings into the fire, and they laid their hands upon the good things
that were before them. As soon as they had had enough to eat and drink,
Ajax made a sign to Phoenix, and when he saw this, Ulysses filled his cup
with wine and pledged Achilles.</p>
<p>"Hail," said he, "Achilles, we have had no scant of good cheer, neither in
the tent of Agamemnon, nor yet here; there has been plenty to eat and
drink, but our thought turns upon no such matter. Sir, we are in the face
of great disaster, and without your help know not whether we shall save
our fleet or lose it. The Trojans and their allies have camped hard by our
ships and by the wall; they have lit watchfires throughout their host and
deem that nothing can now prevent them from falling on our fleet. Jove,
moreover, has sent his lightnings on their right; Hector, in all his
glory, rages like a maniac; confident that Jove is with him he fears
neither god nor man, but is gone raving mad, and prays for the approach of
day. He vows that he will hew the high sterns of our ships in pieces, set
fire to their hulls, and make havoc of the Achaeans while they are dazed
and smothered in smoke; I much fear that heaven will make good his
boasting, and it will prove our lot to perish at Troy far from our home in
Argos. Up, then, and late though it be, save the sons of the Achaeans who
faint before the fury of the Trojans. You will repent bitterly hereafter
if you do not, for when the harm is done there will be no curing it;
consider ere it be too late, and save the Danaans from destruction.</p>
<p>"My good friend, when your father Peleus sent you from Phthia to
Agamemnon, did he not charge you saying, 'Son, Minerva and Juno will make
you strong if they choose, but check your high temper, for the better part
is in goodwill. Eschew vain quarrelling, and the Achaeans old and young
will respect you more for doing so.' These were his words, but you have
forgotten them. Even now, however, be appeased, and put away your anger
from you. Agamemnon will make you great amends if you will forgive him;
listen, and I will tell you what he has said in his tent that he will give
you. He will give you seven tripods that have never yet been on the fire,
and ten talents of gold; twenty iron cauldrons, and twelve strong horses
that have won races and carried off prizes. Rich indeed both in land and
gold is he who has as many prizes as these horses have won for Agamemnon.
Moreover he will give you seven excellent workwomen, Lesbians, whom he
chose for himself, when you took Lesbos—all of surpassing beauty. He
will give you these, and with them her whom he erewhile took from you, the
daughter of Briseus, and he will swear a great oath, he has never gone up
into her couch nor been with her after the manner of men and women. All
these things will he give you now down, and if hereafter the gods
vouchsafe him to sack the city of Priam, you can come when we Achaeans are
dividing the spoil, and load your ship with gold and bronze to your
liking. You can take twenty Trojan women, the loveliest after Helen
herself. Then, when we reach Achaean Argos, wealthiest of all lands, you
shall be his son-in-law, and he will show you like honour with his own
dear son Orestes, who is being nurtured in all abundance. Agamemnon has
three daughters, Chrysothemis, Laodice, and Iphianassa; you may take the
one of your choice, freely and without gifts of wooing, to the house of
Peleus; he will add such dower to boot as no man ever yet gave his
daughter, and will give you seven well-established cities, Cardamyle,
Enope, and Hire where there is grass; holy Pheras and the rich meadows of
Anthea; Aepea also, and the vine-clad slopes of Pedasus, all near the sea,
and on the borders of sandy Pylos. The men that dwell there are rich in
cattle and sheep; they will honour you with gifts as though were a god,
and be obedient to your comfortable ordinances. All this will he do if you
will now forgo your anger. Moreover, though you hate both him and his
gifts with all your heart, yet pity the rest of the Achaeans who are being
harassed in all their host; they will honour you as a god, and you will
earn great glory at their hands. You might even kill Hector; he will come
within your reach, for he is infatuated, and declares that not a Danaan
whom the ships have brought can hold his own against him."</p>
<p>Achilles answered, "Ulysses, noble son of Laertes, I should give you
formal notice plainly and in all fixity of purpose that there be no more
of this cajoling, from whatsoever quarter it may come. Him do I hate even
as the gates of hell who says one thing while he hides another in his
heart; therefore I will say what I mean. I will be appeased neither by
Agamemnon son of Atreus nor by any other of the Danaans, for I see that I
have no thanks for all my fighting. He that fights fares no better than he
that does not; coward and hero are held in equal honour, and death deals
like measure to him who works and him who is idle. I have taken nothing by
all my hardships—with my life ever in my hand; as a bird when she
has found a morsel takes it to her nestlings, and herself fares hardly,
even so many a long night have I been wakeful, and many a bloody battle
have I waged by day against those who were fighting for their women. With
my ships I have taken twelve cities, and eleven round about Troy have I
stormed with my men by land; I took great store of wealth from every one
of them, but I gave all up to Agamemnon son of Atreus. He stayed where he
was by his ships, yet of what came to him he gave little, and kept much
himself.</p>
<p>"Nevertheless he did distribute some meeds of honour among the chieftains
and kings, and these have them still; from me alone of the Achaeans did he
take the woman in whom I delighted—let him keep her and sleep with
her. Why, pray, must the Argives needs fight the Trojans? What made the
son of Atreus gather the host and bring them? Was it not for the sake of
Helen? Are the sons of Atreus the only men in the world who love their
wives? Any man of common right feeling will love and cherish her who is
his own, as I this woman, with my whole heart, though she was but a
fruitling of my spear. Agamemnon has taken her from me; he has played me
false; I know him; let him tempt me no further, for he shall not move me.
Let him look to you, Ulysses, and to the other princes to save his ships
from burning. He has done much without me already. He has built a wall; he
has dug a trench deep and wide all round it, and he has planted it within
with stakes; but even so he stays not the murderous might of Hector. So
long as I fought the Achaeans Hector suffered not the battle range far
from the city walls; he would come to the Scaean gates and to the oak
tree, but no further. Once he stayed to meet me and hardly did he escape
my onset: now, however, since I am in no mood to fight him, I will
to-morrow offer sacrifice to Jove and to all the gods; I will draw my
ships into the water and then victual them duly; to-morrow morning, if you
care to look, you will see my ships on the Hellespont, and my men rowing
out to sea with might and main. If great Neptune vouchsafes me a fair
passage, in three days I shall be in Phthia. I have much there that I left
behind me when I came here to my sorrow, and I shall bring back still
further store of gold, of red copper, of fair women, and of iron, my share
of the spoils that we have taken; but one prize, he who gave has
insolently taken away. Tell him all as I now bid you, and tell him in
public that the Achaeans may hate him and beware of him should he think
that he can yet dupe others for his effrontery never fails him.</p>
<p>"As for me, hound that he is, he dares not look me in the face. I will
take no counsel with him, and will undertake nothing in common with him.
He has wronged me and deceived me enough, he shall not cozen me further;
let him go his own way, for Jove has robbed him of his reason. I loathe
his presents, and for himself care not one straw. He may offer me ten or
even twenty times what he has now done, nay—not though it be all
that he has in the world, both now or ever shall have; he may promise me
the wealth of Orchomenus or of Egyptian Thebes, which is the richest city
in the whole world, for it has a hundred gates through each of which two
hundred men may drive at once with their chariots and horses; he may offer
me gifts as the sands of the sea or the dust of the plain in multitude,
but even so he shall not move me till I have been revenged in full for the
bitter wrong he has done me. I will not marry his daughter; she may be
fair as Venus, and skilful as Minerva, but I will have none of her: let
another take her, who may be a good match for her and who rules a larger
kingdom. If the gods spare me to return home, Peleus will find me a wife;
there are Achaean women in Hellas and Phthia, daughters of kings that have
cities under them; of these I can take whom I will and marry her. Many a
time was I minded when at home in Phthia to woo and wed a woman who would
make me a suitable wife, and to enjoy the riches of my old father Peleus.
My life is more to me than all the wealth of Ilius while it was yet at
peace before the Achaeans went there, or than all the treasure that lies
on the stone floor of Apollo's temple beneath the cliffs of Pytho. Cattle
and sheep are to be had for harrying, and a man buy both tripods and
horses if he wants them, but when his life has once left him it can
neither be bought nor harried back again.</p>
<p>"My mother Thetis tells me that there are two ways in which I may meet my
end. If I stay here and fight, I shall not return alive but my name will
live for ever: whereas if I go home my name will die, but it will be long
ere death shall take me. To the rest of you, then, I say, 'Go home, for
you will not take Ilius.' Jove has held his hand over her to protect her,
and her people have taken heart. Go, therefore, as in duty bound, and tell
the princes of the Achaeans the message that I have sent them; tell them
to find some other plan for the saving of their ships and people, for so
long as my displeasure lasts the one that they have now hit upon may not
be. As for Phoenix, let him sleep here that he may sail with me in the
morning if he so will. But I will not take him by force."</p>
<p>They all held their peace, dismayed at the sternness with which he had
denied them, till presently the old knight Phoenix in his great fear for
the ships of the Achaeans, burst into tears and said, "Noble Achilles, if
you are now minded to return, and in the fierceness of your anger will do
nothing to save the ships from burning, how, my son, can I remain here
without you? Your father Peleus bade me go with you when he sent you as a
mere lad from Phthia to Agamemnon. You knew nothing neither of war nor of
the arts whereby men make their mark in council, and he sent me with you
to train you in all excellence of speech and action. Therefore, my son, I
will not stay here without you—no, not though heaven itself
vouchsafe to strip my years from off me, and make me young as I was when I
first left Hellas the land of fair women. I was then flying the anger of
father Amyntor, son of Ormenus, who was furious with me in the matter of
his concubine, of whom he was enamoured to the wronging of his wife my
mother. My mother, therefore, prayed me without ceasing to lie with the
woman myself, that so she hate my father, and in the course of time I
yielded. But my father soon came to know, and cursed me bitterly, calling
the dread Erinyes to witness. He prayed that no son of mine might ever sit
upon knees—and the gods, Jove of the world below and awful
Proserpine, fulfilled his curse. I took counsel to kill him, but some god
stayed my rashness and bade me think on men's evil tongues and how I
should be branded as the murderer of my father; nevertheless I could not
bear to stay in my father's house with him so bitter against me. My
cousins and clansmen came about me, and pressed me sorely to remain; many
a sheep and many an ox did they slaughter, and many a fat hog did they set
down to roast before the fire; many a jar, too, did they broach of my
father's wine. Nine whole nights did they set a guard over me taking it in
turns to watch, and they kept a fire always burning, both in the cloister
of the outer court and in the inner court at the doors of the room wherein
I lay; but when the darkness of the tenth night came, I broke through the
closed doors of my room, and climbed the wall of the outer court after
passing quickly and unperceived through the men on guard and the women
servants. I then fled through Hellas till I came to fertile Phthia, mother
of sheep, and to King Peleus, who made me welcome and treated me as a
father treats an only son who will be heir to all his wealth. He made me
rich and set me over much people, establishing me on the borders of Phthia
where I was chief ruler over the Dolopians.</p>
<p>"It was I, Achilles, who had the making of you; I loved you with all my
heart: for you would eat neither at home nor when you had gone out
elsewhere, till I had first set you upon my knees, cut up the dainty
morsel that you were to eat, and held the wine-cup to your lips. Many a
time have you slobbered your wine in baby helplessness over my shirt; I
had infinite trouble with you, but I knew that heaven had vouchsafed me no
offspring of my own, and I made a son of you, Achilles, that in my hour of
need you might protect me. Now, therefore, I say battle with your pride
and beat it; cherish not your anger for ever; the might and majesty of
heaven are more than ours, but even heaven may be appeased; and if a man
has sinned he prays the gods, and reconciles them to himself by his
piteous cries and by frankincense, with drink-offerings and the savour of
burnt sacrifice. For prayers are as daughters to great Jove; halt,
wrinkled, with eyes askance, they follow in the footsteps of sin, who,
being fierce and fleet of foot, leaves them far behind him, and ever
baneful to mankind outstrips them even to the ends of the world; but
nevertheless the prayers come hobbling and healing after. If a man has
pity upon these daughters of Jove when they draw near him, they will bless
him and hear him too when he is praying; but if he deny them and will not
listen to them, they go to Jove the son of Saturn and pray that he may
presently fall into sin—to his ruing bitterly hereafter. Therefore,
Achilles, give these daughters of Jove due reverence, and bow before them
as all good men will bow. Were not the son of Atreus offering you gifts
and promising others later—if he were still furious and implacable—I
am not he that would bid you throw off your anger and help the Achaeans,
no matter how great their need; but he is giving much now, and more
hereafter; he has sent his captains to urge his suit, and has chosen those
who of all the Argives are most acceptable to you; make not then their
words and their coming to be of none effect. Your anger has been righteous
so far. We have heard in song how heroes of old time quarrelled when they
were roused to fury, but still they could be won by gifts, and fair words
could soothe them.</p>
<p>"I have an old story in my mind—a very old one—but you are all
friends and I will tell it. The Curetes and the Aetolians were fighting
and killing one another round Calydon—the Aetolians defending the
city and the Curetes trying to destroy it. For Diana of the golden throne
was angry and did them hurt because Oeneus had not offered her his harvest
first-fruits. The other gods had all been feasted with hecatombs, but to
the daughter of great Jove alone he had made no sacrifice. He had
forgotten her, or somehow or other it had escaped him, and this was a
grievous sin. Thereon the archer goddess in her displeasure sent a
prodigious creature against him—a savage wild boar with great white
tusks that did much harm to his orchard lands, uprooting apple-trees in
full bloom and throwing them to the ground. But Meleager son of Oeneus got
huntsmen and hounds from many cities and killed it—for it was so
monstrous that not a few were needed, and many a man did it stretch upon
his funeral pyre. On this the goddess set the Curetes and the Aetolians
fighting furiously about the head and skin of the boar.</p>
<p>"So long as Meleager was in the field things went badly with the Curetes,
and for all their numbers they could not hold their ground under the city
walls; but in the course of time Meleager was angered as even a wise man
will sometimes be. He was incensed with his mother Althaea, and therefore
stayed at home with his wedded wife fair Cleopatra, who was daughter of
Marpessa daughter of Euenus, and of Ides the man then living. He it was
who took his bow and faced King Apollo himself for fair Marpessa's sake;
her father and mother then named her Alcyone, because her mother had
mourned with the plaintive strains of the halcyon-bird when Phoebus Apollo
had carried her off. Meleager, then, stayed at home with Cleopatra,
nursing the anger which he felt by reason of his mother's curses. His
mother, grieving for the death of her brother, prayed the gods, and beat
the earth with her hands, calling upon Hades and on awful Proserpine; she
went down upon her knees and her bosom was wet with tears as she prayed
that they would kill her son—and Erinys that walks in darkness and
knows no ruth heard her from Erebus.</p>
<p>"Then was heard the din of battle about the gates of Calydon, and the dull
thump of the battering against their walls. Thereon the elders of the
Aetolians besought Meleager; they sent the chiefest of their priests, and
begged him to come out and help them, promising him a great reward. They
bade him choose fifty plough-gates, the most fertile in the plain of
Calydon, the one-half vineyard and the other open plough-land. The old
warrior Oeneus implored him, standing at the threshold of his room and
beating the doors in supplication. His sisters and his mother herself
besought him sore, but he the more refused them; those of his comrades who
were nearest and dearest to him also prayed him, but they could not move
him till the foe was battering at the very doors of his chamber, and the
Curetes had scaled the walls and were setting fire to the city. Then at
last his sorrowing wife detailed the horrors that befall those whose city
is taken; she reminded him how the men are slain, and the city is given
over to the flames, while the women and children are carried into
captivity; when he heard all this, his heart was touched, and he donned
his armour to go forth. Thus of his own inward motion he saved the city of
the Aetolians; but they now gave him nothing of those rich rewards that
they had offered earlier, and though he saved the city he took nothing by
it. Be not then, my son, thus minded; let not heaven lure you into any
such course. When the ships are burning it will be a harder matter to save
them. Take the gifts, and go, for the Achaeans will then honour you as a
god; whereas if you fight without taking them, you may beat the battle
back, but you will not be held in like honour."</p>
<p>And Achilles answered, "Phoenix, old friend and father, I have no need of
such honour. I have honour from Jove himself, which will abide with me at
my ships while I have breath in my body, and my limbs are strong. I say
further—and lay my saying to your heart—vex me no more with
this weeping and lamentation, all in the cause of the son of Atreus. Love
him so well, and you may lose the love I bear you. You ought to help me
rather in troubling those that trouble me; be king as much as I am, and
share like honour with myself; the others shall take my answer; stay here
yourself and sleep comfortably in your bed; at daybreak we will consider
whether to remain or go."</p>
<p>On this he nodded quietly to Patroclus as a sign that he was to prepare a
bed for Phoenix, and that the others should take their leave. Ajax son of
Telamon then said, "Ulysses, noble son of Laertes, let us be gone, for I
see that our journey is vain. We must now take our answer, unwelcome
though it be, to the Danaans who are waiting to receive it. Achilles is
savage and remorseless; he is cruel, and cares nothing for the love his
comrades lavished upon him more than on all the others. He is implacable—and
yet if a man's brother or son has been slain he will accept a fine by way
of amends from him that killed him, and the wrong-doer having paid in full
remains in peace among his own people; but as for you, Achilles, the gods
have put a wicked unforgiving spirit in your heart, and this, all about
one single girl, whereas we now offer you the seven best we have, and much
else into the bargain. Be then of a more gracious mind, respect the
hospitality of your own roof. We are with you as messengers from the host
of the Danaans, and would fain he held nearest and dearest to yourself of
all the Achaeans."</p>
<p>"Ajax," replied Achilles, "noble son of Telamon, you have spoken much to
my liking, but my blood boils when I think it all over, and remember how
the son of Atreus treated me with contumely as though I were some vile
tramp, and that too in the presence of the Argives. Go, then, and deliver
your message; say that I will have no concern with fighting till Hector,
son of noble Priam, reaches the tents of the Myrmidons in his murderous
course, and flings fire upon their ships. For all his lust of battle, I
take it he will be held in check when he is at my own tent and ship."</p>
<p>On this they took every man his double cup, made their drink-offerings,
and went back to the ships, Ulysses leading the way. But Patroclus told
his men and the maid-servants to make ready a comfortable bed for Phoenix;
they therefore did so with sheepskins, a rug, and a sheet of fine linen.
The old man then laid himself down and waited till morning came. But
Achilles slept in an inner room, and beside him the daughter of Phorbas
lovely Diomede, whom he had carried off from Lesbos. Patroclus lay on the
other side of the room, and with him fair Iphis whom Achilles had given
him when he took Scyros the city of Enyeus.</p>
<p>When the envoys reached the tents of the son of Atreus, the Achaeans rose,
pledged them in cups of gold, and began to question them. King Agamemnon
was the first to do so. "Tell me, Ulysses," said he, "will he save the
ships from burning, or did he refuse, and is he still furious?"</p>
<p>Ulysses answered, "Most noble son of Atreus, king of men, Agamemnon,
Achilles will not be calmed, but is more fiercely angry than ever, and
spurns both you and your gifts. He bids you take counsel with the Achaeans
to save the ships and host as you best may; as for himself, he said that
at daybreak he should draw his ships into the water. He said further that
he should advise every one to sail home likewise, for that you will not
reach the goal of Ilius. 'Jove,' he said, 'has laid his hand over the city
to protect it, and the people have taken heart.' This is what he said, and
the others who were with me can tell you the same story—Ajax and the
two heralds, men, both of them, who may be trusted. The old man Phoenix
stayed where he was to sleep, for so Achilles would have it, that he might
go home with him in the morning if he so would; but he will not take him
by force."</p>
<p>They all held their peace, sitting for a long time silent and dejected, by
reason of the sternness with which Achilles had refused them, till
presently Diomed said, "Most noble son of Atreus, king of men, Agamemnon,
you ought not to have sued the son of Peleus nor offered him gifts. He is
proud enough as it is, and you have encouraged him in his pride still
further. Let him stay or go as he will. He will fight later when he is in
the humour, and heaven puts it in his mind to do so. Now, therefore, let
us all do as I say; we have eaten and drunk our fill, let us then take our
rest, for in rest there is both strength and stay. But when fair
rosy-fingered morn appears, forthwith bring out your host and your
horsemen in front of the ships, urging them on, and yourself fighting
among the foremost."</p>
<p>Thus he spoke, and the other chieftains approved his words. They then made
their drink-offerings and went every man to his own tent, where they laid
down to rest and enjoyed the boon of sleep.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/> <SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN></p>
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