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Book
V
Then Pallas Minerva put valour into the heart of
Diomed, son of Tydeus, that he might excel all the other Argives,
and cover himself with glory. She made a stream of fire flare from
his shield and helmet like the star that shines most brilliantly
in summer after its bath in the waters of Oceanus- even such a fire
did she kindle upon his head and shoulders as she bade him speed
into the thickest hurly-burly of the fight.
Now there was a certain rich and honourable man
among the Trojans, priest of Vulcan, and his name was Dares. He
had two sons, Phegeus and Idaeus, both of them skilled in all the
arts of war. These two came forward from the main body of Trojans,
and set upon Diomed, he being on foot, while they fought from their
chariot. When they were close up to one another, Phegeus took aim
first, but his spear went over Diomed's left shoulder without hitting
him. Diomed then threw, and his spear sped not in vain, for it hit
Phegeus on the breast near the nipple, and he fell from his chariot.
Idaeus did not dare to bestride his brother's body, but sprang from
the chariot and took to flight, or he would have shared his brother's
fate; whereon Vulcan saved him by wrapping him in a cloud of darkness,
that his old father might not be utterly overwhelmed with grief;
but the son of Tydeus drove off with the horses, and bade his followers
take them to the ships. The Trojans were scared when they saw the
two sons of Dares, one of them in fright and the other lying dead
by his chariot. Minerva, therefore, took Mars by the hand and said,
"Mars, Mars, bane of men, bloodstained stormer of cities, may
we not now leave the Trojans and Achaeans to fight it out, and see
to which of the two Jove will vouchsafe the victory? Let us go away,
and thus avoid his anger."
So saying, she drew Mars out of the battle, and
set him down upon the steep banks of the Scamander. Upon this the
Danaans drove the Trojans back, and each one of their chieftains
killed his man. First King Agamemnon flung mighty Odius, captain
of the Halizoni, from his chariot. The spear of Agamemnon caught
him on the broad of his back, just as he was turning in flight;
it struck him between the shoulders and went right through his chest,
and his armour rang rattling round him as he fell heavily to the
ground.
Then Idomeneus killed Phaesus, son of Borus the
Meonian, who had come from Varne. Mighty Idomeneus speared him on
the right shoulder as he was mounting his chariot, and the darkness
of death enshrouded him as he fell heavily from the car.
The squires of Idomeneus spoiled him of his armour,
while Menelaus, son of Atreus, killed Scamandrius the son of Strophius,
a mighty huntsman and keen lover of the chase. Diana herself had
taught him how to kill every kind of wild creature that is bred
in mountain forests, but neither she nor his famed skill in archery
could now save him, for the spear of Menelaus struck him in the
back as he was flying; it struck him between the shoulders and went
right through his chest, so that he fell headlong and his armour
rang rattling round him.
Meriones then killed Phereclus the son of Tecton,
who was the son of Hermon, a man whose hand was skilled in all manner
of cunning workmanship, for Pallas Minerva had dearly loved him.
He it was that made the ships for Alexandrus, which were the beginning
of all mischief, and brought evil alike both on the Trojans and
on Alexandrus himself; for he heeded not the decrees of heaven.
Meriones overtook him as he was flying, and struck him on the right
buttock. The point of the spear went through the bone into the bladder,
and death came upon him as he cried aloud and fell forward on his
knees.
Meges, moreover, slew Pedaeus, son of Antenor,
who, though he was a bastard, had been brought up by Theano as one
of her own children, for the love she bore her husband. The son
of Phyleus got close up to him and drove a spear into the nape of
his neck: it went under his tongue all among his teeth, so he bit
the cold bronze, and fell dead in the dust.
And Eurypylus, son of Euaemon, killed Hypsenor,
the son of noble Dolopion, who had been made priest of the river
Scamander, and was honoured among the people as though he were a
god. Eurypylus gave him chase as he was flying before him, smote
him with his sword upon the arm, and lopped his strong hand from
off it. The bloody hand fell to the ground, and the shades of death,
with fate that no man can withstand, came over his eyes.
Thus furiously did the battle rage between them.
As for the son of Tydeus, you could not say whether he was more
among the Achaeans or the Trojans. He rushed across the plain like
a winter torrent that has burst its barrier in full flood; no dykes,
no walls of fruitful vineyards can embank it when it is swollen
with rain from heaven, but in a moment it comes tearing onward,
and lays many a field waste that many a strong man hand has reclaimed-
even so were the dense phalanxes of the Trojans driven in rout by
the son of Tydeus, and many though they were, they dared not abide
his onslaught.
Now when the son of Lycaon saw him scouring the
plain and driving the Trojans pell-mell before him, he aimed an
arrow and hit the front part of his cuirass near the shoulder: the
arrow went right through the metal and pierced the flesh, so that
the cuirass was covered with blood. On this the son of Lycaon shouted
in triumph, "Knights Trojans, come on; the bravest of the Achaeans
is wounded, and he will not hold out much longer if King Apollo
was indeed with me when I sped from Lycia hither."
Thus did he vaunt; but his arrow had not killed
Diomed, who withdrew and made for the chariot and horses of Sthenelus,
the son of Capaneus. "Dear son of Capaneus," said he,
"come down from your chariot, and draw the arrow out of my
shoulder."
Sthenelus sprang from his chariot, and drew the
arrow from the wound, whereon the blood came spouting out through
the hole that had been made in his shirt. Then Diomed prayed, saying,
"Hear me, daughter of aegis-bearing Jove, unweariable, if ever
you loved my father well and stood by him in the thick of a fight,
do the like now by me; grant me to come within a spear's throw of
that man and kill him. He has been too quick for me and has wounded
me; and now he is boasting that I shall not see the light of the
sun much longer."
Thus he prayed, and Pallas Minerva heard him; she
made his limbs supple and quickened his hands and his feet. Then
she went up close to him and said, "Fear not, Diomed, to do
battle with the Trojans, for I have set in your heart the spirit
of your knightly father Tydeus. Moreover, I have withdrawn the veil
from your eyes, that you know gods and men apart. If, then, any
other god comes here and offers you battle, do not fight him; but
should Jove's daughter Venus come, strike her with your spear and
wound her."
When she had said this Minerva went away, and the
son of Tydeus again took his place among the foremost fighters,
three times more fierce even than he had been before. He was like
a lion that some mountain shepherd has wounded, but not killed,
as he is springing over the wall of a sheep-yard to attack the sheep.
The shepherd has roused the brute to fury but cannot defend his
flock, so he takes shelter under cover of the buildings, while the
sheep, panic-stricken on being deserted, are smothered in heaps
one on top of the other, and the angry lion leaps out over the sheep-yard
wall. Even thus did Diomed go furiously about among the Trojans.
He killed Astynous, and shepherd of his people,
the one with a thrust of his spear, which struck him above the nipple,
the other with a sword- cut on the collar-bone, that severed his
shoulder from his neck and back. He let both of them lie, and went
in pursuit of Abas and Polyidus, sons of the old reader of dreams
Eurydamas: they never came back for him to read them any more dreams,
for mighty Diomed made an end of them. He then gave chase to Xanthus
and Thoon, the two sons of Phaenops, both of them very dear to him,
for he was now worn out with age, and begat no more sons to inherit
his possessions. But Diomed took both their lives and left their
father sorrowing bitterly, for he nevermore saw them come home from
battle alive, and his kinsmen divided his wealth among themselves.
Then he came upon two sons of Priam, Echemmon and
Chromius, as they were both in one chariot. He sprang upon them
as a lion fastens on the neck of some cow or heifer when the herd
is feeding in a coppice. For all their vain struggles he flung them
both from their chariot and stripped the armour from their bodies.
Then he gave their horses to his comrades to take them back to the
ships.
When Aeneas saw him thus making havoc among the
ranks, he went through the fight amid the rain of spears to see
if he could find Pandarus. When he had found the brave son of Lycaon
he said, "Pandarus, where is now your bow, your winged arrows,
and your renown as an archer, in respect of which no man here can
rival you nor is there any in Lycia that can beat you? Lift then
your hands to Jove and send an arrow at this fellow who is going
so masterfully about, and has done such deadly work among the Trojans.
He has killed many a brave man- unless indeed he is some god who
is angry with the Trojans about their sacrifices, and and has set
his hand against them in his displeasure."
And the son of Lycaon answered, "Aeneas, I
take him for none other than the son of Tydeus. I know him by his
shield, the visor of his helmet, and by his horses. It is possible
that he may be a god, but if he is the man I say he is, he is not
making all this havoc without heaven's help, but has some god by
his side who is shrouded in a cloud of darkness, and who turned
my arrow aside when it had hit him. I have taken aim at him already
and hit him on the right shoulder; my arrow went through the breastpiece
of his cuirass; and I made sure I should send him hurrying to the
world below, but it seems that I have not killed him. There must
be a god who is angry with me. Moreover I have neither horse nor
chariot. In my father's stables there are eleven excellent chariots,
fresh from the builder, quite new, with cloths spread over them;
and by each of them there stand a pair of horses, champing barley
and rye; my old father Lycaon urged me again and again when I was
at home and on the point of starting, to take chariots and horses
with me that I might lead the Trojans in battle, but I would not
listen to him; it would have been much better if I had done so,
but I was thinking about the horses, which had been used to eat
their fill, and I was afraid that in such a great gathering of men
they might be ill-fed, so I left them at home and came on foot to
Ilius armed only with my bow and arrows. These it seems, are of
no use, for I have already hit two chieftains, the sons of Atreus
and of Tydeus, and though I drew blood surely enough, I have only
made them still more furious. I did ill to take my bow down from
its peg on the day I led my band of Trojans to Ilius in Hector's
service, and if ever I get home again to set eyes on my native place,
my wife, and the greatness of my house, may some one cut my head
off then and there if I do not break the bow and set it on a hot
fire- such pranks as it plays me."
Aeneas answered, "Say no more. Things will
not mend till we two go against this man with chariot and horses
and bring him to a trial of arms. Mount my chariot, and note how
cleverly the horses of Tros can speed hither and thither over the
plain in pursuit or flight. If Jove again vouchsafes glory to the
son of Tydeus they will carry us safely back to the city. Take hold,
then, of the whip and reins while I stand upon the car to fight,
or else do you wait this man's onset while I look after the horses."
"Aeneas." replied the son of Lycaon,
"take the reins and drive; if we have to fly before the son
of Tydeus the horses will go better for their own driver. If they
miss the sound of your voice when they expect it they may be frightened,
and refuse to take us out of the fight. The son of Tydeus will then
kill both of us and take the horses. Therefore drive them yourself
and I will be ready for him with my spear."
They then mounted the chariot and drove full-speed
towards the son of Tydeus. Sthenelus, son of Capaneus, saw them
coming and said to Diomed, "Diomed, son of Tydeus, man after
my own heart, I see two heroes speeding towards you, both of them
men of might the one a skilful archer, Pandarus son of Lycaon, the
other, Aeneas, whose sire is Anchises, while his mother is Venus.
Mount the chariot and let us retreat. Do not, I pray you, press
so furiously forward, or you may get killed."
Diomed looked angrily at him and answered: "Talk
not of flight, for I shall not listen to you: I am of a race that
knows neither flight nor fear, and my limbs are as yet unwearied.
I am in no mind to mount, but will go against them even as I am;
Pallas Minerva bids me be afraid of no man, and even though one
of them escape, their steeds shall not take both back again. I say
further, and lay my saying to your heart- if Minerva sees fit to
vouchsafe me the glory of killing both, stay your horses here and
make the reins fast to the rim of the chariot; then be sure you
spring Aeneas' horses and drive them from the Trojan to the Achaean
ranks. They are of the stock that great Jove gave to Tros in payment
for his son Ganymede, and are the finest that live and move under
the sun. King Anchises stole the blood by putting his mares to them
without Laomedon's knowledge, and they bore him six foals. Four
are still in his stables, but he gave the other two to Aeneas. We
shall win great glory if we can take them."
Thus did they converse, but the other two had now
driven close up to them, and the son of Lycaon spoke first. "Great
and mighty son," said he, "of noble Tydeus, my arrow failed
to lay you low, so I will now try with my spear."
He poised his spear as he spoke and hurled it from
him. It struck the shield of the son of Tydeus; the bronze point
pierced it and passed on till it reached the breastplate. Thereon
the son of Lycaon shouted out and said, "You are hit clean
through the belly; you will not stand out for long, and the glory
of the fight is mine."
But Diomed all undismayed made answer, "You
have missed, not hit, and before you two see the end of this matter
one or other of you shall glut tough-shielded Mars with his blood."
With this he hurled his spear, and Minerva guided
it on to Pandarus's nose near the eye. It went crashing in among
his white teeth; the bronze point cut through the root of his to
tongue, coming out under his chin, and his glistening armour rang
rattling round him as he fell heavily to the ground. The horses
started aside for fear, and he was reft of life and strength.
Aeneas sprang from his chariot armed with shield
and spear, fearing lest the Achaeans should carry off the body.
He bestrode it as a lion in the pride of strength, with shield and
on spear before him and a cry of battle on his lips resolute to
kill the first that should dare face him. But the son of Tydeus
caught up a mighty stone, so huge and great that as men now are
it would take two to lift it; nevertheless he bore it aloft with
ease unaided, and with this he struck Aeneas on the groin where
the hip turns in the joint that is called the "cup-bone."
The stone crushed this joint, and broke both the sinews, while its
jagged edges tore away all the flesh. The hero fell on his knees,
and propped himself with his hand resting on the ground till the
darkness of night fell upon his eyes. And now Aeneas, king of men,
would have perished then and there, had not his mother, Jove's daughter
Venus, who had conceived him by Anchises when he was herding cattle,
been quick to mark, and thrown her two white arms about the body
of her dear son. She protected him by covering him with a fold of
her own fair garment, lest some Danaan should drive a spear into
his breast and kill him.
Thus, then, did she bear her dear son out of the
fight. But the son of Capaneus was not unmindful of the orders that
Diomed had given him. He made his own horses fast, away from the
hurly-burly, by binding the reins to the rim of the chariot. Then
he sprang upon Aeneas's horses and drove them from the Trojan to
the Achaean ranks. When he had so done he gave them over to his
chosen comrade Deipylus, whom he valued above all others as the
one who was most like-minded with himself, to take them on to the
ships. He then remounted his own chariot, seized the reins, and
drove with all speed in search of the son of Tydeus.
Now the son of Tydeus was in pursuit of the Cyprian
goddess, spear in hand, for he knew her to be feeble and not one
of those goddesses that can lord it among men in battle like Minerva
or Enyo the waster of cities, and when at last after a long chase
he caught her up, he flew at her and thrust his spear into the flesh
of her delicate hand. The point tore through the ambrosial robe
which the Graces had woven for her, and pierced the skin between
her wrist and the palm of her hand, so that the immortal blood,
or ichor, that flows in the veins of the blessed gods, came pouring
from the wound; for the gods do not eat bread nor drink wine, hence
they have no blood such as ours, and are immortal. Venus screamed
aloud, and let her son fall, but Phoebus Apollo caught him in his
arms, and hid him in a cloud of darkness, lest some Danaan should
drive a spear into his breast and kill him; and Diomed shouted out
as he left her, "Daughter of Jove, leave war and battle alone,
can you not be contented with beguiling silly women? If you meddle
with fighting you will get what will make you shudder at the very
name of war."
The goddess went dazed and discomfited away, and
Iris, fleet as the wind, drew her from the throng, in pain and with
her fair skin all besmirched. She found fierce Mars waiting on the
left of the battle, with his spear and his two fleet steeds resting
on a cloud; whereon she fell on her knees before her brother and
implored him to let her have his horses. "Dear brother,"
she cried, "save me, and give me your horses to take me to
Olympus where the gods dwell. I am badly wounded by a mortal, the
son of Tydeus, who would now fight even with father Jove."
Thus she spoke, and Mars gave her his gold-bedizened
steeds. She mounted the chariot sick and sorry at heart, while Iris
sat beside her and took the reins in her hand. She lashed her horses
on and they flew forward nothing loth, till in a trice they were
at high Olympus, where the gods have their dwelling. There she stayed
them, unloosed them from the chariot, and gave them their ambrosial
forage; but Venus flung herself on to the lap of her mother Dione,
who threw her arms about her and caressed her, saying, "Which
of the heavenly beings has been treating you in this way, as though
you had been doing something wrong in the face of day?"
And laughter-loving Venus answered, "Proud
Diomed, the son of Tydeus, wounded me because I was bearing my dear
son Aeneas, whom I love best of all mankind, out of the fight. The
war is no longer one between Trojans and Achaeans, for the Danaans
have now taken to fighting with the immortals."
"Bear it, my child," replied Dione, "and
make the best of it. We dwellers in Olympus have to put up with
much at the hands of men, and we lay much suffering on one another.
Mars had to suffer when Otus and Ephialtes, children of Aloeus,
bound him in cruel bonds, so that he lay thirteen months imprisoned
in a vessel of bronze. Mars would have then perished had not fair
Eeriboea, stepmother to the sons of Aloeus, told Mercury, who stole
him away when he was already well-nigh worn out by the severity
of his bondage. Juno, again, suffered when the mighty son of Amphitryon
wounded her on the right breast with a three-barbed arrow, and nothing
could assuage her pain. So, also, did huge Hades, when this same
man, the son of aegis-bearing Jove, hit him with an arrow even at
the gates of hell, and hurt him badly. Thereon Hades went to the
house of Jove on great Olympus, angry and full of pain; and the
arrow in his brawny shoulder caused him great anguish till Paeeon
healed him by spreading soothing herbs on the wound, for Hades was
not of mortal mould. Daring, head-strong, evildoer who recked not
of his sin in shooting the gods that dwell in Olympus. And now Minerva
has egged this son of Tydeus on against yourself, fool that he is
for not reflecting that no man who fights with gods will live long
or hear his children prattling about his knees when he returns from
battle. Let, then, the son of Tydeus see that he does not have to
fight with one who is stronger than you are. Then shall his brave
wife Aegialeia, daughter of Adrestus, rouse her whole house from
sleep, wailing for the loss of her wedded lord, Diomed the bravest
of the Achaeans."
So saying, she wiped the ichor from the wrist of
her daughter with both hands, whereon the pain left her, and her
hand was healed. But Minerva and Juno, who were looking on, began
to taunt Jove with their mocking talk, and Minerva was first to
speak. "Father Jove," said she, "do not be angry
with me, but I think the Cyprian must have been persuading some
one of the Achaean women to go with the Trojans of whom she is so
very fond, and while caressing one or other of them she must have
torn her delicate hand with the gold pin of the woman's brooch."
The sire of gods and men smiled, and called golden
Venus to his side. "My child," said he, "it has not
been given you to be a warrior. Attend, henceforth, to your own
delightful matrimonial duties, and leave all this fighting to Mars
and to Minerva."
Thus did they converse. But Diomed sprang upon
Aeneas, though he knew him to be in the very arms of Apollo. Not
one whit did he fear the mighty god, so set was he on killing Aeneas
and stripping him of his armour. Thrice did he spring forward with
might and main to slay him, and thrice did Apollo beat back his
gleaming shield. When he was coming on for the fourth time, as though
he were a god, Apollo shouted to him with an awful voice and said,
"Take heed, son of Tydeus, and draw off; think not to match
yourself against gods, for men that walk the earth cannot hold their
own with the immortals."
The son of Tydeus then gave way for a little space,
to avoid the anger of the god, while Apollo took Aeneas out of the
crowd and set him in sacred Pergamus, where his temple stood. There,
within the mighty sanctuary, Latona and Diana healed him and made
him glorious to behold, while Apollo of the silver bow fashioned
a wraith in the likeness of Aeneas, and armed as he was. Round this
the Trojans and Achaeans hacked at the bucklers about one another's
breasts, hewing each other's round shields and light hide-covered
targets. Then Phoebus Apollo said to Mars, "Mars, Mars, bane
of men, blood-stained stormer of cities, can you not go to this
man, the son of Tydeus, who would now fight even with father Jove,
and draw him out of the battle? He first went up to the Cyprian
and wounded her in the hand near her wrist, and afterwards sprang
upon me too, as though he were a god."
He then took his seat on the top of Pergamus, while
murderous Mars went about among the ranks of the Trojans, cheering
them on, in the likeness of fleet Acamas chief of the Thracians.
"Sons of Priam," said he, "how long will you let
your people be thus slaughtered by the Achaeans? Would you wait
till they are at the walls of Troy? Aeneas the son of Anchises has
fallen, he whom we held in as high honour as Hector himself. Help
me, then, to rescue our brave comrade from the stress of the fight."
With these words he put heart and soul into them
all. Then Sarpedon rebuked Hector very sternly. "Hector,"
said he, "where is your prowess now? You used to say that though
you had neither people nor allies you could hold the town alone
with your brothers and brothers-in-law. I see not one of them here;
they cower as hounds before a lion; it is we, your allies, who bear
the brunt of the battle. I have come from afar, even from Lycia
and the banks of the river Xanthus, where I have left my wife, my
infant son, and much wealth to tempt whoever is needy; nevertheless,
I head my Lycian soldiers and stand my ground against any who would
fight me though I have nothing here for the Achaeans to plunder,
while you look on, without even bidding your men stand firm in defence
of their wives. See that you fall not into the hands of your foes
as men caught in the meshes of a net, and they sack your fair city
forthwith. Keep this before your mind night and day, and beseech
the captains of your allies to hold on without flinching, and thus
put away their reproaches from you."
So spoke Sarpedon, and Hector smarted under his
words. He sprang from his chariot clad in his suit of armour, and
went about among the host brandishing his two spears, exhorting
the men to fight and raising the terrible cry of battle. Then they
rallied and again faced the Achaeans, but the Argives stood compact
and firm, and were not driven back. As the breezes sport with the
chaff upon some goodly threshing-floor, when men are winnowing-
while yellow Ceres blows with the wind to sift the chaff from the
grain, and the chaff- heaps grow whiter and whiter- even so did
the Achaeans whiten in the dust which the horses' hoofs raised to
the firmament of heaven, as their drivers turned them back to battle,
and they bore down with might upon the foe. Fierce Mars, to help
the Trojans, covered them in a veil of darkness, and went about
everywhere among them, inasmuch as Phoebus Apollo had told him that
when he saw Pallas, Minerva leave the fray he was to put courage
into the hearts of the Trojans- for it was she who was helping the
Danaans. Then Apollo sent Aeneas forth from his rich sanctuary,
and filled his heart with valour, whereon he took his place among
his comrades, who were overjoyed at seeing him alive, sound, and
of a good courage; but they could not ask him how it had all happened,
for they were too busy with the turmoil raised by Mars and by Strife,
who raged insatiably in their midst.
The two Ajaxes, Ulysses and Diomed, cheered the
Danaans on, fearless of the fury and onset of the Trojans. They
stood as still as clouds which the son of Saturn has spread upon
the mountain tops when there is no air and fierce Boreas sleeps
with the other boisterous winds whose shrill blasts scatter the
clouds in all directions- even so did the Danaans stand firm and
unflinching against the Trojans. The son of Atreus went about among
them and exhorted them. "My friends," said he, "quit
yourselves like brave men, and shun dishonour in one another's eyes
amid the stress of battle. They that shun dishonour more often live
than get killed, but they that fly save neither life nor name."
As he spoke he hurled his spear and hit one of
those who were in the front rank, the comrade of Aeneas, Deicoon
son of Pergasus, whom the Trojans held in no less honour than the
sons of Priam, for he was ever quick to place himself among the
foremost. The spear of King Agamemnon struck his shield and went
right through it, for the shield stayed it not. It drove through
his belt into the lower part of his belly, and his armour rang rattling
round him as he fell heavily to the ground.
Then Aeneas killed two champions of the Danaans,
Crethon and Orsilochus. Their father was a rich man who lived in
the strong city of Phere and was descended from the river Alpheus,
whose broad stream flows through the land of the Pylians. The river
begat Orsilochus, who ruled over much people and was father to Diocles,
who in his turn begat twin sons, Crethon and Orsilochus, well skilled
in all the arts of war. These, when they grew up, went to Ilius
with the Argive fleet in the cause of Menelaus and Agamemnon sons
of Atreus, and there they both of them fell. As two lions whom their
dam has reared in the depths of some mountain forest to plunder
homesteads and carry off sheep and cattle till they get killed by
the hand of man, so were these two vanquished by Aeneas, and fell
like high pine-trees to the ground.
Brave Menelaus pitied them in their fall, and made
his way to the front, clad in gleaming bronze and brandishing his
spear, for Mars egged him on to do so with intent that he should
be killed by Aeneas; but Antilochus the son of Nestor saw him and
sprang forward, fearing that the king might come to harm and thus
bring all their labour to nothing; when, therefore Aeneas and Menelaus
were setting their hands and spears against one another eager to
do battle, Antilochus placed himself by the side of Menelaus. Aeneas,
bold though he was, drew back on seeing the two heroes side by side
in front of him, so they drew the bodies of Crethon and Orsilochus
to the ranks of the Achaeans and committed the two poor fellows
into the hands of their comrades. They then turned back and fought
in the front ranks.
They killed Pylaemenes peer of Mars, leader of
the Paphlagonian warriors. Menelaus struck him on the collar-bone
as he was standing on his chariot, while Antilochus hit his charioteer
and squire Mydon, the son of Atymnius, who was turning his horses
in flight. He hit him with a stone upon the elbow, and the reins,
enriched with white ivory, fell from his hands into the dust. Antilochus
rushed towards him and struck him on the temples with his sword,
whereon he fell head first from the chariot to the ground. There
he stood for a while with his head and shoulders buried deep in
the dust- for he had fallen on sandy soil till his horses kicked
him and laid him flat on the ground, as Antilochus lashed them and
drove them off to the host of the Achaeans.
But Hector marked them from across the ranks, and
with a loud cry rushed towards them, followed by the strong battalions
of the Trojans. Mars and dread Enyo led them on, she fraught with
ruthless turmoil of battle, while Mars wielded a monstrous spear,
and went about, now in front of Hector and now behind him.
Diomed shook with passion as he saw them. As a
man crossing a wide plain is dismayed to find himself on the brink
of some great river rolling swiftly to the sea- he sees its boiling
waters and starts back in fear- even so did the son of Tydeus give
ground. Then he said to his men, "My friends, how can we wonder
that Hector wields the spear so well? Some god is ever by his side
to protect him, and now Mars is with him in the likeness of mortal
man. Keep your faces therefore towards the Trojans, but give ground
backwards, for we dare not fight with gods."
As he spoke the Trojans drew close up, and Hector
killed two men, both in one chariot, Menesthes and Anchialus, heroes
well versed in war. Ajax son of Telamon pitied them in their fall;
he came close up and hurled his spear, hitting Amphius the son of
Selagus, a man of great wealth who lived in Paesus and owned much
corn-growing land, but his lot had led him to come to the aid of
Priam and his sons. Ajax struck him in the belt; the spear pierced
the lower part of his belly, and he fell heavily to the ground.
Then Ajax ran towards him to strip him of his armour, but the Trojans
rained spears upon him, many of which fell upon his shield. He planted
his heel upon the body and drew out his spear, but the darts pressed
so heavily upon him that he could not strip the goodly armour from
his shoulders. The Trojan chieftains, moreover, many and valiant,
came about him with their spears, so that he dared not stay; great,
brave and valiant though he was, they drove him from them and he
was beaten back.
Thus, then, did the battle rage between them. Presently
the strong hand of fate impelled Tlepolemus, the son of Hercules,
a man both brave and of great stature, to fight Sarpedon; so the
two, son and grandson of great Jove, drew near to one another, and
Tlepolemus spoke first. "Sarpedon," said he, "councillor
of the Lycians, why should you come skulking here you who are a
man of peace? They lie who call you son of aegis-bearing Jove, for
you are little like those who were of old his children. Far other
was Hercules, my own brave and lion-hearted father, who came here
for the horses of Laomedon, and though he had six ships only, and
few men to follow him, sacked the city of Ilius and made a wilderness
of her highways. You are a coward, and your people are falling from
you. For all your strength, and all your coming from Lycia, you
will be no help to the Trojans but will pass the gates of Hades
vanquished by my hand."
And Sarpedon, captain of the Lycians, answered,
"Tlepolemus, your father overthrew Ilius by reason of Laomedon's
folly in refusing payment to one who had served him well. He would
not give your father the horses which he had come so far to fetch.
As for yourself, you shall meet death by my spear. You shall yield
glory to myself, and your soul to Hades of the noble steeds."
Thus spoke Sarpedon, and Tlepolemus upraised his
spear. They threw at the same moment, and Sarpedon struck his foe
in the middle of his throat; the spear went right through, and the
darkness of death fell upon his eyes. Tlepolemus's spear struck
Sarpedon on the left thigh with such force that it tore through
the flesh and grazed the bone, but his father as yet warded off
destruction from him.
His comrades bore Sarpedon out of the fight, in
great pain by the weight of the spear that was dragging from his
wound. They were in such haste and stress as they bore him that
no one thought of drawing the spear from his thigh so as to let
him walk uprightly. Meanwhile the Achaeans carried off the body
of Tlepolemus, whereon Ulysses was moved to pity, and panted for
the fray as he beheld them. He doubted whether to pursue the son
of Jove, or to make slaughter of the Lycian rank and file; it was
not decreed, however, that he should slay the son of Jove; Minerva,
therefore, turned him against the main body of the Lycians. He killed
Coeranus, Alastor, Chromius, Alcandrus, Halius, Noemon, and Prytanis,
and would have slain yet more, had not great Hector marked him,
and sped to the front of the fight clad in his suit of mail, filling
the Danaans with terror. Sarpedon was glad when he saw him coming,
and besought him, saying, "Son of Priam, let me not he here
to fall into the hands of the Danaans. Help me, and since I may
not return home to gladden the hearts of my wife and of my infant
son, let me die within the walls of your city."
Hector made him no answer, but rushed onward to
fall at once upon the Achaeans and. kill many among them. His comrades
then bore Sarpedon away and laid him beneath Jove's spreading oak
tree. Pelagon, his friend and comrade drew the spear out of his
thigh, but Sarpedon fainted and a mist came over his eyes. Presently
he came to himself again, for the breath of the north wind as it
played upon him gave him new life, and brought him out of the deep
swoon into which he had fallen.
Meanwhile the Argives were neither driven towards
their ships by Mars and Hector, nor yet did they attack them; when
they knew that Mars was with the Trojans they retreated, but kept
their faces still turned towards the foe. Who, then, was first and
who last to be slain by Mars and Hector? They were valiant Teuthras,
and Orestes the renowned charioteer, Trechus the Aetolian warrior,
Oenomaus, Helenus the son of Oenops, and Oresbius of the gleaming
girdle, who was possessed of great wealth, and dwelt by the Cephisian
lake with the other Boeotians who lived near him, owners of a fertile
country.
Now when the goddess Juno saw the Argives thus
falling, she said to Minerva, "Alas, daughter of aegis-bearing
Jove, unweariable, the promise we made Menelaus that he should not
return till he had sacked the city of Ilius will be of none effect
if we let Mars rage thus furiously. Let us go into the fray at once."
Minerva did not gainsay her. Thereon the august
goddess, daughter of great Saturn, began to harness her gold-bedizened
steeds. Hebe with all speed fitted on the eight-spoked wheels of
bronze that were on either side of the iron axle-tree. The felloes
of the wheels were of gold, imperishable, and over these there was
a tire of bronze, wondrous to behold. The naves of the wheels were
silver, turning round the axle upon either side. The car itself
was made with plaited bands of gold and silver, and it had a double
top-rail running all round it. From the body of the car there went
a pole of silver, on to the end of which she bound the golden yoke,
with the bands of gold that were to go under the necks of the horses
Then Juno put her steeds under the yoke, eager for battle and the
war-cry.
Meanwhile Minerva flung her richly embroidered
vesture, made with her own hands, on to her father's threshold,
and donned the shirt of Jove, arming herself for battle. She threw
her tasselled aegis about. her shoulders, wreathed round with Rout
as with a fringe, and on it were Strife, and Strength, and Panic
whose blood runs cold; moreover there was the head of the dread
monster Gorgon,, grim and awful to behold, portent of aegis-bearing
Jove. On her head she set her helmet of gold, with four plumes,
and coming to a peak both in front and behind- decked with the emblems
of a hundred cities; then she stepped into her flaming chariot and
grasped the spear, so stout and sturdy and strong, with which she
quells the ranks of heroes who have displeased her. Juno lashed
the horses on, and the gates of heaven bellowed as they flew open
of their own accord -gates over which the flours preside, in whose
hands are Heaven and Olympus, either to open the dense cloud that
hides them, or to close it. Through these the goddesses drove their
obedient steeds, and found the son of Saturn sitting all alone on
the topmost ridges of Olympus. There Juno stayed her horses, and
spoke to Jove the son of Saturn, lord of all. "Father Jove,"
said she, "are you not angry with Mars for these high doings?
how great and goodly a host of the Achaeans he has destroyed to
my great grief, and without either right or reason, while the Cyprian
and Apollo are enjoying it all at their ease and setting this unrighteous
madman on to do further mischief. I hope, Father Jove, that you
will not be angry if I hit Mars hard, and chase him out of the battle."
And Jove answered, "Set Minerva on to him,
for she punishes him more often than any one else does."
Juno did as he had said. She lashed her horses,
and they flew forward nothing loth midway betwixt earth and sky.
As far as a man can see when he looks out upon the sea from some
high beacon, so far can the loud-neighing horses of the gods spring
at a single bound. When they reached Troy and the place where its
two flowing streams Simois and Scamander meet, there Juno stayed
them and took them from the chariot. She hid them in a thick cloud,
and Simois made ambrosia spring up for them to eat; the two goddesses
then went on, flying like turtledoves in their eagerness to help
the Argives. When they came to the part where the bravest and most
in number were gathered about mighty Diomed, fighting like lions
or wild boars of great strength and endurance, there Juno stood
still and raised a shout like that of brazen-voiced Stentor, whose
cry was as loud as that of fifty men together. "Argives,"
she cried; "shame on cowardly creatures, brave in semblance
only; as long as Achilles was fighting, fi his spear was so deadly
that the Trojans dared not show themselves outside the Dardanian
gates, but now they sally far from the city and fight even at your
ships."
With these words she put heart and soul into them
all, while Minerva sprang to the side of the son of Tydeus, whom
she found near his chariot and horses, cooling the wound that Pandarus
had given him. For the sweat caused by the hand that bore the weight
of his shield irritated the hurt: his arm was weary with pain, and
he was lifting up the strap to wipe away the blood. The goddess
laid her hand on the yoke of his horses and said, "The son
of Tydeus is not such another as his father. Tydeus was a little
man, but he could fight, and rushed madly into the fray even when
I told him not to do so. When he went all unattended as envoy to
the city of Thebes among the Cadmeans, I bade him feast in their
houses and be at peace; but with that high spirit which was ever
present with him, he challenged the youth of the Cadmeans, and at
once beat them in all that he attempted, so mightily did I help
him. I stand by you too to protect you, and I bid you be instant
in fighting the Trojans; but either you are tired out, or you are
afraid and out of heart, and in that case I say that you are no
true son of Tydeus the son of Oeneus."
Diomed answered, "I know you, goddess, daughter
of aegis-bearing Jove, and will hide nothing from you. I am not
afraid nor out of heart, nor is there any slackness in me. I am
only following your own instructions; you told me not to fight any
of the blessed gods; but if Jove's daughter Venus came into battle
I was to wound her with my spear. Therefore I am retreating, and
bidding the other Argives gather in this place, for I know that
Mars is now lording it in the field."
"Diomed, son of Tydeus," replied Minerva,
"man after my own heart, fear neither Mars nor any other of
the immortals, for I will befriend you. Nay, drive straight at Mars,
and smite him in close combat; fear not this raging madman, villain
incarnate, first on one side and then on the other. But now he was
holding talk with Juno and myself, saying he would help the Argives
and attack the Trojans; nevertheless he is with the Trojans, and
has forgotten the Argives."
With this she caught hold of Sthenelus and lifted
him off the chariot on to the ground. In a second he was on the
ground, whereupon the goddess mounted the car and placed herself
by the side of Diomed. The oaken axle groaned aloud under the burden
of the awful goddess and the hero; Pallas Minerva took the whip
and reins, and drove straight at Mars. He was in the act of stripping
huge Periphas, son of Ochesius and bravest of the Aetolians. Bloody
Mars was stripping him of his armour, and Minerva donned the helmet
of Hades, that he might not see her; when, therefore, he saw Diomed,
he made straight for him and let Periphas lie where he had fallen.
As soon as they were at close quarters he let fly with his bronze
spear over the reins and yoke, thinking to take Diomed's life, but
Minerva caught the spear in her hand and made it fly harmlessly
over the chariot. Diomed then threw, and Pallas Minerva drove the
spear into the pit of Mars's stomach where his under-girdle went
round him. There Diomed wounded him, tearing his fair flesh and
then drawing his spear out again. Mars roared as loudly as nine
or ten thousand men in the thick of a fight, and the Achaeans and
Trojans were struck with panic, so terrible was the cry he raised.
As a dark cloud in the sky when it comes on to
blow after heat, even so did Diomed son of Tydeus see Mars ascend
into the broad heavens. With all speed he reached high Olympus,
home of the gods, and in great pain sat down beside Jove the son
of Saturn. He showed Jove the immortal blood that was flowing from
his wound, and spoke piteously, saying, "Father Jove, are you
not angered by such doings? We gods are continually suffering in
the most cruel manner at one another's hands while helping mortals;
and we all owe you a grudge for having begotten that mad termagant
of a daughter, who is always committing outrage of some kind. We
other gods must all do as you bid us, but her you neither scold
nor punish; you encourage her because the pestilent creature is
your daughter. See how she has been inciting proud Diomed to vent
his rage on the immortal gods. First he went up to the Cyprian and
wounded her in the hand near her wrist, and then he sprang upon
me too as though he were a god. Had I not run for it I must either
have lain there for long enough in torments among the ghastly corpes,
or have been eaten alive with spears till I had no more strength
left in me."
Jove looked angrily at him and said, "Do not
come whining here, Sir Facing-bothways. I hate you worst of all
the gods in Olympus, for you are ever fighting and making mischief.
You have the intolerable and stubborn spirit of your mother Juno:
it is all I can do to manage her, and it is her doing that you are
now in this plight: still, I cannot let you remain longer in such
great pain; you are my own off-spring, and it was by me that your
mother conceived you; if, however, you had been the son of any other
god, you are so destructive that by this time you should have been
lying lower than the Titans."
He then bade Paeeon heal him, whereon Paeeon spread
pain-killing herbs upon his wound and cured him, for he was not
of mortal mould. As the juice of the fig-tree curdles milk, and
thickens it in a moment though it is liquid, even so instantly did
Paeeon cure fierce Mars. Then Hebe washed him, and clothed him in
goodly raiment, and he took his seat by his father Jove all glorious
to behold.
But Juno of Argos and Minerva of Alalcomene, now
that they had put a stop to the murderous doings of Mars, went back
again to the house of Jove.
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