Page 24 of The Iliad


  Like the generations of leaves, the lives of mortal men.

  Now the wind scatters the old leaves across the earth,

  now the living timber bursts with the new buds

  and spring comes round again. And so with men:

  as one generation comes to life, another dies away.

  But about my birth, if you'd like to learn it well,

  first to last--though many people know it--

  here's my story . . .

  There is a city, Corinth,

  deep in a bend of Argos, good stallion-country

  where Sisyphus used to live, the wiliest man alive.

  Sisyphus, Aeolus' son, who had a son called Glaucus,

  and in his day Glaucus sired brave Bellerophon,

  a man without a fault. The gods gave him beauty

  and the fine, gallant traits that go with men.

  But Proetus plotted against him. Far stronger,

  the king in his anger drove him out of Argos,

  the kingdom Zeus had brought beneath his scepter.

  Proetus' wife, you see, was mad for Bellerophon,

  the lovely Antea lusted to couple with him,

  all in secret. Futile--she could never seduce

  the man's strong will, his seasoned, firm resolve.

  So straight to the king she went, blurting out her lies:

  'I wish you'd die, Proetus, if you don't kill Bellerophon!

  Bellerophon's bent on dragging me down with him in lust

  though I fight him all the way!'

  All of it false

  but the king seethed when he heard a tale like that.

  He balked at killing the man--he'd some respect at least--

  but he quickly sent him off to Lycia, gave him tokens,

  murderous signs, scratched in a folded tablet,

  and many of them too, enough to kill a man.

  He told him to show them to Antea's father:

  that would mean his death.

  So off he went to Lycia,

  safe in the escort of the gods, and once he reached

  the broad highlands cut by the rushing Xanthus,

  the king of Lycia gave him a royal welcome.

  Nine days he feasted him, nine oxen slaughtered.

  When the tenth Dawn shone with her rose-red fingers,

  he began to question him, asked to see his credentials,

  whatever he brought him from his in-law, Proetus.

  But then, once he received that fatal message

  sent from his own daughter's husband, first

  he ordered Bellerophon to kill the Chimaera--

  grim monster sprung of the gods, nothing human,

  all lion in front, all snake behind, all goat between,

  terrible, blasting lethal fire at every breath!

  But he laid her low, obeying signs from the gods.

  Next he fought the Solymi, tribesmen bent on glory,

  roughest battle of men he ever entered, so he claimed.

  Then for a third test he brought the Amazons down,

  a match for men in war. But as he turned back,

  his host spun out the tightest trap of all:

  picking the best men from Lycia far and wide

  he set an ambush--that never came home again!

  Fearless Bellerophon killed them all.

  Then, yes,

  when the king could see the man's power at last,

  a true son of the gods, he pressed him hard to stay,

  he offered his own daughter's hand in marriage,

  he gave him half his royal honors as the king.

  And the Lycians carved him out a grand estate,

  the choicest land in the realm, rich in vineyards

  and good tilled fields for him to lord it over.

  And his wife bore good Bellerophon three children:

  Isander, Hippolochus and Laodamia. Laodamia

  lay in the arms of Zeus who rules the world

  and she bore the god a son, our great commander,

  Sarpedon helmed in bronze.

  But the day soon came

  when even Bellerophon was hated by all the gods.

  Across the Alean plain he wandered, all alone,

  eating his heart out, a fugitive on the run

  from the beaten tracks of men. His son Isander?

  Killed by the War-god, never sated--a boy fighting

  the Solymi always out for glory. Laodamia? Artemis,

  flashing her golden reins, cut her down in anger.

  But Hippolochus fathered me, I'm proud to say.

  He sent me off to Troy . . .

  and I hear his urgings ringing in my ears:

  'Always be the best, my boy, the bravest,

  and hold your head up high above the others.

  Never disgrace the generation of your fathers.

  They were the bravest champions born in Corinth,

  in Lycia far and wide.'

  There you have my lineage.

  That is the blood I claim, my royal birth."

  When he heard that, Diomedes' spirits lifted.

  Raising his spear, the lord of the war cry drove it home,

  planting it deep down in the earth that feeds us all

  and with winning words he called out to Glaucus,

  the young captain, "Splendid--you are my friend,

  my guest from the days of our grandfathers long ago!

  Noble Oeneus hosted your brave Bellerophon once,

  he held him there in his halls, twenty whole days,

  and they gave each other handsome gifts of friendship.

  My kinsman offered a gleaming sword-belt, rich red,

  Bellerophon gave a cup, two-handled, solid gold--

  I left it at home when I set out for Troy.

  My father, Tydeus, I really don't remember.

  I was just a baby when father left me then,

  that time an Achaean army went to die at Thebes.

  So now I am your host and friend in the heart of Argos,

  you are mine in Lycia when I visit in your country.

  Come, let us keep clear of each other's spears,

  even there in the thick of battle. Look,

  plenty of Trojans there for me to kill,

  your famous allies too, any soldier the god

  will bring in range or I can run to ground.

  And plenty of Argives too--kill them if you can.

  But let's trade armor. The men must know our claim:

  we are sworn friends from our fathers' days till now!"

  Both agreed. Both fighters sprang from their chariots,

  clasped each other's hands and traded pacts of friendship.

  But the son of Cronus, Zeus, stole Glaucus' wits away.

  He traded his gold armor for bronze with Diomedes,

  the worth of a hundred oxen just for nine.

  And now,

  when Hector reached the Scaean Gates and the great oak,

  the wives and daughters of Troy came rushing up around him,

  asking about their sons, brothers, friends and husbands.

  But Hector told them only, "Pray to the gods"--

  all the Trojan women, one after another . . .

  Hard sorrows were hanging over many.

  And soon

  he came to Priam's palace, that magnificent structure

  built wide with porches and colonnades of polished stone.

  And deep within its walls were fifty sleeping chambers

  masoned in smooth, lustrous ashlar, linked in a line

  where the sons of Priam slept beside their wedded wives,

  and facing these, opening out across the inner courtyard,

  lay the twelve sleeping chambers of Priam's daughters,

  masoned and roofed in lustrous ashlar, linked in a line

  where the sons-in-law of Priam slept beside their wives.

  And there at the palace Hector's mother met her son,

  that warm, goodhearted woman,
going in with Laodice,

  the loveliest daughter Hecuba ever bred. His mother

  clutched his hand and urged him, called his name:

  "My child--why have you left the bitter fighting,

  why have you come home? Look how they wear you out,

  the sons of Achaea--curse them--battling round our walls!

  And that's why your spirit brought you back to Troy,

  to climb the heights and stretch your arms to Zeus.

  But wait, I'll bring you some honeyed, mellow wine.

  First pour out cups to Father Zeus and the other gods,

  then refresh yourself, if you'd like to quench your thirst.

  When a man's exhausted, wine will build his strength--

  battle-weary as you are, fighting for your people."

  But Hector shook his head, his helmet flashing:

  "Don't offer me mellow wine, mother, not now--

  you'd sap my limbs, I'd lose my nerve for war.

  And I'd be ashamed to pour a glistening cup to Zeus

  with unwashed hands. I'm splattered with blood and filth--

  how could I pray to the lord of storm and lightning?

  No, mother, you are the one to pray.

  Go to Athena's shrine, the queen of plunder,

  go with offerings, gather the older noble women

  and take a robe, the largest, loveliest robe

  that you can find throughout the royal halls,

  a gift that far and away you prize most yourself,

  and spread it out across the sleek-haired goddess' knees.

  Then promise to sacrifice twelve heifers in her shrine,

  yearlings never broken, if only she'll pity Troy,

  the Trojan wives and all our helpless children,

  if only she'll hold Diomedes back from the holy city--

  that wild spearman, that invincible headlong terrorl

  Now, mother, go to the queen of plunder's shrine

  and I'll go hunt for Paris, summon him to fight

  if the man will hear what I have to say . . .

  Let the earth gape and swallow him on the spot!

  A great curse Olympian Zeus let live and grow in him,

  for Troy and high-hearted Priam and all his sons.

  That man--if I could see him bound for the House of Death,

  I could say my heart had forgot its wrenching grief!"

  But his mother simply turned away to the palace.

  She gave her servants orders and out they strode

  to gather the older noble women through the city.

  Hecuba went down to a storeroom filled with scent

  and there they were, brocaded, beautiful robes . . .

  the work of Sidonian women. Magnificent Paris

  brought those women back himself from Sidon,

  sailing the open seas on the same long voyage

  he swept Helen off, her famous Father's child.

  Lifting one from the lot, Hecuba brought it out

  for great Athena's gift, the largest, loveliest,

  richly worked, and like a star it glistened,

  deep beneath the others. Then she made her way

  with a file of noble women rushing in her train.

  Once they reached Athena's shrine on the city crest

  the beauty Theano opened the doors to let them in,

  Cisseus' daughter, the horseman Antenor's wife

  and Athena's priestess chosen by the Trojans. Then--

  with a shrill wail they all stretched their arms to Athena

  as Theano, her face radiant, lifting the robe on high,

  spread it out across the sleek-haired goddess' knees

  and prayed to the daughter of mighty Father Zeus:

  "Queen Athena--shield of our city--glory of goddesses!

  Now shatter the spear of Diomedes! That wild man--

  hurl him headlong down before the Scaean Gates!

  At once we'll sacrifice twelve heifers in your shrine,

  yearlings never broken, if only you'll pity Troy,

  the Trojan wives and all our helpless children!"

  But Athena refused to hear Theano's prayers.

  And while they prayed to the daughter of mighty Zeus

  Hector approached the halls of Paris, sumptuous halls

  he built himself with the finest masons of the day,

  master builders famed in the fertile land of Troy.

  They'd raised his sleeping chamber, house and court

  adjoining Priam's and Hector's aloft the city heights.

  Now Hector, dear to Zeus, strode through the gates,

  clutching a thrusting-lance eleven forearms long;

  the bronze tip of the weapon shone before him,

  ringed with a golden hoop to grip the shaft.

  And there in the bedroom Hector came on Paris

  polishing, fondling his splendid battle-gear,

  his shield and breastplate, turning over and over

  his long curved bow. And there was Helen of Argos,

  sitting with all the women of the house, directing

  the rich embroidered work they had in hand.

  Seeing Paris,

  Hector raked his brother with insults, stinging taunts:

  "What on earth are you doing? Oh how wrong it is,

  this anger you keep smoldering in your heart! Look,

  your people dying around the city, the steep walls,

  dying in arms--and all for you, the battle cries

  and the fighting flaring up around the citadel.

  You'd be the first to lash out at another--anywhere--

  you saw hanging back from this, this hateful war.

  Up with you--

  before all Troy is torched to a cinder here and now!"

  And Paris, magnificent as a god, replied,

  "Ah Hector, you criticize me fairly, yes,

  nothing unfair, beyond what I deserve. And so

  I will try to tell you something. Please bear with me,

  hear me out. It's not so much from anger or outrage

  at our people that I keep to my rooms so long.

  I only wanted to plunge myself in grief.

  But just now my wife was bringing me round,

  her winning words urging me back to battle.

  And it strikes me, even me, as the better way.

  Victory shifts, you know, now one man, now another.

  So come, wait while I get this war-gear on,

  or you go on ahead and I will follow--

  I think I can overtake you."

  Hector, helmet flashing,

  answered nothing. And Helen spoke to him now,

  her soft voice welling up: "My dear brother,

  dear to me, bitch that I am, vicious, scheming--

  horror to freeze the heart! Oh how I wish

  that first day my mother brought me into the light

  some black whirlwind had rushed me out to the mountains

  or into the surf where the roaring breakers crash and drag

  and the waves had swept me off before all this had happened!

  But since the gods ordained it all, these desperate years,

  I wish I had been the wife of a better man, someone

  alive to outrage, the withering scorn of men.

  This one has no steadiness in his spirit,

  not now, he never will ...

  and he's going to reap the fruits of it, I swear.

  But come in, rest on this seat with me, dear brother.

  You are the one hit hardest by the fighting, Hector,

  you more than all--and all for me, whore that I am,

  and this blind mad Paris. Oh the two of us!

  Zeus planted a killing doom within us both,

  so even for generations still unborn

  we will live in song."

  Turning to go,

  his helmet flashing, tall Hector answered,

  "Don't ask me to sit beside you here, Helen.

  Lo
ve me as you do, you can't persuade me now.

  No time for rest. My heart races to help our Trojans--

  they long for me, sorely, whenever I am gone.

  But rouse this fellow, won't you?

  And let him hurry himself along as well,

  so he can overtake me before I leave the city.

  For I must go home to see my people first,

  to visit my own dear wife and my baby son.

  Who knows if I will ever come back to them again?--

  or the deathless gods will strike me down at last

  at the hands of Argive fighters."

  A flash of his helmet

  and off he strode and quickly reached his sturdy,

  well-built house. But white-armed Andromache--

  Hector could not find her in the halls.

  She and the boy and a servant finely gowned

  were standing watch on the tower, sobbing, grieving.

  When Hector saw no sign of his loyal wife inside

  he went to the doorway, stopped and asked the servants,

  "Come, please, tell me the truth now, women.

  Where's Andromache gone? To my sisters' house?

  To my brothers' wives with their long flowing robes?

  Or Athena's shrine where the noble Trojan women

  gather to win the great grim goddess over?"

  A busy, willing servant answered quickly,

  "Hector, seeing you want to know the truth,

  she hasn't gone to your sisters, brothers' wives

  or Athena's shrine where the noble Trojan women

  gather to win the great grim goddess over.

  Up to the huge gate-tower of Troy she's gone

  because she heard our men are so hard-pressed,

  the Achaean fighters coming on in so much force.

  She sped to the wall in panic, like a madwoman--

  the nurse went with her, carrying your child."

  At that, Hector spun and rushed from his house,

  back by the same way down the wide, well-paved streets

  throughout the city until he reached the Scaean Gates,

  the last point he would pass to gain the field of battle.

  There his warm, generous wife came running up to meet him,

  Andromache the daughter of gallant-hearted Eetion

  who had lived below Mount Placos rich with timber,

  in Thebe below the peaks, and ruled Cilicia's people.

  His daughter had married Hector helmed in bronze.

  She joined him now, and following in her steps

  a servant holding the boy against her breast,

  in the first flush of life, only a baby,

  Hector's son, the darling of his eyes

  and radiant as a star . . .

  Hector would always call the boy Scamandrius,

  townsmen called him Astyanax, Lord of the City,

  since Hector was the lone defense of Troy.

  The great man of war breaking into a broad smile,

  his gaze fixed on his son, in silence. Andromache,

  pressing close beside him and weeping freely now,

  clung to his hand, urged him, called him: "Reckless one,

  my Hector--your own fiery courage will destroy you!

  Have you no pity for him, our helpless son? Or me,

  and the destiny that weighs me down, your widow,

 
Homer's Novels