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The Iliad Page 16

each man look well to his chariot’s running order,

  nerve himself for combat now, so all day long

  we can last out the grueling duels of Ares!

  No breathing space, no letup, not a moment, not

  till the night comes on to part the fighters’ fury!

  Now sweat will soak the shield-strap round your chest,

  your fist gripping the spear will ache with tensing,

  now the lather will drench your war-team’s flanks,

  hauling your sturdy chariot.

  But any man I catch,

  trying to skulk behind his long beaked ships,

  hanging back from battle—he is finished.

  No way for him to escape the dogs and birds!“

  So he commanded

  and the armies gave a deep resounding roar like waves

  crashing against a cliff when the South Wind whips it,

  bearing down, some craggy headland jutting out to sea—

  the waves will never leave it in peace, thrashed by gales

  that hit from every quarter, breakers left and right.

  The troops sprang up, scattered back to the ships,

  lit fires beside their tents and took their meal.

  Each sacrificed to one or another deathless god,

  each man praying to flee death and the grind of war.

  But the lord of men Agamemnon sacrificed a fat rich ox,

  five years old, to the son of mighty Cronus, Zeus,

  and called the chiefs of all the Argive forces:

  Nestor first and foremost, then King Idomeneus,

  the Great and Little Ajax, Tydeus’ son Diomedes

  and Odysseus sixth, a mastermind like Zeus.

  The lord of the war cry Menelaus came uncalled,

  he knew at heart what weighed his brother down.

  They stood in a ring around the ox, took up barley

  and then, rising among them, King Agamemnon

  raised his voice in prayer: “Zeus, Zeus,

  god of greatness, god of glory, lord god

  of the dark clouds who lives in the bright sky,

  don’t let the sun go down or the night descend on us!

  Not till I hurl the smoke-black halls of Priam headlong—

  torch his gates to blazing rubble—rip the tunic of Hector

  and slash his heroic chest to ribbons with my bronze—

  and a ruck of comrades round him, groveling facedown,

  gnaw their own earth!”

  And so Agamemnon prayed

  but the son of Cronus would not bring his prayer to pass,

  not yet ... the Father accepted the sacrifices, true,

  but doubled the weight of thankless, ruthless war. ,

  Once the men had prayed and flung the barley,

  first they lifted back the heads of the victims,

  slit their throats, skinned them and carved away

  the meat from the thighbones and wrapped them in fat,

  a double fold sliced clean and topped with strips of flesh.

  And they burned these on a cleft stick, peeled and dry,

  spitted the vitals, held them over Hephaestus’ flames

  and once they’d charred the thighs and tasted the organs

  they cut the rest into pieces, pierced them with spits,

  roasted them to a turn and pulled them off the fire.

  The work done, the feast laid out, they ate well

  and no man’s hunger lacked a share of the banquet.

  When they had put aside desire for food and drink,

  Nestor the noble old horseman spoke out first:

  “Marshal Atrides, lord of men Agamemnon,

  no more trading speeches now. No more delay,

  putting off the work the god puts in our hands.

  Come, let the heralds cry out to all contingents,

  full battle-armor, muster the men along the ships.

  Now down we go, united—review them as we pass.

  Down through the vast encampment of Achaea,

  the faster to rouse the slashing god of warl”

  Agamemnon the lord of men did not resist.

  He commanded heralds to cry out loud and clear

  and summon the long-haired Achaean troops to battle.

  Their cries rang out. The battalions gathered quickly.

  The warlords dear to the gods and flanking Agamemnon

  strode on ahead, marshaling men-at-arms in files,

  and down their ranks the fiery-eyed Athena bore

  her awesome shield of storm, ageless, deathless—

  a hundred golden tassels, all of them braided tight

  and each worth a hundred oxen, float along the front.

  Her shield of lightning dazzling, swirling around her,

  headlong on Athena swept through the Argive armies,

  driving soldiers harder, lashing the fighting-fury

  in each Achaean’s heart—no stopping them now,

  mad for war and struggle. Now, suddenly,

  battle thrilled them more than the journey home,

  than sailing hollow ships to their dear native land.

  As ravening fire rips through big stands of timber

  high on a mountain ridge and the blaze flares miles away,

  so from the marching troops the blaze of bronze armor,

  splendid and superhuman, flared across the earth,

  flashing into the air to hit the skies.

  Armies gathering now

  as the huge flocks on flocks of winging birds, geese or cranes

  or swans with their long lancing necks—circling Asian marshes

  round the Cayster outflow, wheeling in all directions,

  glorying in their wings—keep on landing, advancing,

  wave on shrieking wave and the tidal flats resound.

  So tribe on tribe, pouring out of the ships and shelters,

  marched across the Scamander plain and the earth shook,

  tremendous thunder from under trampling men and horses

  drawing into position down the Scamander meadow flats

  breaking into flower—men by the thousands, numberless

  as the leaves and spears that flower forth in spring.

  The armies massing ... crowding thick-and-fast

  as the swarms of flies seething over the shepherds’ stalls

  in the first spring days when the buckets flood with milk—

  so many long-haired Achaeans swarmed across the plain

  to confront the Trojans, fired to smash their lines.

  The armies grouping now—as seasoned goatherds

  split their wide-ranging flocks into packs with ease

  when herds have mixed together down the pasture:

  so the captains formed their tight platoons,

  detaching right and left, moving up for action—

  and there in the midst strode powerful Agamemnon,

  eyes and head like Zeus who loves the lightning,

  great in the girth like Ares, god of battles,

  broad through the chest like sea lord Poseidon.

  Like a bull rising head and shoulders over the herds,

  a royal bull rearing over his flocks of driven cattle—

  so imposing was Atreus’ son, so Zeus made him that day,

  towering over fighters, looming over armies.

  Sing to me now, you Muses who hold the halls of Olympus!

  You are goddesses, you are everywhere, you know all things—

  all we hear is the distant ring of glory, we know nothing—

  who were the captains of Achaea? Who were the kings?

  The mass of troops I could never tally, never name,

  not even if I had ten tongues and ten mouths,

  a tireless voice and the heart inside me bronze,

  never unless you Muses of Olympus, daughters of Zeus

  whose shield is rolling thunder, sing, sing in memory

  all who gathered under Troy. Now I can only tell
/>   the lords of the ships, the ships in all their numbers!

  First came the Boeotian units led by Leitus and Peneleos:

  Arcesilaus and Prothoënor and Clonius shared command

  of the armed men who lived in Hyria, rocky Aulis,

  Schoenus, Scolus and Eteonus spurred with hills,

  Thespia and Graea, the dancing rings of Mycalessus,

  men who lived round Harma, Ilesion and Erythrae

  and those who settled Eleon, Hyle and Peteon,

  Ocalea, Medeon’s fortress walled and strong,

  Copae, Eutresis and Thisbe thronged with doves,

  fighters from Coronea, Haliartus deep in meadows,

  and the men who held Plataea and lived in Glisas,

  men who held the rough-hewn gates of Lower Thebes,

  Onchestus the holy, Poseidon’s sun-filled grove,

  men from the town of Arne green with vineyards,

  Midea and sacred Nisa, Anthedon-on-the-marches.

  Fifty ships came freighted with these contingents,

  one hundred and twenty young Boeotians manning each.

  Then men who lived in Aspledon, Orchomenos of the Minyans,

  fighters led by Ascalaphus and Ialmenus, sons of Ares

  whom Astyoche bore in Actor son of Azeus’ halls

  when the shy young girl, climbing into the upper rooms,

  made love with the god of war in secret, shared his strength.

  In her two sons’ command sailed thirty long curved ships.

  Then Schedius and Epistrophus led the men of Phocis—

  two sons of Iphitus, that great heart, Naubolus’ son—

  the men who held Cyparissus and Pytho’s high crags,

  the hallowed earth of Crisa, Daulis and Panopeus,

  men who dwelled round Anemoria, round Hyampolis,

  men who lived along the Cephisus’ glinting waters,

  men who held Lilaea close to the river’s wellsprings.

  Laden with all their ranks came forty long black ships

  and Phocian captains ranged them column by column,

  manning stations along the Boeotians’ left flank.

  Next the Locrians led by racing Ajax, son of Oileus,

  Little Ajax—a far cry from the size of Telamonian Ajax—

  a smaller man but trim in his skintight linen corslet,

  he outthrew all Hellenes, all Achaeans with his spear.

  He led the men who lived in Opois, Cynus, Calliarus,

  Bessa and Scarphe, the delightful town of Augeae,

  Tarphe and Thronion down the Boagrius River.

  In Oilean Ajax’ charge came forty long black ships,

  Locrians living across the straits from sacrosanct Euboea.

  And the men who held Euboea, Abantes breathing fury,

  Chalcis and Eretria, Histiaea covered with vineyards,

  Cerinthus along the shore and Dion’s hilltop streets,

  the men who held Carystus and men who settled Styra.

  Elephenor, comrade of Ares, led the whole contingent,

  Chalcodon’s son, a lord of the fierce Abantes.

  The sprinting Abantes followed hard at his heels,

  their forelocks cropped, hair grown long at the back,

  troops nerved to lunge with their tough ashen spears

  and slash the enemies’ breastplates round their chests.

  In Elephenor’s command sailed forty long black ships.

  Next the men who held the strong-built city of Athens,

  realm of high-hearted Erechtheus. Zeus’s daughter Athena

  tended him once the grain-giving fields had borne him,

  long ago, and then she settled the king in Athens,

  in her own rich shrine, where sons of Athens worship him

  with bulls and goats as the years wheel round in season.

  Athenians all, and Peteos’ son Menestheus led them on,

  and no one born on the earth could match that man

  in arraying teams of horse and shielded fighters—

  Nestor his only rival, thanks to Nestor’s age.

  And in his command sailed fifty long black ships.

  Out of Salamis Great Telamonian Ajax led twelve ships

  drawn up where Athenian forces formed their line of battle.

  Then men of Argos and Tiryns with her tremendous walls

  and Hermione and Asine commanding the deep wide gulf,

  Troezen, Eionae and Epidaurus green with vines

  and Achaea’s warrior sons who held Aegina and Mases—

  Diomedes lord of the war cry led their crack contingents

  flanked by Sthenelus, far-famed Capaneus’ favorite son.

  Third in the vanguard marched Euryalus strong as a god,

  son of King Mecisteus son of Talaus, but over them all,

  with cries to marshal men Diomedes led the whole force

  and his Argives sailed in eighty long black ships.

  Next the men who held Mycenae’s huge walled citadel,

  Corinth in all her wealth and sturdy, strong Cleonae,

  men of Omiae, lovely Araethyrea and Sicyon,

  Adrastus’ domain before he ruled Mycenae,

  men of Hyperesia, Gonoessa perched on hills,

  men who held Pellene and those who circled Aegion,

  men of the coastal strip and Helice’s broad headland.

  They came in a hundred ships and Agamemnon led them on,

  Atreus’ royal son, and marching in his companies

  came the most and bravest fighting men by far.

  And there in the midst, armed in gleaming bronze,

  in all his glory, he towered high over all his fighters—

  he was the greatest warlord, he led by far the largest army.

  Next those who held Lacedaemon’s hollows deep with gorges,

  Pharis, Sparta and Messe, crowded haunt of the wild doves,

  men who lived in Brysiae and Augeae’s gracious country,

  men who held Amyclae, Helos the seaboard fortress,

  men who settled Laas and lived near Oetylus:

  Agamemnon’s brother, Menelaus lord of the war cry

  led their sixty ships, armed them apart, downshore,

  and amidst their ranks he marched, ablaze with valor,

  priming men for attack. And his own heart blazed the most

  to avenge the groans and shocks of war they’d borne for Helen.

  Next the men who lived in Pylos and handsome Arene,

  Thryon, the Alpheus ford and finely-masoned Aepy,

  men who lived in Cyparisseis and Amphigenia,

  Pteleos, Helos and Dorion where the Muses met

  the Thracian Thamyris, stopped the minstrel’s song.

  From Oechalia he came, from Oechalia’s King Eurytus,

  boasting to high heaven that he could outsing the very Muses,

  the daughters of Zeus whose shield resounds with thunder.

  They were enraged, they maimed him, they ripped away

  his voice, the rousing immortal wonder of his song

  and wiped all arts of harping from his mind.

  Nestor the noble old horseman led those troops

  in ninety sweeping ships lined up along the shore.