The Iliad

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The Iliad Page 72

by Robert Fagels


  As soon as he heard that, the god of earthquakes

  surged through the clashing troops and raining spears

  to reach the place where the two famed heroes fought.

  Quickly he poured a mist across Achilles’ eyes,

  wrenched the spear from stalwart Aeneas’ shield,

  laid the bronze-shod ashen shaft at Achilles’ feet

  and hoisting Aeneas off the earth he slung him far ...

  And over the massing lines of men and massing chariots,

  high in the air Aeneas vaulted, hurled by the god’s hand

  till he came to ground at the battle’s churning flank

  where Cauconian units braced themselves for action.

  The god of the earthquake swept beside him there

  and gave the man a burst of winging orders: “Aeneas—

  what god on high commands you to play the madman?

  Fighting against Achilles’ overwhelming fury!—

  both a better soldier and more loved by the gods.

  Pull back at once, whenever you’re thrown against him—

  or go down to the House of Death against the will of fate.

  But once Achilles has met his death, his certain doom,

  take courage then, go fight on the front lines then—

  no other Achaean can bring you down in war.”

  With that,

  with destiny made clear, he left him there on the spot

  and turning back to Achilles quickly brushed away

  the mist from his eyes, the magic, godsent haze.

  And Achilles stared with all his might, dazzled,

  disgusted too, and addressed his own great heart:

  “Impossible—look, a marvel right before my eyes!

  That spear I hurled is lying here on the ground.

  That man—I cannot see him—

  the one I hurled at, wild to cut him down.

  Ah, so the deathless gods must love Aeneas too.

  And I thought his vaunts were empty, hollow boasting.

  Well let him go, I say! Never, never again

  will he have the nerve to test my fighting power—

  even now he was glad to save himself from death.

  Now, quick, I’ll marshal our battle-hungry Argives—

  face the rest of the Trojans, test them, fight them down!”

  And back to the lines he leapt and urged each man,

  “No more standing back from the Trojans, brave Achaeans!

  Now fighter go against fighter, out for bloodshed!

  It’s hard for me, strong as I am, single-handed

  to make for such a force and fight them all.

  Why, not even Ares the deathless god of war,

  not even Athena—for all their heavy labor

  could hack a passage through such jaws of battle.

  But I—whatever fists and feet and strength can do,

  that I will do, I swear, not hang back, not one inch.

  Straight through enemy columns I go plowing now—

  and no Trojan, I guarantee, will thrill with pleasure

  once he meets my spearshaft head-to-head!”

  Spurring his men

  while Hector aflash in armor urged his Trojans—

  thinking he’d even go up against Achilles:

  “No fear of Pelides now, my gallant Trojans!

  I too could battle the deathless gods with words—

  it’s hard with a spear, the gods are so much stronger.

  Not even Achilles can bring off all his boasts:

  some he’ll accomplish, some cut short, half done.

  I’m off to engage the man, though his fists are fire,

  though his fists are fire and his fury burnished iron!”

  Spurring them on to raise their spears for full assault

  and the Trojans’ fury massed and mounted, war cries broke

  but Apollo suddenly stood by Hector, shouting,

  “Don’t for a moment duel Achilles, Hector,

  out in front of your ranks!

  Withdraw to your main lines and wait him there,

  out of the crash of battle. Else he’ll spear you down

  or close for the kill and hack you with his sword.”

  So Hector drew back to his thronging comrades,

  terrified to hear the voice of god. Not Achilles—

  armored in battle-power down he flung on the Trojans,

  loosed barbaric cries, and his first kill was Iphition,

  Otrynteus’ hardy son and a chief of large contingents,

  born of a river nymph to Otrynteus, scourge of towns,

  below Tmolus’ snows in the wealthy realm of Hyde ...

  As the Trojan charged head-on Achilles speared him

  square in the brows—his whole skull split in half

  and down he crashed, Achilles exulting over him:

  “Here you lie, Otrynteus’ son—most terrible man alive!

  Here’s your deathbed! Far from your birthplace, Gyge Lake

  where your father’s fine estate lies next to the Hyllus

  stocked with fish and next to the whirling Hermus!”

  Vaunting over the dark that swept his quarry’s eyes

  and the running-rims of Argive war-cars cut him to shreds

  at the onset’s breaking edge. And next Achilles lunged

  at Demoleon, son of Antenor, a tough defensive fighter—

  he stabbed his temple and cleft his helmet’s cheekpiece.

  None of the bronze plate could hold it—boring through

  the metal and skull the bronze spearpoint pounded,

  Demoleon’s brains splattered all inside his casque,

  the Trojan beaten down in his fury. Hippodamas next,

  he leapt from his chariot fleeing before Achilles—

  Achilles’ spearshaft rammed him through the back

  and he gasped his life away, bellowing like some bull

  that chokes and grunts when the young boys drag him round

  the lord of Helice’s shrine and the earthquake god

  delights to see them dragging—so he bellowed now

  and the man’s proud spirit left his bones behind.

  Achilles rushed with his spear at noble Polydorus

  son of Priam. His father would not let him fight,

  ever, he was the youngest-born of all his sons—

  Priam loved him most, the fastest runner of all

  but now the young fool, mad to display his speed,

  went dashing along the front to meet his death.

  Just as he shot past the matchless runner Achilles

  speared him square in the back where his war-belt clasped,

  golden buckles clinching both halves of his breastplate—

  straight on through went the point and out the navel,

  down on his knees he dropped—

  screaming shrill as the world went black before him—

  ciutched his bowels to his body, hunched and sank.

  But Hector seeing his own brother Polydorus

  clutching his entrails, sinking limp to the ground—

  the mist came swirling down his eyes as well...

  He could bear no more, wheeling off at a distance—

  shaking his whetted spear he charged Achilles now,

  coming fierce as fire but Achilles marked him quickly

  and springing forth to take him, triumphed to himself,

  “Here is the man who’s raked my heart the most,

  who killed my cherished comrade! No more delay,

  dodging each other down the passageways of battle!”

  Under his brows he glared at royal Hector, shouting,

  “Quick, charge me—the sooner to meet your death!”

  But Hector, his helmet flashing, never flinched:

  “Don’t think for a moment, Achilles, son of Peleus,

  you can frighten me with words like a child, a foot—

  I’m an old hand myself at trading taunts
and insults.

  Well I know you are brave, and I am far weaker.

  True—but all lies in the lap of the great gods.

  Weaker I am, but I still might take your life

  with one hurl of a spear—my weapon can cut too,

  long before now its point has found its mark!”

  Grim reminder—

  he brandished the shaft and hurled with all his might

  but Athena blew it back from Achilles bent on glory—

  a quick light breath and the shaft flew back again

  to tall Prince Hector and fell before his feet.

  Achilles blazed, charging, raging to cut him down,

  loosing savage cries—but Phoebus whisked him away,

  easy work for a god, and wrapped him round in mist.

  Three times the brilliant runner Achilles charged him,

  lunged with his bronze spear, three times he slashed at cloud—

  then at Achilles’ fourth assault like something superhuman

  his terrifying voice burst out in winging words:

  “Now, again, you’ve escaped your death, you dog,

  but a good close brush with death it was, I’d say!

  Now, again, your Phoebus Apollo pulls you through,

  the one you pray to, wading into our storm of spears.

  We’ll fight again—I’ll finish you off next time

  if one of the gods will only urge me on as well.

  But now I’ll go for the others, anyone I can catch.”

  Whirling

  he stabbed Dryops, speared him right through the neck—

  he dropped at his feet and Achilles left him dead

  and smashed Demuchus’ knee, Philetor’s strapping son,

  stopped him right in his tracks with a well-flung spear

  then sprang with his great sword and ripped his life away.

  Then on he rushed at the sons of Bias—Laogonus, Dardanus—

  hurled them off their chariot, slammed them both to ground,

  one with a spear-thrust, one chopped down with a blade.

  Then Tros, Alastor’s son, crawled to Achilles’ knees

  and clutched them, hoping he’d spare him,

  let Tros off alive, no cutting him down in blood,

  he’d pity Tros, a man of his own age—the young fool,

  he’d no idea, thinking Achilles could be swayed!

  Here was a man not sweet at heart, not kind, no,

  he was raging, wild—as Tros grasped his knees,

  desperate, begging, Achilles slit open his liver,

  the liver spurted loose, gushing with dark blood,

  drenched his lap and the night swirled down his eyes

  as his life breath slipped away.

  And Mulius next—

  he reared and jammed his lance through the man’s ear

  so the lance came jutting out through the other ear,

  bronze point glinting.

  Echeclus son of Agenor next—

  Achilles split his head at the brow with hilted sword

  so the whole blade ran hot with blood, and red death

  came plunging down his eyes, and the strong force of fate.

  Deucalion next—he lanced his arm with a bronze-shod spear,

  he spitted the Trojan through where the elbow-tendons grip

  and there he stood, waiting Achilles, arm dangling heavy,

  staring death in the face—and Achilles chopped his neck

  and his sword sent head and helmet flying off together

  and marrow bubbling up from the clean-cut neckbone.

  Down he went, his corpse full length on the ground—

  just as Achilles charged at Piras’ handsome son,

  Rhigmus who’d sailed from the fertile soil of Thrace—

  Achilles pierced his belly, the bronze impaled his guts

  and out of his car he pitched as his driver Areithous

  swung the horses round but Achilles speared his back

  and the spearshaft heaved him off the chariot too

  and the panicked stallions bolted.

  Achilles now

  like inhuman fire raging on through the mountain gorges

  splinter-dry, setting ablaze big stands of timber,

  the wind swirling the huge fireball left and right—

  chaos of fire—Achilles storming on with brandished spear

  like a frenzied god of battle trampling all he killed

  and the earth ran black with blood. Thundering on,

  on like oxen broad in the brow some field hand yokes

  to crush white barley heaped on a well-laid threshing floor

  and the grain is husked out fast by the bellowing oxen’s hoofs—

  so as the great Achilles rampaged on, his sharp-hoofed stallions

  trampled shields and corpses, axle under his chariot splashed

  with blood, blood on the handrails sweeping round the car,

  sprays of blood shooting up from the stallions’ hoofs

  and churning, whirling rims—and the son of Peleus

  charioteering on to seize his glory, bloody filth

  splattering both strong arms, Achilles’ invincible arms—

  BOOK TWENTY-ONE

  Achilles Fights the River

  But once they reached the ford where the river runs clear,

  the strong, whirling Xanthus sprung of immortal Zeus,

  Achilles split the Trojan rout, driving one half

  back toward the city, scattering up the plain

  where Achaeans themselves stampeded off in terror

  just the day before when Hector raged unchecked.

  Now back in their tracks the Trojans fled pell-mell

  while Hera spread dense cloud ahead to block their way.

  But the other half were packed in the silver-whirling river,

  into its foaming depths they tumbled, splashing, flailing—

  the plunging river roaring, banks echoing, roaring back

  and the men screamed, swimming wildly, left and right,

  spinning round in the whirlpools. Spun like locusts

  swarming up in the air, whipped by rushing fire,

  flitting toward a river—the tireless fire blazes,

  scorching them all with hard explosive blasts of flame

  and beaten down in the depths the floating locusts huddle—

  so at Achilles’ charge the Xanthus’ swirling currents

  choked with a spate of horse and men—the river roared.

  And the god-sprung hero left his spear on the bank,

  propped on tamarisks—in he leapt like a frenzied god,

  his heart racing with slaughter, only his sword in hand,

  whirling in circles, stashing—hideous groans breaking,

  fighters stabbed by the blade, water flushed with blood.

  Like shoals of fish darting before some big-bellied dolphin,

  escaping, cramming the coves of a good deepwater harbor,

  terrified for their hves—he devours all he catches—

  so the Trojans down that terrible river’s onrush

  cowered under its bluffs. But soon as Achilles

  grew arm-weary from killing, twelve young Trojans

  he rounded up from the river, took them all alive

 

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