Complete Works of Homer

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Complete Works of Homer Page 52

by Homer


  And Agamemnon through the tents waked all, and did dispose

  Both men and mules for carriage of matter for the fire;

  Of all which work Meriones, the Cretan sovereign's squire,

  Was captain; and abroad they went. Wood-cutting tools they bore

  Of all hands, and well-twisted cords. The mules marched all before.

  Up hill, and down hill, overthwarts, and break-neck cliffs they passed;

  But, when the fountful Ida's tops they scaled with utmost haste,

  All fell upon the high-haired oaks, and down their curled brows

  Fell bustling to the earth, and up went all the boles and boughs

  Bound to the mules; and back again they parted the harsh way

  Amongst them through the tangling shrubs, and long they thought the day

  Till in the plain field all arrived, for all the woodmen bore

  Logs on their necks; Meriones would have it so. The shore

  At last they reached yet, and then down their carriages they cast,

  And sat upon them, where the son of Peleus had placed

  The ground for his great sepulchre, and for his friend's, in one.

  They raised a huge pile,.and to arms went every Myrmidon,

  Charged by Achilles; chariots and horse were harnessed,

  Fighters and charioteers got up, and they the sad march led,

  A cloud of infinite foot behind. In midst of all was borne

  Patroclus' person by his peers. On him were all heads shorn,

  Even till they covered him with curls. Next to him marched his friend

  Embracing his cold neck all sad, since now he was to send

  His dearest to his endless home. Arrived all where the wood

  Was heaped for funeral, they set down. Apart Achilles stood,

  And when enough wood was heaped on, he cut his golden hair,

  Long kept for Sperchius the flood, in hope of safe repair

  To Phthia by that river's pow'r; but now left hopeless thus,

  Enraged and looking on the sea, he cried out: " Sperchius,

  In vain my father's piety vowed, at my implored return

  To my loved country, that these curls should on thy shores be shorn,

  Besides a sacred hecatomb, and sacrifice beside

  Of fifty wethers, at those founts, where men have edified

  A lofty temple, and perfumed an altar to thy name.

  There vowed he all these offerings; but fate prevents thy fame,

  His hopes not suffering satisfied. And since I never more

  Shall see my loved soil, my friend's hands shall to the Stygian shore

  Convey these tresses." Thus he put in his friend's hands the hair;

  And this bred fresh desire of moan; and in that sad affair

  The sun had set amongst them all, had Thetis' son not spoke

  Thus to Atrides : " King of men, thy aid I still invoke,

  Since thy command all men still hear. Dismiss thy soldiers now,

  And let them victual; they have mourned sufficient; 'tis we owe

  The dead this honour; and with us let all the captains stay."

  This heard, Atrides instantly the soldiers sent away;

  The funeral officers remained, and heaped on matter still,

  Till of an hundred foot about they made the funeral pile,

  In whose hot height they cast the corse, and then they poured on tears.

  Numbers of fat sheep, and like store of crooked-going steers,

  They slew before the solemn fire; stripped off their hides and dressed.

  Of which Achilles took the fat, and covered the deceased

  From head to foot; and round about he made the officers pile

  The beasts' naked bodies, vessels full of honey and of oil

  Poured in them, laid upon a bier, and cast into the fire.

  Four goodly horse, and of nine hounds two most in the desire

  Of that great prince and trencher-fed; all fed that hungry flame.

  Twelve Trojan princes last stood forth, young, and of toward fame,

  All which, set on with wicked spirits, there struck he, there he slew,

  And to the iron strength of fire their noble limbs he threw.

  Then breathed his last sighs, and these words : " Again rejoice, my friend,

  Even in the joyless depth of hell. Now give I complete end

  To all my vows. Alone thy life sustained not violence,

  Twelve Trojan princes wait on thee, and labour to incense

  Thy glorious heap of funeral. Great Hector I'll excuse,

  The dogs shall eat him." These high threats performed not their abuse :

  Jove's daughter, Venus, took the guard of noble Hector's corse,

  And kept the dogs off, night and day applying sovereign force

  Of rosy balms, that to the dogs were horrible in taste,

  And with which she the body filled. Renowned Apollo cast

  A cloud from heaven, lest with the sun the nerves and lineaments

  Might dry and putrefy. And now some Powers denied consents

  To his solemnity; the Fire (for all the oily fuel

  It had injected) would not burn; and then the loving Cruel

  Studied for help, and, standing off, invoked the two fair Winds,

  Zephyr and Boreas, to afford the rage of both their kinds

  To aid his outrage. Precious gifts his earnest zeal did vow,

  Poured from a golden bowl much wine, and prayed them both to blow,

  That quickly his friend's corse might burn, and that heap's sturdy breast

  Embrace consumption. Iris heard. The Winds were at a feast,

  All in the court of Zephyrus, that boisterous blowing Air,

  Gathered together. She that wears the thousand-coloured hair

  Flew thither, standing in the porch. They, seeing her, all arose,

  Called to her, every one desired she would awhile repose,

  And eat with them. She answered: " No, no place of seat is here;

  Retreat calls to the Ocean and ^Ethiopia, where

  A hecatomb is offering now to heaven, and there must I

  Partake the feast of sacrifice. I come to signify

  That Thetis' son implores your aids, princes of North and West,

  With vows of much fair sacrifice, if each will set his breast

  Against his heap of funeral, and make it quickly burn;

  Patroclus lies there, whose decease all the Achaians mourn."

  She said, and parted; and out rushed, with an unmeasured roar,

  Those two Winds, tumbling clouds in heaps, ushers to either's blore,

  And instantly they reached the sea; up flew the waves; the gale

  Was strong; reached fruitful Troy; and full upon the fire they fall.

  The huge heap thundered. All night long from his choked breast they blew

  A liberal flame up; and all night swift-foot Achilles threw

  Wine from a golden bowl on earth, and steeped the soil in wiue,

  Still calling on Patroclus' soul. No father could incline

  More to a son most dear, nor more mourn at his burned bones,

  Than did the great prince to his friend at his combustions,

  Still creeping near and near the heap, still sighing, weeping still.

  But when the Day-star looked abroad, and promised from his hill

  Light, which the saffron Morn made good, and sprinkled on the seas,

  Then languished the great pile, then sunk the flames, and then calm Peace

  Turned back the rough Winds to their homes, the Thracian billow rings

  Their high retreat, ruffled with cuffs of their triumphant wings.

  Pelides then forsook the pile, and to his tired limb

  Choosed place of rest, where laid, sweet sleep fell to his wish on him.

  When all the king's guard, waiting then, perceiving will to rise

  In that great session, hurried in, and oped again his eyes

&n
bsp; With tumult of their troop, and- haste. A little then he reared

  His troubled person, sitting up, and this affair referred

  To wished commandment of the kings : " Atrides, and the rest

  Of our commanders general, vouchsafe me this request

  Before your parting: Give in charge the quenching with black wine

  Of this heap's relics, every brand the yellow fire made shine;

  And then let search Patroclus' hones, distinguishing them well

  As well ye may, they kept the midst, the rest at random fell

  About th' extreme part of the pile. Men's bones and horses' mixed

  Being found, I'll find an urn of gold t' enclose them, and betwixt

  The air and them two kels of fat lay on them, aud to rest

  Commit them, till mine own bones seal our love, my soul deceased.

  The sepulchre I have not charged to make of too much state,

  But of a model something mean, that you of younger fate,

  When I am gone, may amplify with such a breadth and height

  As fits your judgment and our worths." This charge received his weight

  In all observance. First they quenched with sable wine the heap

  As far as it had fed the flame. The ash fell wondrous deep,

  In which his consorts, that his life religiously loved,

  Searched, weeping, for his bones; which found, they conscionably proved

  His will made to Aeacides, and what his love did add.

  A golden vessel, double fat, contained them. All which, clad

  In veils of linen, pure and rich, were solemnly conveyed

  T' Achilles' tent. The platform then about the pile they laid

  Of his fit sepulchre, and raised a heap of earth, and then

  Offered departure. But the prince retained there still his men,

  Employing them to fetch from fleet rich tripods for his games,

  Caldrons, horse, mules, broad-headed beeves, bright steel, and brighter dames.

  The best at horse-race he ordained a lady for his prize,

  Generally praiseful, fair and young, and skilled in housewiferies

  Of all kinds fitting; and withal, a trivet, that inclosed

  Twenty-two measures' room, with ears. The next prize he proposed

  Was, that which then had high respect, a mare of six years old,

  Unhandled, horsed with a mule, and ready to have foaled.

  The third game was a caldron, new, fair, bright, and could for size

  Contain two measures. For the fourth, two talents' quantities

  Of finest gold. The fifth game was a great new standing bowl,

  To set down both ways. These brought in, Achilles then stood up,

  And said : "Atrides and my lords, chief horsemen of our host,

  These games expect ye. If myself should interpose my most

  For our horse-race, I make no doubt that I should take again

  These gifts proposed. Ye all know well of how divine a strain

  My horse are, and how eminent. Of Neptune's gift they are

  To Peleus, and of his to me. Myself then will not share

  In gifts given others, nor my steeds breathe any spirit to shake

  Their airy pasterns; so they mourn for their kind guider's sake,

  Late lost, that used with humorous oil to slick their lofty manes.

  Clear water having cleansed them first, and, his bane being their banes,

  Those lofty manes now strew the earth, their heads held shaken down.

  You then that trust in chariots, and hope with horse to crown

  Your conquering temples, gird yourselves; now, fame and prize stretch for,

  All that have spirits." This fired all. The first competitor

  Was king Eumelus, whom the art of horsemanship did grace,

  Son of Admetus. Next to him rose Diomed to the race,

  That under reins ruled Trojan horse, of late forced from the son

  Of lord Anchises, himself freed of near confusion

  By Phoebus. Next to him set forth the yellow-headed king

  Of Lacedaemon, Jove's high seed; and in his managing

  Podargus and swift iEthe trod, steeds to the King of men;

  iEthe given by Echepolus, the Anchisiaden,

  A bribe to free him from the war resolved for Ilion;

  So Delicacy feasted him, whom Jove bestowed upon

  A mighty wealth; his dwelling was in broad Sicyone.

  Old Nestor's son, Antilochus, was fourth for chivalry

  In this contention; his fair horse were of the Pylian breed,

  And his old father, coming near, informed him, for good speed,

  With good race notes, in which himself could good instruction give :

  “Antilochus, though young thou art, yet thy grave virtues live

  Beloved of Neptune and of Jove. Their spirits have taught thee all

  The art of horsemanship, for which the less thy merits fall

  In need of doctrine. Well thy skill can wield a chariot

  In all fit turnings, yet thy horse their slow feet handle not

  As fits thy manage, which makes me cast doubts of thy success.

  I well know all these are not seen in art of this address

  More than thyself; their horses yet superior are to thine

  For their parts, thine want speed to make discharge of a design

  To please an artist. But go on, show but thy art and heart

  At all points, and set them against their horses' heart and art;

  Good judges will not see thee lose. A carpenter's desert

  Stands more in cunning than in power. A pilot doth avert

  His vessel from the rock and wrack, tost with the churlish winds,

  By skill, not strength. So sorts it here; one charioteer that finds

  Want of another's power in horse must in his own skill set

  An overplus of that to that; and so the proof will get

  Skill, that still rests within a man, more grace than pow'r without.

  He that in horse and chariots trusts is often hurled about

  This way and that, unhandsomely, all heaven wide of his end.

  He, better skilled, that rules worse horse, will an observance bend

  Right on the scope still of a race, bear near, know ever when to rein,

  When give rein, as his foe before, well noted in his vein

  Of manage and his steeds' estate, presents occasion.

  I'll give thee instance now, as plain as if thou saw'st it done:

  Here stands a dry stub of some tree a cubit from the ground

  (Suppose the stub of oak or larch, either arc so sound

  That neither rots with wet) two stones, white, mark you, white for view,

  Parted on either side the stub; and these lay where they drew

  The way into a strait; the race betwixt both lying clear.

  Imagine them some monument of one long since tombed there,

  Or that they had been lists of race for men of former years,

  As now the lists Achilles sets may serve for charioteers

  Many years hence. When near to these the race grows, then as right

  Drive on them as thy eye can judge; then lay thy bridle's weight

  Most of thy left side; thy right horse then switching, all thy throat,

  Spent in encouragements, give him, and all the rein let float

  About his shoulders, thy near horse will yet be he that gave

  Thy skill the prize, and him rein so his head may touch the nave

  Of thy left wheel; but then take care thou runn'st not on the stone

  (With wrack of horse and chariot) which so thou bear'st upon.

  Shipwrack within the haven avoid by all means; that will breed

  Others delight and thee a shame. Be wise then, and take heed,

  My loved son, get but to be first at turning in the course,

  He lives not that can cote thee then, not if he back
ed the horse

  The Gods bred, and Adrastus owed; divine Arion's speed

  Could not outpace thee, or the horse Laomedon did breed,

  Whose race is famous, and fed here." Thus said Neleides,

  When all that could be said was said. And then Meriones

  Set fifthly forth his fair-maned horse. All leaped to chariot;

  And every man then for the start cast in his proper lot.

  Achilles drew; Antilochus the lot set foremost forth;

  Eumelus next; Atrides third; Meriones the fourth;

  The fifth and last was Diomed, far first in excellence.

  All stood in order, and the lists Achilles fixed far thence

  In plain field; and a seat ordained fast by, in which he set

  Renowned Phoenix, that in grace of Peleus was so great,

  To see the race, and give a truth of all their passages.

  All start together, scourged, and cried, and gave their business

  Study and order. Through the field they held a winged pace.

  Beneath the bosom of their steeds a dust so dimmed the race,

  It stood above their heads in clouds, or like to storms amazed.

  Manes flew like ensigns with the wind. The chariots sometimes grazed

  And sometimes jumped up to the air; yet still sat fast the men,

  Their spirits even panting in their breasts with fervour to obtain.

  But when they turned to fleet again, then all men's skills were tried,

  Theu stretched the pasterns of their steeds. Eumelus' horse in pride

  Still bore their sovereign. After them came Diomed's coursers close,

  Still apt to leap their chariot, and ready to repose

  Upon the shoulders of their king their heads; his back even burned

  With fire that from their nostrils flew; and then their lord had turned

  The race for him, or given it doubt, if Phoebus had not smit

  The scourge out of his hands, and tears of helpless wrath with it

  From forth his eyes, to see his horse for want of scourge made slow,

  And th' others, by Apollo's help, with much more swiftness go.

  Apollo's spite Pallas discerned, and flew to Tydeus' son,

  His scourge reached, and his horse made fresh. Then took her angry run

  At king Eumelus, brake his gears", his mares on both sides flew,

  His dra,ught-tree fell to earth, and him the tossed-up chariot threw

  Down to the earth, his elbows torn, his forehead, all his face,

  Struck at the centre, his speech lost. And then the turned race

  Fell to Tydides; before all his conquering horse he drave,

 

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