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Tales of Troy: Ulysses the Sacker of Cities
THE BATTLES WITH THE AMAZONS AND MEMNON--THE DEATH OF ACHILLES
Andrew Lang
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       THE BATTLES WITH THE AMAZONS AND MEMNON--THE DEATH OF ACHILLES
       Ulysses thought much and often of Helen, without whose kindness he could
       not have saved the Greeks by stealing the Luck of Troy. He saw that,
       though she remained as beautiful as when the princes all sought her hand,
       she was most unhappy, knowing herself to be the cause of so much misery,
       and fearing what the future might bring. Ulysses told nobody about the
       secret which she had let fall, the coming of the Amazons.
       The Amazons were a race of warlike maids, who lived far away on the banks
       of the river Thermodon. They had fought against Troy in former times,
       and one of the great hill-graves on the plain of Troy covered the ashes
       of an Amazon, swift-footed Myrine. People believed that they were the
       daughters of the God of War, and they were reckoned equal in battle to
       the bravest men. Their young Queen, Penthesilea, had two reasons for
       coming to fight at Troy: one was her ambition to win renown, and the
       other her sleepless sorrow for having accidentally killed her sister,
       Hippolyte, when hunting. The spear which she threw at a stag struck
       Hippolyte and slew her, and Penthesilea cared no longer for her own life,
       and desired to fall gloriously in battle. So Penthesilea and her
       bodyguard of twelve Amazons set forth from the wide streams of Thermodon,
       and rode into Troy. The story says that they did not drive in chariots,
       like all the Greek and Trojan chiefs, but rode horses, which must have
       been the manner of their country.
       Penthesilea was the tallest and most beautiful of the Amazons, and shone
       among her twelve maidens like the moon among the stars, or the bright
       Dawn among the Hours which follow her chariot wheels. The Trojans
       rejoiced when they beheld her, for she looked both terrible and
       beautiful, with a frown on her brow, and fair shining eyes, and a blush
       on her cheeks. To the Trojans she came like Iris, the Rainbow, after a
       storm, and they gathered round her cheering, and throwing flowers and
       kissing her stirrup, as the people of Orleans welcomed Joan of Arc when
       she came to deliver them. Even Priam was glad, as is a man long blind,
       when he has been healed, and again looks upon the light of the sun. Priam
       held a great feast, and gave to Penthesilea many beautiful gifts: cups of
       gold, and embroideries, and a sword with a hilt of silver, and she vowed
       that she would slay Achilles. But when Andromache, the wife of Hector,
       heard her she said within herself, "Ah, unhappy girl, what is this boast
       of thine! Thou hast not the strength to fight the unconquerable son of
       Peleus, for if Hector could not slay him, what chance hast thou? But the
       piled-up earth covers Hector!"
       In the morning Penthesilea sprang up from sleep and put on her glorious
       armour, with spear in hand, and sword at side, and bow and quiver hung
       behind her back, and her great shield covering her side from neck to
       stirrup, and mounted her horse, and galloped to the plain. Beside her
       charged the twelve maidens of her bodyguard, and all the company of
       Hector's brothers and kinsfolk. These headed the Trojan lines, and they
       rushed towards the ships of the Greeks.
       Then the Greeks asked each other, "Who is this that leads the Trojans as
       Hector led them, surely some God rides in the van of the charioteers!"
       Ulysses could have told them who the new leader of the Trojans was, but
       it seems that he had not the heart to fight against women, for his name
       is not mentioned in this day's battle. So the two lines clashed, and the
       plain of Troy ran red with blood, for Penthesilea slew Molios, and
       Persinoos, and Eilissos, and Antiphates, and Lernos high of heart, and
       Hippalmos of the loud warcry, and Haemonides, and strong Elasippus, while
       her maidens Derinoe and Clonie slew each a chief of the Greeks. But
       Clonie fell beneath the spear of Podarkes, whose hand Penthesilea cut off
       with the sword, while Idomeneus speared the Amazon Bremousa, and Meriones
       of Crete slew Evadre, and Diomede killed Alcibie and Derimacheia in close
       fight with the sword, so the company of the Twelve were thinned, the
       bodyguard of Penthesilea.
       The Trojans and Greeks kept slaying each other, but Penthesilea avenged
       her maidens, driving the ranks of Greece as a lioness drives the cattle
       on the hills, for they could not stand before her. Then she shouted,
       "Dogs! to-day shall you pay for the sorrows of Priam! Where is Diomede,
       where is Achilles, where is Aias, that, men say, are your bravest? Will
       none of them stand before my spear?" Then she charged again, at the head
       of the Household of Priam, brothers and kinsmen of Hector, and where they
       came the Greeks fell like yellow leaves before the wind of autumn. The
       white horse that Penthesilea rode, a gift from the wife of the North
       Wind, flashed like lightning through a dark cloud among the companies of
       the Greeks, and the chariots that followed the charge of the Amazon
       rocked as they swept over the bodies of the slain. Then the old Trojans,
       watching from the walls, cried: "This is no mortal maiden but a Goddess,
       and to-day she will burn the ships of the Greeks, and they will all
       perish in Troyland, and see Greece never more again."
       Now it so was that Aias and Achilles had not heard the din and the cry of
       war, for both had gone to weep over the great new grave of Patroclus.
       Penthesilea and the Trojans had driven back the Greeks within their
       ditch, and they were hiding here and there among the ships, and torches
       were blazing in men's hands to burn the ships, as in the day of the
       valour of Hector: when Aias heard the din of battle, and called to
       Achilles to make speed towards the ships.
       So they ran swiftly to their huts, and armed themselves, and Aias fell
       smiting and slaying upon the Trojans, but Achilles slew five of the
       bodyguard of Penthesilea. She, beholding her maidens fallen, rode
       straight against Aias and Achilles, like a dove defying two falcons, and
       cast her spear, but it fell back blunted from the glorious shield that
       the God had made for the son of Peleus. Then she threw another spear at
       Aias, crying, "I am the daughter of the God of War," but his armour kept
       out the spear, and he and Achilles laughed aloud. Aias paid no more heed
       to the Amazon, but rushed against the Trojan men; while Achilles raised
       the heavy spear that none but he could throw, and drove it down through
       breastplate and breast of Penthesilea, yet still her hand grasped her
       sword-hilt. But, ere she could draw her sword, Achilles speared her
       horse, and horse and rider fell, and died in their fall.
       There lay fair Penthesilea in the dust, like a tall poplar tree that the
       wind has overthrown, and her helmet fell, and the Greeks who gathered
       round marvelled to see her lie so beautiful in death, like Artemis, the
       Goddess of the Woods, when she sleeps alone, weary with hunting on the
       hills. Then the heart of Achilles was pierced with pity and sorrow,
       thinking how she might have been his wife in his own country, had he
       spared her, but he was never to see pleasant Phthia, his native land,
       again. So Achilles stood and wept over Penthesilea dead.
       Now the Greeks, in pity and sorrow, held their hands, and did not pursue
       the Trojans who had fled, nor did they strip the armour from Penthesilea
       and her twelve maidens, but laid the bodies on biers, and sent them back
       in peace to Priam. Then the Trojans burned Penthesilea in the midst of
       her dead maidens, on a great pile of dry wood, and placed their ashes in
       a golden casket, and buried them all in the great hill-grave of Laomedon,
       an ancient King of Troy, while the Greeks with lamentation buried them
       whom the Amazon had slain.
       The old men of Troy and the chiefs now held a council, and Priam said
       that they must not yet despair, for, if they had lost many of their
       bravest warriors, many of the Greeks had also fallen. Their best plan
       was to fight only with arrows from the walls and towers, till King Memnon
       came to their rescue with a great army of Aethiopes. Now Memnon was the
       son of the bright Dawn, a beautiful Goddess who had loved and married a
       mortal man, Tithonus. She had asked Zeus, the chief of the Gods, to make
       her lover immortal, and her prayer was granted. Tithonus could not die,
       but he began to grow grey, and then white haired, with a long white
       beard, and very weak, till nothing of him seemed to be left but his
       voice, always feebly chattering like the grasshoppers on a summer day.
       Memnon was the most beautiful of men, except Paris and Achilles, and his
       home was in a country that borders on the land of sunrising. There he
       was reared by the lily maidens called Hesperides, till he came to his
       full strength, and commanded the whole army of the Aethiopes. For their
       arrival Priam wished to wait, but Polydamas advised that the Trojans
       should give back Helen to the Greeks, with jewels twice as valuable as
       those which she had brought from the house of Menelaus. Then Paris was
       very angry, and said that Polydamas was a coward, for it was little to
       Paris that Troy should be taken and burned in a month if for a month he
       could keep Helen of the fair hands.
       At length Memnon came, leading a great army of men who had nothing white
       about them but the teeth, so fiercely the sun burned on them in their own
       country. The Trojans had all the more hopes of Memnon because, on his
       long journey from the land of sunrising, and the river Oceanus that
       girdles the round world, he had been obliged to cross the country of the
       Solymi. Now the Solymi were the fiercest of men and rose up against
       Memnon, but he and his army fought them for a whole day, and defeated
       them, and drove them to the hills. When Memnon came, Priam gave him a
       great cup of gold, full of wine to the brim, and Memnon drank the wine at
       one draught. But he did not make great boasts of what he could do, like
       poor Penthesilea, "for," said he, "whether I am a good man at arms will
       be known in battle, where the strength of men is tried. So now let us
       turn to sleep, for to wake and drink wine all through the night is an ill
       beginning of war."
       Then Priam praised his wisdom, and all men betook them to bed, but the
       bright Dawn rose unwillingly next day, to throw light on the battle where
       her son was to risk his fife. Then Memnon led out the dark clouds of his
       men into the plain, and the Greeks foreboded evil when they saw so great
       a new army of fresh and unwearied warriors, but Achilles, leading them in
       his shining armour, gave them courage. Memnon fell upon the left wing of
       the Greeks, and on the men of Nestor, and first he slew Ereuthus, and
       then attacked Nestor's young son, Antilochus, who, now that Patroclus had
       fallen, was the dearest friend of Achilles. On him Memnon leaped, like a
       lion on a kid, but Antilochus lifted a huge stone from the plain, a
       pillar that had been set on the tomb of some great warrior long ago, and
       the stone smote full on the helmet of Memnon, who reeled beneath the
       stroke. But Memnon seized his heavy spear, and drove it through shield
       and corselet of Antilochus, even into his heart, and he fell and died
       beneath his father's eyes. Then Nestor in great sorrow and anger strode
       across the body of Antilochus and called to his other son, Thrasymedes,
       "Come and drive afar this man that has slain thy brother, for if fear be
       in thy heart thou art no son of mine, nor of the race of Periclymenus,
       who stood up in battle even against the strong man Heracles!"
       But Memnon was too strong for Thrasymedes, and drove him off, while old
       Nestor himself charged sword in hand, though Memnon bade him begone, for
       he was not minded to strike so aged a man, and Nestor drew back, for he
       was weak with age. Then Memnon and his army charged the Greeks, slaying
       and stripping the dead. But Nestor had mounted his chariot and driven to
       Achilles, weeping, and imploring him to come swiftly and save the body of
       Antilochus, and he sped to meet Memnon, who lifted a great stone, the
       landmark of a field, and drove it against the shield of the son of
       Peleus. But Achilles was not shaken by the blow; he ran forward, and
       wounded Memnon over the rim of his shield. Yet wounded as he was Memnon
       fought on and struck his spear through the arm of Achilles, for the
       Greeks fought with no sleeves of bronze to protect their arms.
       Then Achilles drew his great sword, and flew on Memnon, and with sword-
       strokes they lashed at each other on shield and helmet, and the long
       horsehair crests of the helmets were shorn off, and flew down the wind,
       and their shields rang terribly beneath the sword strokes. They thrust
       at each others' throats between shield and visor of the helmet, they
       smote at knee, and thrust at breast, and the armour rang about their
       bodies, and the dust from beneath their feet rose up in a cloud around
       them, like mist round the falls of a great river in flood. So they
       fought, neither of them yielding a step, till Achilles made so rapid a
       thrust that Memnon could not parry it, and the bronze sword passed clean
       through his body beneath the breast-bone, and he fell, and his armour
       clashed as he fell.
       Then Achilles, wounded as he was and weak from loss of blood, did not
       stay to strip the golden armour of Memnon, but shouted his warcry, and
       pressed on, for he hoped to enter the gate of Troy with the fleeing
       Trojans, and all the Greeks followed after him. So they pursued, slaying
       as they went, and the Scaean gate was choked with the crowd of men,
       pursuing and pursued. In that hour would the Greeks have entered Troy,
       and burned the city, and taken the women captive, but Paris stood on the
       tower above the gate, and in his mind was anger for the death of his
       brother Hector. He tried the string of his bow, and found it frayed, for
       all day he had showered his arrows on the Greeks; so he chose a new
       bowstring, and fitted it, and strung the bow, and chose an arrow from his
       quiver, and aimed at the ankle of Achilles, where it was bare beneath the
       greave, or leg-guard of metal, that the God had fashioned for him.
       Through the ankle flew the arrow, and Achilles wheeled round, weak as he
       was, and stumbled, and fell, and the armour that the God had wrought was
       defiled with dust and blood.
       Then Achilles rose again, and cried: "What coward has smitten me with a
       secret arrow from afar? Let him stand forth and meet me with sword and
       spear!" So speaking he seized the shaft with his strong hands and tore
       it out of the wound, and much blood gushed, and darkness came over his
       eyes. Yet he staggered forward, striking blindly, and smote Orythaon, a
       dear friend of Hector, through the helmet, and others he smote, but now
       his force failed him, and he leaned on his spear, and cried his warcry,
       and said, "Cowards of Troy, ye shall not all escape my spear, dying as I
       am." But as he spoke he fell, and all his armour rang around him, yet
       the Trojans stood apart and watched; and as hunters watch a dying lion
       not daring to go nigh him, so the Trojans stood in fear till Achilles
       drew his latest breath. Then from the wall the Trojan women raised a
       great cry of joy over him who had slain the noble Hector: and thus was
       fulfilled the prophecy of Hector, that Achilles should fall in the Scaean
       gateway, by the hand of Paris.
       Then the best of the Trojans rushed forth from the gate to seize the body
       of Achilles, and his glorious armour, but the Greeks were as eager to
       carry the body to the ships that it might have due burial. Round the
       dead Achilles men fought long and sore, and both sides were mixed, Greeks
       and Trojans, so that men dared not shoot arrows from the walls of Troy
       lest they should kill their own friends. Paris, and Aeneas, and Glaucus,
       who had been the friend of Sarpedon, led the Trojans, and Aias and
       Ulysses led the Greeks, for we are not told that Agamemnon was fighting
       in this great battle of the war. Now as angry wild bees flock round a
       man who is taking their honeycombs, so the Trojans gathered round Aias,
       striving to stab him, but he set his great shield in front, and smote and
       slew all that came within reach of his spear. Ulysses, too, struck down
       many, and though a spear was thrown and pierced his leg near the knee he
       stood firm, protecting the body of Achilles. At last Ulysses caught the
       body of Achilles by the hands, and heaved it upon his back, and so limped
       towards the ships, but Aias and the men of Aias followed, turning round
       if ever the Trojans ventured to come near, and charging into the midst of
       them. Thus very slowly they bore the dead Achilles across the plain,
       through the bodies of the fallen and the blood, till they met Nestor in
       his chariot and placed Achilles therein, and swiftly Nestor drove to the
       ships.
       There the women, weeping, washed Achilles' comely body, and laid him on a
       bier with a great white mantle over him, and all the women lamented and
       sang dirges, and the first was Briseis, who loved Achilles better than
       her own country, and her father, and her brothers whom he had slain in
       war. The Greek princes, too, stood round the body, weeping and cutting
       off their long locks of yellow hair, a token of grief and an offering to
       the dead.
       Men say that forth from the sea came Thetis of the silver feet, the
       mother of Achilles, with her ladies, the deathless maidens of the waters.
       They rose up from their glassy chambers below the sea, moving on, many
       and beautiful, like the waves on a summer day, and their sweet song
       echoed along the shores, and fear came upon the Greeks. Then they would
       have fled, but Nestor cried: "Hold, flee not, young lords of the
       Achaeans! Lo, she that comes from the sea is his mother, with the
       deathless maidens of the waters, to look on the face of her dead son."
       Then the sea nymphs stood around the dead Achilles and clothed him in the
       garments of the Gods, fragrant raiment, and all the Nine Muses, one to
       the other replying with sweet voices, began their lament.
       Next the Greeks made a great pile of dry wood, and laid Achilles on it,
       and set fire to it, till the flames had consumed his body except the
       white ashes. These they placed in a great golden cup and mingled with
       them the ashes of Patroclus, and above all they built a tomb like a hill,
       high on a headland above the sea, that men for all time may see it as
       they go sailing by, and may remember Achilles. Next they held in his
       honour foot races and chariot races, and other games, and Thetis gave
       splendid prizes. Last of all, when the games were ended, Thetis placed
       before the chiefs the glorious armour that the God had made for her son
       on the night after the slaying of Patroclus by Hector. "Let these arms
       be the prize of the best of the Greeks," she said, "and of him that saved
       the body of Achilles out of the hands of the Trojans."
       Then stood up on one side Aias and on the other Ulysses, for these two
       had rescued the body, and neither thought himself a worse warrior than
       the other. Both were the bravest of the brave, and if Aias was the
       taller and stronger, and upheld the fight at the ships on the day of the
       valour of Hector; Ulysses had alone withstood the Trojans, and refused to
       retreat even when wounded, and his courage and cunning had won for the
       Greeks the Luck of Troy. Therefore old Nestor arose and said: "This is a
       luckless day, when the best of the Greeks are rivals for such a prize. He
       who is not the winner will be heavy at heart, and will not stand firm by
       us in battle, as of old, and hence will come great loss to the Greeks.
       Who can be a just judge in this question, for some men will love Aias
       better, and some will prefer Ulysses, and thus will arise disputes among
       ourselves. Lo! have we not here among us many Trojan prisoners, waiting
       till their friends pay their ransom in cattle and gold and bronze and
       iron? These hate all the Greeks alike, and will favour neither Aias nor
       Ulysses. Let them be the judges, and decide who is the best of the
       Greeks, and the man who has done most harm to the Trojans."
       Agamemnon said that Nestor had spoken wisely. The Trojans were then made
       to sit as judges in the midst of the Assembly, and Aias and Ulysses
       spoke, and told the stories of their own great deeds, of which we have
       heard already, but Aias spoke roughly and discourteously, calling Ulysses
       a coward and a weakling. "Perhaps the Trojans know," said Ulysses
       quietly, "whether they think that I deserve what Aias has said about me,
       that I am a coward; and perhaps Aias may remember that he did not find me
       so weak when we wrestled for a prize at the funeral of Patroclus."
       Then the Trojans all with one voice said that Ulysses was the best man
       among the Greeks, and the most feared by them, both for his courage and
       his skill in stratagems of war. On this, the blood of Aias flew into his
       face, and he stood silent and unmoving, and could not speak a word, till
       his friends came round him and led him away to his hut, and there he sat
       down and would not eat or drink, and the night fell.
       Long he sat, musing in his mind, and then rose and put on all his armour,
       and seized a sword that Hector had given him one day when they two fought
       in a gentle passage of arms, and took courteous farewell of each other,
       and Aias had given Hector a broad sword-belt, wrought with gold. This
       sword, Hector's gift, Aias took, and went towards the hut of Ulysses,
       meaning to carve him limb from limb, for madness had come upon him in his
       great grief. Rushing through the night to slay Ulysses he fell upon the
       flock of sheep that the Greeks kept for their meat. And up and down
       among them he went, smiting blindly till the dawn came, and, lo! his
       senses returned to him, and he saw that he had not smitten Ulysses, but
       stood in a pool of blood among the sheep that he had slain. He could not
       endure the disgrace of his madness, and he fixed the sword, Hector's
       gift, with its hilt firmly in the ground, and went back a little way, and
       ran and fell upon the sword, which pierced his heart, and so died the
       great Aias, choosing death before a dishonoured life. _