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Tales of Troy: Ulysses the Sacker of Cities
TROJAN VICTORIES
Andrew Lang
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       TROJAN VICTORIES
       The war might now have ended, but an evil and foolish thought came to
       Pandarus, a prince of Ida, who fought for the Trojans. He chose to shoot
       an arrow at Menelaus, contrary to the sworn vows of peace, and the arrow
       pierced the breastplate of Menelaus through the place where the clasped
       plates meet, and drew his blood. Then Agamemnon, who loved his brother
       dearly, began to lament, saying that if he died, the army would all go
       home and Trojans would dance on the grave of Menelaus. "Do not alarm all
       our army," said Menelaus, "the arrow has done me little harm;" and so it
       proved, for the surgeon easily drew the arrow out of the wound.
       Then Agamemnon hastened here and there, bidding the Greeks arm and attack
       the Trojans, who would certainly be defeated, for they had broken the
       oaths of peace. But with his usual insolence he chose to accuse Ulysses
       and Diomede of cowardice, though Diomede was as brave as any man, and
       Ulysses had just prevented the whole army from launching their ships and
       going home. Ulysses answered him with spirit, but Diomede said nothing
       at the moment; later he spoke his mind. He leaped from his chariot, and
       all the chiefs leaped down and advanced in line, the chariots following
       them, while the spearmen and bowmen followed the chariots. The Trojan
       army advanced, all shouting in their different languages, but the Greeks
       came on silently. Then the two front lines clashed, shield against
       shield, and the noise was like the roaring of many flooded torrents among
       the hills. When a man fell he who had slain him tried to strip off his
       armour, and his friends fought over his body to save the dead from this
       dishonour.
       Ulysses fought above a wounded friend, and drove his spear through head
       and helmet of a Trojan prince, and everywhere men were falling beneath
       spears and arrows and heavy stones which the warriors threw. Here
       Menelaus speared the man who built the ships with which Paris had sailed
       to Greece; and the dust rose like a cloud, and a mist went up from the
       fighting men, while Diomede stormed across the plain like a river in
       flood, leaving dead bodies behind him as the river leaves boughs of trees
       and grass to mark its course. Pandarus wounded Diomede with an arrow,
       but Diomede slew him, and the Trojans were being driven in flight, when
       Sarpedon and Hector turned and hurled themselves on the Greeks; and even
       Diomede shuddered when Hector came on, and charged at Ulysses, who was
       slaying Trojans as he went, and the battle swayed this way and that, and
       the arrows fell like rain.
       But Hector was sent into the city to bid the women pray to the goddess
       Athene for help, and he went to the house of Paris, whom Helen was
       imploring to go and fight like a man, saying: "Would that the winds had
       wafted me away, and the tides drowned me, shameless that I am, before
       these things came to pass!"
       Then Hector went to see his dear wife, Andromache, whose father had been
       slain by Achilles early in the siege, and he found her and her nurse
       carrying her little boy, Hector's son, and like a star upon her bosom lay
       his beautiful and shining golden head. Now, while Helen urged Paris to
       go into the fight, Andromache prayed Hector to stay with her in the town,
       and fight no more lest he should be slain and leave her a widow, and the
       boy an orphan, with none to protect him. The army she said, should come
       back within the walls, where they had so long been safe, not fight in the
       open plain. But Hector answered that he would never shrink from battle,
       "yet I know this in my heart, the day shall come for holy Troy to be laid
       low, and Priam and the people of Priam. But this and my own death do not
       trouble me so much as the thought of you, when you shall be carried as a
       slave to Greece, to spin at another woman's bidding, and bear water from
       a Grecian well. May the heaped up earth of my tomb cover me ere I hear
       thy cries and the tale of thy captivity."
       Then Hector stretched out his hands to his little boy, but the child was
       afraid when he saw the great glittering helmet of his father and the
       nodding horsehair crest. So Hector laid his helmet on the ground and
       dandled the child in his arms, and tried to comfort his wife, and said
       good-bye for the last time, for he never came back to Troy alive. He
       went on his way back to the battle, and Paris went with him, in glorious
       armour, and soon they were slaying the princes of the Greeks.
       The battle raged till nightfall, and in the night the Greeks and Trojans
       burned their dead; and the Greeks made a trench and wall round their
       camp, which they needed for safety now that the Trojans came from their
       town and fought in the open plain.
       Next day the Trojans were so successful that they did not retreat behind
       their walls at night, but lit great fires on the plain: a thousand fires,
       with fifty men taking supper round each of them, and drinking their wine
       to the music of flutes. But the Greeks were much discouraged, and
       Agamemnon called the whole army together, and proposed that they should
       launch their ships in the night and sail away home. Then Diomede stood
       up, and said: "You called me a coward lately. You are the coward! Sail
       away if you are afraid to remain here, but all the rest of us will fight
       till we take Troy town."
       Then all shouted in praise of Diomede, and Nestor advised them to send
       five hundred young men, under his own son, Thrasymedes, to watch the
       Trojans, and guard the new wall and the ditch, in case the Trojans
       attacked them in the darkness. Next Nestor counselled Agamemnon to send
       Ulysses and Aias to Achilles, and promise to give back Briseis, and rich
       presents of gold, and beg pardon for his insolence. If Achilles would be
       friends again with Agamemnon, and fight as he used to fight, the Trojans
       would soon be driven back into the town.
       Agamemnon was very ready to beg pardon, for he feared that the whole army
       would be defeated, and cut off from their ships, and killed or kept as
       slaves. So Ulysses and Aias and the old tutor of Achilles, Phoenix, went
       to Achilles and argued with him, praying him to accept the rich presents,
       and help the Greeks. But Achilles answered that he did not believe a
       word that Agamemnon said; Agamemnon had always hated him, and always
       would hate him. No; he would not cease to be angry, he would sail away
       next day with all his men, and he advised the rest to come with him. "Why
       be so fierce?" said tall Aias, who seldom spoke. "Why make so much
       trouble about one girl? We offer you seven girls, and plenty of other
       gifts."
       Then Achilles said that he would not sail away next day, but he would not
       fight till the Trojans tried to burn his own ships, and there he thought
       that Hector would find work enough to do. This was the most that
       Achilles would promise, and all the Greeks were silent when Ulysses
       delivered his message. But Diomede arose and said that, with or without
       Achilles, fight they must; and all men, heavy at heart, went to sleep in
       their huts or in the open air at their doors.
       Agamemnon was much too anxious to sleep. He saw the glow of the thousand
       fires of the Trojans in the dark, and heard their merry flutes, and he
       groaned and pulled out his long hair by handfuls. When he was tired of
       crying and groaning and tearing his hair, he thought that he would go for
       advice to old Nestor. He threw a lion skin, the coverlet of his bed,
       over his shoulder, took his spear, went out and met Menelaus--for he,
       too, could not sleep--and Menelaus proposed to send a spy among the
       Trojans, if any man were brave enough to go, for the Trojan camp was all
       alight with fires, and the adventure was dangerous. Therefore the two
       wakened Nestor and the other chiefs, who came just as they were, wrapped
       in the fur coverlets of their beds, without any armour. First they
       visited the five hundred young men set to watch the wall, and then they
       crossed the ditch and sat down outside and considered what might be done.
       "Will nobody go as a spy among the Trojans?" said Nestor; he meant would
       none of the young men go. Diomede said that he would take the risk if
       any other man would share it with him, and, if he might choose a
       companion, he would take Ulysses.
       "Come, then, let us be going," said Ulysses, "for the night is late, and
       the dawn is near." As these two chiefs had no armour on, they borrowed
       shields and leather caps from the young men of the guard, for leather
       would not shine as bronze helmets shine in the firelight. The cap lent
       to Ulysses was strengthened outside with rows of boars' tusks. Many of
       these tusks, shaped for this purpose, have been found, with swords and
       armour, in a tomb in Mycenae, the town of Agamemnon. This cap which was
       lent to Ulysses had once been stolen by his grandfather, Autolycus, who
       was a Master Thief, and he gave it as a present to a friend, and so,
       through several hands, it had come to young Meriones of Crete, one of the
       five hundred guards, who now lent it to Ulysses. So the two princes set
       forth in the dark, so dark it was that though they heard a heron cry,
       they could not see it as it flew away.
       While Ulysses and Diomede stole through the night silently, like two
       wolves among the bodies of dead men, the Trojan leaders met and
       considered what they ought to do. They did not know whether the Greeks
       had set sentinels and outposts, as usual, to give warning if the enemy
       were approaching; or whether they were too weary to keep a good watch; or
       whether perhaps they were getting ready their ships to sail homewards in
       the dawn. So Hector offered a reward to any man who would creep through
       the night and spy on the Greeks; he said he would give the spy the two
       best horses in the Greek camp.
       Now among the Trojans there was a young man named Dolon, the son of a
       rich father, and he was the only boy in a family of five sisters. He was
       ugly, but a very swift runner, and he cared for horses more than for
       anything else in the world. Dolon arose and said, "If you will swear to
       give me the horses and chariot of Achilles, son of Peleus, I will steal
       to the hut of Agamemnon and listen and find out whether the Greeks mean
       to fight or flee." Hector swore to give these horses, which were the
       best in the world, to Dolon, so he took his bow and threw a grey wolf's
       hide over his shoulders, and ran towards the ships of the Greeks.
       Now Ulysses saw Dolon as he came, and said to Diomede, "Let us suffer him
       to pass us, and then do you keep driving him with your spear towards the
       ships, and away from Troy." So Ulysses and Diomede lay down among the
       dead men who had fallen in the battle, and Dolon ran on past them towards
       the Greeks. Then they rose and chased him as two greyhounds course a
       hare, and, when Dolon was near the sentinels, Diomede cried "Stand, or I
       will slay you with my spear!" and he threw his spear just over Dolon's
       shoulder. So Dolon stood still, green with fear, and with his teeth
       chattering. When the two came up, he cried, and said that his father was
       a rich man, who would pay much gold, and bronze, and iron for his ransom.
       Ulysses said, "Take heart, and put death out of your mind, and tell us
       what you are doing here." Dolon said that Hector had promised him the
       horses of Achilles if he would go and spy on the Greeks. "You set your
       hopes high," said Ulysses, "for the horses of Achilles are not earthly
       steeds, but divine; a gift of the Gods, and Achilles alone can drive
       them. But, tell me, do the Trojans keep good watch, and where is Hector
       with his horses?" for Ulysses thought that it would be a great adventure
       to drive away the horses of Hector.
       "Hector is with the chiefs, holding council at the tomb of Ilus," said
       Dolon; "but no regular guard is set. The people of Troy, indeed, are
       round their watch fires, for they have to think of the safety of their
       wives and children; but the allies from far lands keep no watch, for
       their wives and children are safe at home." Then he told where all the
       different peoples who fought for Priam had their stations; but, said he,
       "if you want to steal horses, the best are those of Rhesus, King of the
       Thracians, who has only joined us to-night. He and his men are asleep at
       the furthest end of the line, and his horses are the best and greatest
       that ever I saw: tall, white as snow, and swift as the wind, and his
       chariot is adorned with gold and silver, and golden is his armour. Now
       take me prisoner to the ships, or bind me and leave me here while you go
       and try whether I have told you truth or lies."
       "No," said Diomede, "if I spare your life you may come spying again," and
       he drew his sword and smote off the head of Dolon. They hid his cap and
       bow and spear where they could find them easily, and marked the spot, and
       went through the night to the dark camp of King Rhesus, who had no watch-
       fire and no guards. Then Diomede silently stabbed each sleeping man to
       the heart, and Ulysses seized the dead by the feet and threw them aside
       lest they should frighten the horses, which had never been in battle, and
       would shy if they were led over the bodies of dead men. Last of all
       Diomede killed King Rhesus, and Ulysses led forth his horses, beating
       them with his bow, for he had forgotten to take the whip from the
       chariot. Then Ulysses and Diomede leaped on the backs of the horses, as
       they had not time to bring away the chariot, and they galloped to the
       ships, stopping to pick up the spear, and bow, and cap of Dolon. They
       rode to the princes, who welcomed them, and all laughed for glee when
       they saw the white horses and heard that King Rhesus was dead, for they
       guessed that all his army would now go home to Thrace. This they must
       have done, for we never hear of them in the battles that followed, so
       Ulysses and Diomede deprived the Trojans of thousands of men. The other
       princes went to bed in good spirits, but Ulysses and Diomede took a swim
       in the sea, and then went into hot baths, and so to breakfast, for rosy-
       fingered Dawn was coming up the sky. _