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         Hector Meets Andromache 
        
        
        
        
          
        
          
        
        Iliad VI, 439ff 
        (Fagles, p 208) 
                                                          A flash of his helmet 
        and off he strode and quickly reached his sturdy,  
        well-built house. But white-armed Andromache— 
        Hector could not find her in the halls.  
        She and the boy and a servant finely gowned 
        were standing watch on the tower, sobbing, grieving.  
        When Hector saw no sign of his loyal wife inside 
        he went to the doorway, stopped and asked the servants,  
        "Come, please, tell me the truth now, women.  
        Where's Andromache gone? To my sisters' house?  
        To my brothers' wives with their long flowing robes?  
        Or Athena's shrine where the noble Trojan women  
        gather to win the great grim goddess over?" 
        
          
        
              A busy, willing 
        servant answered quickly,  
        "Hector, seeing you want to know the truth,  
        she hasn't gone to your sisters, brothers' wives 
        or Athena's shrine where the noble Trojan women  
        gather to win the great grim goddess over.  
        Up to the huge gate-tower of Troy she's gone  
        because she heard our men are so hard-pressed,  
        the Achaean fighters coming on in so much force.  
        She sped to the wall in panic, like a madwoman— 
        the nurse went with her, carrying your child." 
        
          
        
              At that, Hector 
        spun and rushed from his house, 
        back by the same way down the wide, well-paved streets  
        throughout the city until he reached the Scaean Gates,  
        the last point he would pass to gain the field of battle. 
        There his warm, generous wife came running up to meet him,  
        Andromache the daughter of gallant-hearted Eetion  
        who had lived below Mount Placos rich with timber,  
        in Thebe below the peaks, and ruled Cilicia's people.  
        His daughter had married Hector helmed in bronze.  
        She joined him now, and following in her steps 
        a servant holding the boy against her breast, 
        in the first flush of life, only a baby,  
        Hector's son, the darling of his eyes  
        and radiant as a star . . . 
        Hector would always call the boy Scamandrius,  
        townsmen called him Astyanax, Lord of the City,  
        since Hector was the lone defense of Troy. 
        The great man of war breaking into a broad smile,  
        his gaze fixed on his son, in silence. Andromache,  
        pressing close beside him and weeping freely now, 
        clung to his hand, urged him, called him: "Reckless one,  
        my Hector-your own fiery courage will destroy you!  
        Have you no pity for him, our helpless son? Or me,  
        and the destiny that weighs me down, your widow,  
        now so soon? Yes, soon they will kill you off,  
        all the Achaean forces massed for assault, and then,  
        bereft of you, better for me to sink beneath the earth.  
        What other warmth, what comfort's left for me,  
        once you have met your doom? Nothing but torment!  
        I have lost my father. Mother's gone as well.  
        Father . . . the brilliant Achilles laid him low  
        when he stormed 
        Cilicia's city filled with people,  
        Thebe with her towering gates. He killed Eetion, 
        not that he stripped his gear-he'd some respect at least— 
        for he burned his corpse in all his blazoned bronze,  
        then heaped a grave-mound high above the ashes  
        and nymphs of the mountain planted elms around it,  
        daughters of Zeus whose shield is storm and thunder.  
        And the seven brothers I had within our halls . . .  
        all in the same day went down to the House of Death,  
        the great godlike runner Achilles butchered them all,  
        tending their shambling oxen, shining flocks. 
                                                                    And mother, 
        who ruled under the timberline of woody Placos once— 
        he no sooner haled her here with his other plunder  
        than he took a priceless ransom, set her free  
        and home she went to her father's royal halls  
        where Artemis, showering arrows, shot her down. 
        
          
        
        You, Hector—you are my 
        father now, my noble mother,  
        a brother too, and you are my husband, young and warm and strong! 
        Pity me, please! Take your stand on the rampart here,  
        before you orphan your son and make your wife a widow.  
        Draw your armies up where the wild fig tree stands,  
        there, where the city lies most open to assault,  
        the walls lower, easily overrun. Three times  
        they have tried that point, hoping to storm Troy,  
        their best fighters led by the Great and Little Ajax,  
        famous Idomeneus, Atreus' sons, valiant Diomedes.  
        Perhaps, a skilled prophet revealed the spot— 
        or their own fury whips them on to attack." 
        
          
        
              And tall Hector 
        nodded, his helmet flashing:  
        "All this weighs on my mind too, dear woman.  
        But I would die of shame to face the men of Troy  
        and the Trojan women trailing their long robes  
        if I would shrink from battle now, a coward.  
        Nor does the spirit urge me on that way.  
        I've learned it all too well. To stand up bravely,  
        always to fight in the front ranks of Trojan soldiers,  
        winning my father great glory, glory for myself.  
        For in my heart and soul I also know this well:  
        the day will come when sacred Troy must die,  
        Priam must die and all his people with him,  
        Priam who hurls the strong ash spear . . . 
                                                                    Even so, 
        it is less the pain of the Trojans still to come 
        that weighs me down, not even of Hecuba herself  
        or King Priam, or the thought that my own brothers  
        in all their numbers, all their gallant courage,  
        may tumble in the dust, crushed by enemies- 
        That is nothing, nothing beside your agony  
        when some brazen Argive hales you off in tears,  
        wrenching away your day of light and freedom!  
        Then far off in the 
        land of 
        Argos 
        you must live,  
        laboring at a loom, at another woman's beck and call, 
        fetching water at some spring, Messeis or Hyperia,  
        resisting it all the way— 
        the rough yoke of necessity at your neck. 
        And a man may say, who sees you streaming tears,  
        'There is the wife of Hector, the bravest fighter  
        they could field, those stallion-breaking Trojans, 
        long ago when the men fought .for Troy.' So he will say  
        and the fresh grief will swell your heart once more,  
        widowed, robbed of the one man strong enough  
        to fight off your day of slavery. 
                                                                    No, no, 
        let the earth come piling over my dead body 
        before I hear your cries, I hear you dragged away!" 
        
          
        
              In the same 
        breath, shining Hector reached down 
        for his son—but the boy recoiled,  
        cringing against his nurse's full breast,  
        screaming out at the sight of his own father,  
        terrified by the flashing bronze, the horsehair crest, 
        the great ridge of the helmet nodding, bristling terror- 
        so it struck his eyes. And his loving father laughed,  
        his mother laughed as well, and glorious Hector,  
        quickly lifting the helmet from his head,  
        set it down on the ground, fiery in the sunlight, 
        and raising his son he kissed him, tossed him in his arms,  
        lifting a prayer to Zeus and the other deathless gods:  
        "Zeus, all you immortals! Grant this boy, my son,  
        may be like me, first in glory among the Trojans,  
        strong and brave like me, and rule all Troy in power 
        and one day let them say, 'He is a better man than his father!'— 
        when he comes home from battle bearing the bloody gear  
        of the mortal enemy he has killed in war— 
        a joy to his mother's heart." 
                                                                    So Hector 
        prayed 
        and placed his son in the arms of his loving wife.  
        Andromache pressed the child to her scented breast,  
        smiling through her tears. Her husband noticed,  
        and filled with pity now, Hector stroked her gently, 
        trying to reassure her, repeating her name: "Andromache,  
        dear one, why so desperate? Why so much grief for me?  
        No man will hurl me down to Death, against my fate.  
        And fate? No one alive has ever escaped it,  
        neither brave man nor coward, I tell you— 
        it's born with us the day that we are born.  
        So please go home and tend to your own tasks,  
        the distaff and the loom, and keep the women  
        working hard as well. As for the fighting,  
        men will see to that, all who were born in Troy  
        but I most of all." 
                                                          Hector aflash in arms 
        took up his horsehair-crested helmet once again.  
        And his loving wife went home, turning, glancing  
        back again and again and weeping live warm tears.  
        She quickly reached the sturdy house of Hector,  
        man-killing Hector, 
        and found her women gathered there inside 
        and stirred them all to a high pitch of mourning.  
        So in his house they raised the dirges for the dead,  
        for Hector still alive, his people were so convinced  
        that never again would he come home from battle,  
        never escape the Argives' rage and bloody hands. 
         
        
        
  
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