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        Iliad XVIII 558ff 
        (Fagles, p 483) 
              
        And first Hephaestus makes a great and massive shield,  
        blazoning well-wrought emblems all across its surface,  
        raising a rim around it, glittering, triple-ply  
        with a silver shield-strap run from edge to edge  
        and five layers of metal to build the shield itself,  
        and across its vast expanse with all his craft and cunning  
        the god creates a world of gorgeous immortal work. 
        
          
        
              There he made the 
        earth and there the sky and the sea 
        and the inexhaustible blazing sun and the moon rounding full  
        and there the constellations, all that crown the heavens,  
        the Pleiades and the Hyades, Orion in all his power too  
        and the Great Bear that mankind also calls the Wagon:  
        she wheels on her axis always fixed, watching the Hunter,  
        and she alone is denied a plunge in the Ocean's baths. 
        
          
        
              And he forged on 
        the shield two noble cities filled 
        with mortal men. With weddings and wedding feasts in one  
        and under glowing torches they brought forth the brides  
        from the women's chambers, marching through the streets  
        while choir on choir the wedding song rose high  
        and the young men came dancing, whirling round in rings 
        and among them flutes and harps kept up their stirring call— 
        women rushed to the doors and each stood moved with wonder.  
        And the people massed, streaming into the marketplace  
        where a quarrel had broken out and two men struggled  
        over the blood-price for a kinsman just murdered.  
        One declaimed in public, vowing payment in full— 
        the other spurned him, he would not take a thing— 
        so both men pressed for a judge to cut the knot. 
        The crowd cheered on both, they took both sides, 
        but heralds held them back as the city elders sat 
        on polished stone benches, forming the sacred circle,  
        grasping in hand the staffs of clear-voiced heralds,  
        and each leapt to his feet to plead the case in turn. 
        Two bars of solid gold shone on the ground before them,  
        a prize for the judge who'd speak the straightest verdict. 
        
          
        
              But circling the 
        other city camped a divided army  
        gleaming in battle-gear, and two plans split their ranks:  
        to plunder the city or share the riches with its people,  
        hoards the handsome citadel stored within its depths.  
        But the people were not surrendering, not at all.  
        They armed for a raid, hoping to break the siege— 
        loving wives and innocent children standing guard  
        on the ramparts, flanked by elders bent with age  
        as men marched out to war. Ares and Pallas led them, 
        both burnished gold, gold the attire they donned, and great,  
        magnificent in their armor—gods for all the world,  
        looming up in their brilliance, towering over troops.  
        And once they reached the perfect spot for attack,  
        a watering place where all the herds collected,  
        there they douched, wrapped in glowing bronze.  
        Detached from the ranks, two scouts took up their posts,  
        the eyes of the army waiting to spot a convoy,  
        the enemy's flocks and crook-homed cattle coming . . .  
        Come they did,. quickly, two shepherds behind them,  
        playing their hearts out on their pipes—treachery  
        never crossed their minds. But the soldiers saw them,  
        rushed them, cut off at a stroke the herds of oxen  
        and sleek sheep-flocks glistening silver-gray  
        and killed the herdsmen too. Now the besiegers,  
        soon as they heard the uproar burst from the cattle  
        as they debated, huddled in council, mounted at once  
        behind their racing teams, rode hard to the rescue,  
        arrived at once, and lining up for assault  
        both armies battled it out along the river banks— 
        they raked each other with hurtling bronze-tipped spears. 
        And Strife and Havoc plunged in the fight, and violent Death— 
        now seizing a man alive with fresh wounds, now one unhurt,  
        now hauling a dead man through the slaughter by the heels,  
        the cloak on her back stained red with human blood.  
        So they clashed and fought like living, breathing men  
        grappling each other's corpses, dragging off the dead. 
        
          
        
              And he forged a 
        fallow field, broad rich plowland 
        tilled for the third time, and across it crews of plowmen  
        wheeled their teams, driving them up and back and soon  
        as they'd reach the end-strip, moving into the turn,  
        a man would run up quickly  
        and hand them a cup of honeyed, mellow wine  
        as the crews would turn back down along the furrows,  
        pressing again to reach the end of the deep fallow field 
        and the earth churned black behind them, like earth churning,  
        solid gold as it was—that was the wonder of Hephaestus' work. 
        
          
        
              And he forged a 
        king's estate where harvesters labored,  
        reaping the ripe grain, swinging their whetted scythes.  
        Some stalks fell in line with the reapers, row on row,  
        and others the sheaf-binders girded round with ropes,  
        three binders standing over the sheaves, behind them  
        boys gathering up the cut swaths, filling their arms,  
        supplying grain to the binders, endless bundles.  
        And there in the midst the king,  
        scepter in hand at the head of the reaping-rows,  
        stood tall in silence, rejoicing in his heart.  
        And off to the side, beneath a spreading oak,  
        the heralds were setting out the harvest feast,  
        they were dressing a great ox they had slaughtered,  
        while attendant women poured out barley, generous,  
        glistening handfuls strewn for the reapers' midday meal. 
        
          
        
              And he forged a 
        thriving vineyard loaded with clusters,  
        bunches of lustrous grapes in gold, ripening deep purple  
        and climbing vines shot up on silver vine-poles.  
        And round it he cut a ditch in dark blue enamel 
        and round the ditch he staked a fence in tin. 
        And one lone footpath led toward the vineyard  
        and down it the pickers ran 
        whenever they went to strip the grapes at, vintage— 
        girls and boys, their hearts leaping in innocence,  
        bearing away the sweet ripe fruit in wicker baskets.  
        And there among them a young boy plucked his lyre,  
        so clear it could break the heart with longing,  
        and what he sang was a dirge for the dying year,  
        lovely . . . his fine voice rising and falling low  
        as the rest followed, all together, frisking, singing,  
        shouting, their dancing footsteps beating out the time. 
        
          
        
              And he forged on 
        the shield a herd of longhorn cattle,  
        working the bulls in beaten gold and tin, lowing loud  
        and rumbling out of the farmyard dung to pasture  
        along a rippling stream, along the swaying reeds.  
        And the golden drovers kept the herd in line,  
        four in all, with nine dogs at their heels,  
        their paws flickering quickly—a savage roar!— 
        a crashing attack—and a pair of ramping lions  
        had seized a bull from the cattle's front ranks— 
        he bellowed out as they dragged him off in agony.  
        Packs of dogs and the young herdsmen rushed to help  
        but the lions ripping open the hide of the huge bull  
        were gulping down the guts and the black pooling blood  
        while the herdsmen yelled the fast pack on-no use.  
        The hounds shrank from sinking teeth in the lions,  
        they balked, hunching close, barking, cringing away. 
        
          
        
              And the famous 
        crippled Smith forged a meadow 
        deep in a shaded glen for shimmering flocks to graze, 
        with shepherds' steadings, well-roofed huts and sheepfolds. 
        
          
        
              And the crippled 
        Smith brought all his art to bear  
        on a dancing circle, broad as the circle Daedalus  
        once laid out on Cnossos' spacious fields  
        for Ariadne the girl with lustrous hair. 
        Here young boys and girls, beauties courted 
        with costly gifts of oxen, danced and danced,  
        linking their arms, gripping each other's wrists.  
        And the girls wore robes of linen light and flowing, 
        the boys wore finespun tunics rubbed with a gloss of oil,  
        the girls were crowned with a bloom of fresh garlands,  
        the boys swung golden daggers hung on silver belts.  
        And now they would run in rings on their skilled feet,  
        nimbly, quick as a crouching potter spins his wheel,  
        palming it smoothly, giving it practice twirls  
        to see it run, and now they would run in rows,  
        in rows crisscrossing rows-rapturous dancing.  
        A breathless crowd stood round them struck with joy  
        and through them a pair of tumblers dashed and sprang,  
        whirling in leaping handsprings, leading on the dance. 
        
          
        
              And he forged the 
        Ocean River's mighty power girdling  
        round the outmost rim of the welded indestructible shield. 
        
          
        
              And once the god 
        had made that great and massive shield  
        he made Achilles a breastplate brighter than gleaming fire,  
        he made him a sturdy helmet to fit the fighter's temples,  
        beautiful, burnished work, and raised its golden crest  
        and made him greaves of flexing, pliant tin. 
                                                                    Now, 
        when the famous crippled Smith had finished off  
        that grand array of armor, lifting it in his arms 
        he laid it all at the feet of Achilles' mother Thetis— 
        and down she flashed like a hawk from snowy Mount Olympus  
        bearing the brilliant gear, the god of fire's gift. 
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