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        Iliad 21 110ff (Fagles, 
        p 523) 
        
              So the illustrious 
        son of Priam begged for life  
        but only heard a merciless voice in answer: "Fool,  
        don't talk to me of ransom. No more speeches.  
        Before Patroclus met his day of destiny, true,  
        it warmed my heart a bit to spare some Trojans:  
        droves I took alive and auctioned off as slaves.  
        But now not a single Trojan flees his death,  
        not one the gods hand over to me before your gates,  
        none of all the Trojans, sons of Priam least of all!  
        Come, friend, you too must die. Why moan about it so? 
        Even Patroclus died, a far, far better man than you.  
        And look, you see how handsome and powerful I am?  
        The son of a great man, the mother who gave me life  
        a deathless goddess. But even for me, I tell you,  
        death and the strong force of fate are waiting. 
        There will come a dawn or sunset or high noon  
        when a man will take my life in battle too— 
        flinging a spear perhaps 
        or whipping a deadly arrow off his bow." 
                                                                    At that 
        Lycaon's knees gave way on the spot, his heart too. 
        He let go of the spear, he sank back down . . .  
        spreading both arms wide. Drawing his sharp sword  
        Achilles struck his collarbone just beside the neck  
        and the two-edged blade drove home, plunging to the hilt— 
        and down on the ground he sprawled, stretched facefirst  
        and dark blood pouring out of him drenched the earth.  
        Achilles grabbed a foot, slung him into the river,  
        washed away downstream as he cried above him  
        savage words to wing him on his way: "There— 
        lie there! Make your bed with the fishes now, 
        they'll dress your wound and lick it clean of blood—  
        so much for your last rites! Nor will your mother  
        lay your corpse on a bier and mourn her darling son— 
        whirling Scamander will roll you down the sea's broad bosom!  
        And many a fish, leaping up through the waves, breaking  
        the cold ripples shivering dark will dart and bolt  
        Lycaon's glistening fat! Die, Trojans, die— 
        till I butcher all the way to sacred Troy— 
        run headlong on, I'll hack you from behind!  
        Nothing can save you now— 
        not even your silver-whirling, mighty-tiding river—  
        not for all the bulls you've slaughtered to it for years,  
        the rearing stallions drowned alive in its eddies . . . die!— 
        even so—writhing in death till all you Trojans pay  
        for Patroclus' blood and the carnage of Achaeans  
        killed by the racing ships when I was out of action!" 
        
          
        
              The more he 
        vaunted the more the river's anger rose, 
        churning at heart for a way to halt his rampage,  
        godlike Achilles, and stop the Trojans' rout. 
        But now Pelides shaking his long-shadowed spear 
        was charging Asteropaeus, mad to cut him down— 
        Pelegon's son, himself a son of the Axius River 
        broad and fast and Acessamenus' eldest daughter,  
        Periboea, loved by the deep-swirling stream.  
        Achilles went for Asteropaeus fresh from the ford,  
        braced to face him there and brandishing two spears 
        and the Xanthus filled the Trojan's heart with courage,  
        the river seething for all the youths Achilles slaughtered,  
        chopped to bits in its tide without a twinge of pity.  
        Closing against each other, just about in range, 
        the magnificent runner Achilles opened up, 
        "Who on earth are you? Where do you hail from?— 
        you with the gall to go against my onslaught.  
        Pity the ones whose sons stand up to me in war!" 
        
          
        
              But the noble son 
        of Pelegon answered firmly, 
        "High-hearted son of Peleus, why ask about my birth?  
        I hail from Paeonia's rich soil, a far cry from here,  
        heading Paeonian troops with their long spears,  
        and this my eleventh day since raising Troy.  
        My birth? I come from the Axius' broad currents— 
        Axius floods the land with the clearest stream on earth 
        and Axius fathered the famous Spearman Pelegon.  
        Men say I am his son. 
        Now on with it, great Pelides, let us fight!" 
                                                                    Menacing so 
        as brilliant Achilles raised the Pelian ash spear 
        but the fighting Asteropaeus, quick, ambidextrous,  
        hurled both spears at once—one shaft hit the shield,  
        no breakthrough, the shaft could not smash through,  
        the gold blocked it, forged in the god's gift.  
        But the other grazed Achilles' strong right arm 
        and dark blood gushed as the spear shot past his back,     
        stabbing the earth hard, still lusting to sink in flesh . . .  
        But next Achilles, burning to cut down Asteropaeus  
        hurled his ashen shaft—it flew straight as a die  
        but a clean miss—it struck the river's high bank  
        and half the length of the lance stuck deep in soil.  
        So Achilles, drawing the sharp sword at his hip, 
        sprang at the man in rage as he tried to wrench 
        Pelides' spear from the bank but his grip failed. 
        Three times he tried to wrench it free, tugging madly, 
        thrice gave up the struggle—the fourth with all his might 
        he fought to bend Aeacides' shaft and break it off  
        but before it budged the hero was all over him, 
        slashing out his life, slitting his belly open— 
        a scooping slice at the navel and all his bowels  
        spilled out on the ground, darkness swirled his eyes  
        as he gasped his breath away. And trampling his chest  
        Achilles tore his gear off, glorying over him now:  
        "Lie there with the dead! Punishing work, you see,  
        to fight the sons of invincible Cronus' son, 
        even sprung from a river as you are! You- 210  
        you claimed your birth from a river's broad stream?  
        Well I can boast my birth from powerful Zeus himselfl  
        My father's the man who rules the hordes of Myrmidons,  
        Peleus, son of Aeacus, and Aeacus sprang from Zeus  
        and as Zeus is stronger than rivers surging out to sea,  
        so the breed of Zeus is stronger than any stream's.  
        Here is a great river flowing past you, look— 
        what help can he give you? Nonel  
        Nothing can fight the son of Cronus, Zeus, 
        not even Achelous king of rivers vies with Zeus,  
        not even the overpowering Ocean's huge high tides,  
        the source of all the rivers and all the seas on earth  
        and all springs and all deep wells—all flow from the ocean  
        but even the Ocean shrinks from the mighty Father's bolt  
        when terrible thunder crashes down the skies!" 
                                                                    With that 
        Achilles pulled his bronze spear from the river bluff  
        and left him there, the Trojan's life slashed out,  
        sprawled in the sand, drenched by the black tide— 
        eels and fish the corpse's frenzied attendants 
        ripping into him, nibbling kidney-fat away.  
        But Achilles went for Paeonians, helmets plumed,  
        still running in panic along the river's rapids  
        once they saw their finest fall in the onslaught, 
        beaten down by Pelides' hands and hacking sword. 
        He killed in a blur of kills—Thersilochus, Mydon,  
        Astypylus, Mnesus, Thrasius, Aenius and Ophelestes— 
        still more Paeonian men the runner would have killed  
        if the swirling river had not risen, crying out in fury, 
        taking a man's shape, its voice breaking out of a whirlpool: 
        "Stop, Achilles! Greater than any man on earth,  
        greater in outrage too— 
        for the gods themselves are always at your side!  
        But if Zeus allows you to kill off all the Trojans,  
        drive them out of my depths at least, I ask you,  
        out on the plain and do your butchery there. 
        All my lovely rapids are crammed with corpses now, 
        no channel in sight to sweep my currents out to sacred sea— 
        I'm choked with corpses and still you slaughter more,  
        you blot out more! Leave me alone, have done— 
        captain of armies, I am filled with horror!"  
        
          
        
              And the breakneck 
        runner only paused to answer,  
        "So be it, Scamander sprung of Zeus—as you command.  
        But I, I won't stop killing these overweening Trojans,  
        not till I've packed them in their walls and tested Hector,  
        strength against strength—he kills me or I kill him!" 
        
          
        
        Down on the Trojan front 
        he swept like something superhuman 
        and now from his deep whirls the river roared to Phoebus,  
        "Disgrace—god of the silver bow and bom of Zeusl  
        You throw to the winds the will of Cronus' son— 
        time and again Zeus gave you strict commands:  
        Stand by the Trojan ranks and save their lives  
        till the sun goes down at last and darkness shrouds  
        the plowlands ripe with grain!" 
                                                          When he heard that 
        Achilles the famous Spearman, leaping down from the bluff,  
        plunged in the river's heart and the river charged against him,  
        churning, surging, all his rapids rising in white fury  
        and drove the mass of corpses choking tight his channel,  
        the ruck Achilles killed-Scamander heaved them up 
        and bellowing like a bull the river flung them out 
        on the dry land but saved the living, hiding them down  
        the fresh clear pools of his thundering whirling current 
        but thrashing over Achilles' shoulders raised a killer-wave— 
        the tremendous thrust of it slammed against his shield  
        and he staggered, lost his footing, his arms flung out  
        for a tall strong elm, he clung but out it came by the roots,  
        toppling down, ripping away the whole cliff, blocking the stream  
        with a tangled snarl of branches crashing into it full length  
        to dam the river bank to bank-Bursting up from a whirlpool  
        Achilles dashed for the plain, his feet flying in terror  
        but the great god would not let up, hurling against him,  
        Scamander looming into a murderous breaker, dark, over him,  
        dead set on stopping the brilliant Achilles' rampage here  
        and thrusting disaster off the struggling Trojan force— 
        But the hero sprang away, far as a hard-flung spear,  
        swooping fast as the black eagle, the fierce marauder,  
        both the strongest and swiftest bird that flies the sky— 
        on he streaked and the bronze rang out against his chest,  
        clashing grimly—slipping out from under the wave he fled  
        with the river rolling on behind him, roaring, huge . . .  
        As a farmhand runs a ditch from a dark spring, sluicing  
        the gushing stream through plants and gardens, swinging  
        his mattock to knock the clods out down the shoot  
        and the water rushes on, tearing the pebbles loose  
        and what began as a trickle hits a quick slope and  
        down it goes, outstripping the man who guides it— 
        so the relentless tide kept overtaking Achilles,  
        yes, for all his speed—gods are stronger than men.  
        Again and again the brilliant swift Achilles whirled,  
        trying to stand and fight the river man-to-man and see  
        if all the immortal gods who rule the vaulting skies  
        were after him, putting him to rout-again and again  
        the mighty crest of the river fed by the rains of Zeus  
        came battering down his shoulders, down from high above  
        bi it Achilles kept on leaping, higher, desperate now  
        as the river kept on dragging down his knees, lunging  
        under him, cutting the ground from under hic legs . . . 
        Pelides groaned, scanning the arching blank sky: 
        "Father Zeus! To think in all my misery not one god  
        can bring himself to rescue me from this river!  
        Then I'd face any fate. And no god on high,  
        none is to blame so much as my dear mother— 
        how she lied, she beguiled me, she promised me  
        I'd die beneath the walls of the armored Trojans,  
        cut down in blood by Apollo's whipping arrows!  
        I wish Hector had killed me,  
        the best man bred in Troy-the killer a hero then  
        and a hero too the man whose corpse he stripped! 
        Now look what a wretched death I'm doomed to suffer,  
        trapped in this monstrous river like some boy, some pig-boy  
        swept away, trying to ford a winter torrent in a storm!" 
        
          
        
              Quick to his cry 
        Poseidon and Pallas moved in close,  
        stood at his shoulder now and taking human form,  
        grasped him hand-to-hand, spoke bracing words,  
        Poseidon who shakes the mainland first to say,  
        "Courage, Achilles! Why such fear, such terror?  
        Not with a pair like us to urge you on-gods-in-arms  
        sent down with Zeus's blessings, I and Pallas Athena.  
        It's not your fate to, be swallowed by a river:  
        he'll subside, and soon—you'll see for yourself.  
        But we do have sound advice, if only you will yield.  
        Never rest your hands from the great leveler war,  
        not till you pack and cram the Trojan armies tight  
        in the famous walls of Troy—whoever flees your onset.  
        But once you've ripped away Prince Hector's life,  
        back to the ships you go! We give you glory— 
        seize it in your hands!" 
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