Tuesday, March 19, 2013

ILIAD CHAPTER SUMMARY

-->

Ten years have passed since the Greek armies arrived in Asia minor to lay
waste Troy and win back their honor. Yet in all those years, neither side has
gained enough advantage to force a surrender. The Greeks remain encamped
outside the walls of the city, their nighttime fires mocking the glittering firmament
while their generals plot stratagems and their warriors hone weapons.
.......Among the Greek leaders, bloodstained and hardened to war, are
Agamemnon, the commander-in-chief; Menelaus, King of Sparta and brother of
Agamemnon; Odysseus, king of Ithaca and a military genius of unparalleled
cunning; and Aias the Great, a giant warrior of colossal strength. With sword and
spear, with rocks and fists, the Greeks have fought the Trojans–led by the
godlike Hector, their mightiest warrior, and Aeneas, a war machine second only
to Hector on the Trojan side–to a standoff. In time, the Greeks believe, they will
prevail. They have right on their side, after all. But even more important, they
have Achilles. He is the greatest warrior ever to walk the earth–fierce, unrelenting,
unconquerable. When Achilles fights, enemies cower in terror and
rivers run with blood. No man can stand against him. Not Hector. Not an army of
Hectors.
.......But, alas, in the tenth year of the great war, Achilles refuses to fight after
Agamemnon insults him. No one can offend the great Achilles with impunity. Not
even Agamemnon, general of generals, who can whisper a command that ten
thousand will obey. The rift between them opens after Agamemnon and Achilles
capture two maidens while raiding the region around Troy. Agamemnon’s prize is
Chryseis, the daughter of a priest of the god Apollo. For Achilles, there is the
beautiful Briseis, who becomes his slave mistress.
When Chryses, the father of Chryseis, offers a ransom for his daughter,
Agamemnon refuses it. Chryses then invokes his patron, Apollo, for aid, and the
sun god sends a pestilence upon the Greeks. Many soldiers die before
Agamemnon learns the cause of their deaths from the soothsayer Calchas.
Unable to wage war against disease, Agamemnon reluctantly surrenders
Chryseis to her father.
.......Unfortunately for the Greeks, the headstrong king then orders his men to
seize Briseis as a replacement for his lost prize. Achilles is outraged. But rather
than venting his wrath with his mighty sword, he retires from battle, vowing never
again to fight for his countrymen. On his behalf, his mother, the sea nymph
Thetis, importunes Zeus, king of the gods, to turn the tide of war in favor of the
Trojans. Such a reversal would be fitting punishment for Agamemnon. But Zeus
is reluctant to intervene in the war, for the gods of Olympus have taken sides,
actively meddling in daily combat. For him to support one army over the other
would be to foment celestial discord. Among the deities favoring the Trojans are
Ares, Aphrodite, Apollo, and Artemis. On the side of the Greeks are Athena,
Poseidon, and Hera–the wife of Zeus. There would be hell-raising in the heavens
if Zeus shows partiality. In particular, his wife’s scolding tongue would wag
without surcease. But Zeus is Zeus, god of thunder and lightning. In the end, he
well knows, he can do as he pleases. Swayed by the pleas of Thetis, he confers
his benisons on the Trojans.
.......However, when the next battle rages, the Greeks–fired with Promethean
defiance and succored by their gods–fight like madmen. True, their right arm,
Achilles, is absent; but their left arm becomes a scythe that reaps a harvest of
Trojans. Aias and Diomedes are especially magnificent. Only intervention by the
Trojans’ Olympian supporters save them from massacre. Alas, however, when
the Trojans regroup for the next fight, Zeus infuses new power into Hector’s
sinews. After Hector bids a tender goodbye to his wife, Andromache, and little
boy, Astyanax, he leads a fierce charge that drives the Greeks all the way back
to within sight of the shoreline, where they had started ten years before. Not a
few Greeks, including Agamemnon, are ready to board their ships and set sail for
home. Such has been the fury of the Hector-led onslaught.
.......Then Nestor, a wise old king of three score and ten, advises Agamemnon to
make peace with Achilles. The proud commander, now repentant and fully
acknowledging his unjust treatment of Achilles, accepts the advice and pledges
to restore Briseis to Achilles. When representatives of Agamemnon meet with lordly
Achilles, the great warrior is idly passing time with the person he loves
most in the world, his friend Patroclus, a distinguished warrior in his own right.
Told that all wrongs against him will be righted, Achilles–still smoldering with
anger–spurns the peace-making overture. His wrath is unquenchable. However,
Patroclus, unable to brook the Trojan onslaught against his countrymen, borrows
the armor of Achilles and, at the next opportunity, enters the battle disguised as
Achilles.
.......The stratagem works for a while as Patroclus chops and hacks his way
through the Trojan ranks. But eventually Hector’s spear fells brave Patroclus with
no small help from meddlesome Apollo. The Trojan hero celebrates the kill with
an audacious coup de grĂ¢ce: He removes and puts on Achilles’ armor.
Grievously saddened by the death of his friend and outraged at the brazen
behavior of Hector, wrathful Achilles–with a new suit of armor forged in Olympus
by Hephaestus at the behest of Achilles' mother, Thetis–agrees to rejoin the fight
at long last.
.......The next day, Achilles rules the battlefield with death and destruction, cutting
a swath of terror through enemy ranks. Trojan blood mulches the fields. Limbs lie
helter-skelter, broken and crooked, as fodder for diving raptors. Terrified, the
Trojans flee to the safety of Troy and its high walls–all of them, that is, except
Hector. Foolishly, out of his deep sense of honor and responsibility as protector
of Troy, he stands his ground. In a fairy tale about a noble hero with an adoring
wife and son, Hector would surely have won the day against a vengeful, alldevouring foe.
His compatriots–and the gallery of sons and daughters and wives
peering down from the Trojan bulwarks–would surely have crowned him king. But
in the brutal world of Achilles–whose ability to disembowel and decapitate is a
virtue–Hector suffers a humiliating death. After Achilles chases and catches him,
he easily slays him, then straps his carcass to his chariot and drags him around
the walls of Troy. Patroclus has been avenged, the Greeks have reclaimed
battlefield supremacy, and victory seems imminent.
.......However, old Priam, the King of Troy and the father of Hector, shows that
Trojan valor has not died with Hector. At great risk to himself, he crosses the
battlefield in a chariot and presents himself to Achilles to claim the body of his
son. But there is no anger in Priam's heart. He understands the ways of wars and
warriors. He knows that Achilles, the greatest of the Greek soldiers, had no
choice but to kill his son, the greatest of the Trojan warriors. Humbly, Priam
embraces Achilles and gives him his hand. Deeply moved, Achilles welcomes
Priam and orders an attendant to prepare Hector's body. To spare Priam the
shock of seeing the grossly disfigured corpse, Achilles orders the attendant to
cloak it. Troy mourns Hector for nine days, then burns his body and puts the
remains in a golden urn that is buried in a modest grave.