APOLLO'S priest to th' Argive fleet doth bring Gifts for his daughter, pris'ner to the king; For which her tender'd freedom he entreats; But, being dismiss'd with contumelious threats, At Phoebus' hands, by vengeful pray'r, he seeks To have a plague inflicted on the Greeks. Which had; Achilles doth a council cite, Embold'ning Calchas, in the king's despite, To tell the truth why they were punish'd so. From hence their fierce and deadly strife did grow. For wrong in which acides so raves, That goddess Thetis, from her throne of waves Ascending heav'n, of Jove assistance won, To plague the Greeks by absence of her son, And make the general himself repent To wrong so much his army's ornament. This found by Juno, she with Jove contends; Till Vulcan, with heav'n's cup, the quarrel ends.
ANOTHER ARGUMENT.
Alpha the prayer of Chryses sings: The army's plague: the strife of kings.
CHILLES' baneful wrath resound, O Goddess, that impos'd Infinite sorrows on the Greeks, and many brave souls los'd From breasts heroic; sent them far to that invisible cave That no light comforts; and their limbs to dogs and vultures gave:
• Eacides-Achilles, grandson of Eacus.
To all which Jove's will gave effect; from whom first strife begun Betwixt Atrides, king of men, and Thetis' godlike son.
What god gave Eris their command, and op'd that fighting vein? Jove's and Latona's son; who fir'd against the king of men, For contumély shown his priest, infectious sickness sent To plague the army, and to death by troops the soldiers went. Occasion'd thus: Chryses, the priest, came to the fleet to buy, For presents of unvalu'd price, his daughter's liberty; The golden sceptre and the crown of Phoebus in his hands Proposing; and made suit to all, but most to the commands Of both th' Atrides, who most rul’d. "Great Atreus' sons," said he, "And all ye well-greav'd Greeks, the gods, whose habitations be In heav'nly houses, grace your pow'rs with Priam's razéd town, And grant ye happy conduct home! To win which wish'd renown Of Jove, by honouring his son, far-shooting Phoebus, deign For these fit presents to dissolve the ransomable chain
Of my lov'd daughter's servitude." The Greeks entirely gave Glad acclamatións, for sign that their desires would have
The grave priest reverenc'd, and his gifts of so much price embrac'd. The Gen'ral yet bore no such mind, but viciously disgrac'd With violent terms the priest, and said:-" Dotard! avoid our fleet, Where ling'ring be not found by me; nor thy returning feet Let ever visit us again; lest nor thy godhead's crown,
Nor sceptre, save thee! Her thou seek'st I still will hold mine own, Till age deflow'r her. In our court at Argos, far transferr'd From her lov'd country, she shall ply her web, and see prepar'd
Atrides-patronymic of Agamemnon and Menelaus. Thetis' son—, Eris-the goddess of strife, personification of strife. Jove's and Latona's son-. -Apollo.
12 Unvalued-invaluable, not to be valued. So Shakespeare- "Inestimable stones, unvalu'd jewels."-Rich. III. 1. 4. Proposing--holding before him.
10" See my bed made," it may be Englished. The word is avriówσay, which signifies contra stantem, as standing of one side opposite to another on the other side; which yet others translate cupessentem et adornantem; which, since it shows best to a reader, I follow.-CHAPMAN.
With all fit ornaments my bed. Incense me then no more,
But, if thou wilt be safe, be gone." This said, the sea-beat shore, Obeying his high will, the priest trod off with haste and fear; And, walking silent, till he left far off his enemies' ear, Phœbus, fair hair'd Latona's son, he stirr'd up with a vow, To this stern purpose: "Hear, thou God that bear'st the silver bow, That Chrysa guard'st, rul'st Tenedos with strong hand, and the round Of Cilla most divine dost walk! O Smintheus! if crown'd With thankful off'rings thy rich fane I ever saw, or fir'd Fat thighs of oxen and of goats to thee, this grace desir'd Vouchsafe to me: pains for my tears let these rude Grecks repay, Fore'd with thy arrows." Thus he pray'd, and Phœbus heard him pray, And, vex'd at heart, down from the tops of steep heav'n stoop'd; his
And quiver cover'd round, his hands did on his shoulders throw ; And of the angry Deity the arrows as he mov'd
Rattled about him. Like the night he rang'd the host, and rov'd (Apart the fleet set) terribly; with his hard-loosing hand
His silver bow twang'd; and his shafts did first the mules command, And swift hounds; then the Greeks themselves his deadly arrows shot. The fires of death went never out; nine days his shafts flew hot About the army; and the tenth, Achilles called a court
Of all the Greeks; heav'n's white-arm'd Queen (who, ev'rywhere cut
Beholding her lov'd Greeks, by death) suggested it; and he (All met in one) arose, and said: "Atrides, now I see
We must be wandering again, flight must be still our stay, If flight can save us now, at once sickness and battle lay Such strong hand on us. Let us ask some prophet, priest, or prove Some dream-interpreter (for dreams are often sent from Jove) Why Phœbus is so much incens'd; if unperformed vows He blames in us, or hecatombs; and if these knees he bows
So Went-the second folio omits this word. 52 White-arm'd queen-Juno.
To death may yield his graves no more, but off'ring all supply
Of savours burnt from lambs and goats, avert his fervent eye, And turn his temp'rate." Thus, he sat; and then stood up to them Calchas, surnam❜d Thestorides, of augurs the supreme;
He knew things present, past, to come, and rul'd the equipage Of th' Argive fleet to Ilion, for his prophetic rage Giv'n by Apollo; who, well-seen in th' ill they felt, propos'd This to Achilles: "Jove's belov'd, would thy charge see disclos'd The secret of Apollo's wrath? then covʼnant and take oath To my discov'ry, that, with words and pow'rful actions both, Thy strength will guard the truth in me; because I well conceive That he whose empire governs all, whom all the Grecians give Confirm'd obedience, will be mov'd; and then you know the state Of him that moves him. When a king hath once mark'd for his hate A man inferior, though that day his wrath seems to digest Th' offence he takes, yet evermore he rakes up in his breast Brands of quick anger, till revenge hath quench'd to his desire The fire reservéd. Tell me, then, if, whatsoever ire Suggests in hurt of me to him, thy valour will prevent?"
Achilles answer'd: "All thou know'st speak, and be confident; For by Apollo, Jove's belov'd, (to whom performing vows, O Calchas, for the state of Greece, thy spirit prophetic shows Skills that direct us) not a man of all these Grecians here, I living, and enjoy'ng the light shot through this flow'ry sphere, Shall touch thee with offensive hands; though Agamemnon be The man in question, that doth boast the mightiest empery Of all our army." Then took heart the prophet unreprov'd, And said: "They are not unpaid vows, nor hecatombs, that mov'd 66 Rage-i. e. power, a frequent use of the word,-the poetic inspiration. 70 Discovery-declaration.
66 Empery-sovereign authority ;—
"Ruling in large and ample empery
O'er France, and all her almost kingly dukedoms." SHAKESPEARE.
67 Unreproved-irreproachable. See 11. 785.
The God against us; his offence is for his priest impair'd By Agamemnon, that refus'd the present he preferr'd,
And kept his daughter. This is cause why heav'n's Far-darter darts These plagues amongst us; and this still will empty in our hearts His deathful quiver, uncontain'd till to her loved sire The black-eyed damsel be resign'd; no rédemptory hire Took for her freedom,-not a gift, but all the ransom quit, And she convey'd, with sacrifice, till her enfranchis'd feet Tread Chrysa under; then the God, so pleas'd, perhaps we may Move to remission." Thus, he sate; and up, the great in sway, Heroic Agamemnon rose, eagerly bearing all;
His mind's seat overcast with fumes; an anger general Fill'd all his faculties; his eyes sparkled like kindling fire, Which sternly cast upon the priest, thus vented he his ire : "Prophet of ill! for never good came from thee towards me Not to a word's worth; evermore thou took'st delight to be Offensive in thy auguries, which thou continu'st still, Now casting thy prophetic gall, and vouching all our ill, Shot from Apollo, is impos'd since I refus'd the price Of fair Chryseis' liberty; which would in no worth rise
rate of herself, which moves my vows to have her home, Past Clytemnestra loving her, that grac'd my nuptial room With her virginity and flow'r. Nor ask her merits less For person, disposition, wit, and skill in housewif'ries. And yet, for all this, she shall go, if more conducible
That course be than her holding here. I rather wish the weal Of my lov'd army than the death. Provide yet instantly Supply for her, that I alone of all our royalty
93 Uncontain'd-not to be emptied, unrestrainable.
95 Quit-paid. To quite, or quit, often used in this sense by Chapman. 99 Eagerly bearing all-treating all angrily, sourly (from the French aigre). "If thou think'st so, vex him with eager words."
116 Supply for her-compensation for her loss.
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