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THE DEATH OF ACHILLES

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Where Simoeis and Xanthos, holy streams,

Flow brimming on the level, and chance gleams

Betray far Ida through a rended cloud

And hint the awful home of Zeus, whose shroud

The thunder is—'twixt Ida and the main

Behold gray Ilios, Priam's fee, the plain

About her like a carpet; from whose height

The watchman, ten years watching, every night

Counteth the beacon fires and sees no less

Their number as the years wax and duress

Of hunger thins the townsmen day by day—

More than the Greeks kill plague and famine slay.

Here in their wind-swept city, ten long years

Beset and in this tenth in blood and tears

And havocry to fall, old Priam's sons

Guard still their gods, their wives and little ones,

Guard Helen still, for whose fair womanhood

The sin was done, woe wrought, and all the blood

Of Danaan and Dardan in their pride

Shed; nor yet so the end, for Heré cried

Shrill on the heights more vengeance on wrong done,

And Greek or Trojan paid it. Late or soon

By sword or bitter arrow they went hence,

Each with their goodliest paying one man's offence.

Goodliest in Troy fell Hector; back to Greek

Then swung the doomstroke, and to Dis the bleak

Must pass great Hector's slayer. Zeus on high,

Hidden from men, held up the scales; the sky

Told Thetis that her son must go the way

He sent Queen Hecuba's—himself must pay,

Himself though young, splendid Achilles' self,

The price of manslaying, with blood for pelf.

A grief immortal took her, and she grieved

Deep in sea-cave, whereover restless heaved

The wine-dark ocean—silently, not moving,

Tearless, a god. O Gods, however loving,

That is a lonely grief that must go dry

About the graves where the beloved lie,

And knows too much to doubt if death ends all

Pleasure in strength of limb, joy musical,

Mother-love, maiden-love, which never more

Must the dead look for on the further shore

Of Acheron, and past the willow-wood

Of Proserpine!

But when he understood,

Achilles, that his end was near at hand,

Darkling he heard the news, and on the strand

Beyond the ships he stood awhile, then cried

The Sea-God that high-hearted and clear-eyed

He might go down; and this for utmost grace

He asked, that not by battle might his face

Be marred, nor fighting might some Dardan best

Him who had conquered ever. For the rest,

Fate, which had given, might take, as fate should be.

So prayed he, and Poseidon out of the sea,

There where the deep blue into sand doth fade

And the long wave rolls in, a bar of jade,

Sent him a portent in that sea-blue bird

Swifter than light, the halcyon; and men heard

The trumpet of his praise: "Shaker of Earth,

Hail to thee! Now I fare to death in mirth,

As to a banquet!"

So when day was come

Lightly arose the prince to meet his doom,

And kissed Briseïs where she lay abed

And never more by hers might rest his head:

"Farewell, my dear, farewell, my joy," said he;

"Farewell to all delights 'twixt thee and me!

For now I take a road whose harsh alarms

Forbid so sweet a burden to my arms."

Then his clean limbs his weeping squires bedight

In all the mail Hephaistos served his might

Withal, of breastplate shining like the sun

Upon flood-water, three-topped helm whereon

Gleamed the gold basilisk, and goodly greaves.

These bore he without word; but when from sheaves

Of spears they picked the great ash Pelian

Poseidon gave to Peleus, God to a man,

For no man's manège else—than all men's fear:

"Dry and cold fighting for thee this day, my spear,"

Quoth he. And so when one the golden shield

Immortal, daedal, for no one else to wield,

Cast o'er his head, he frowned: "On thy bright face

Let me see who shall dare a dint," he says,

And stood in thought full-armed; thereafter poured

Libation at the tent-door to the Lord

Of earth and sky, and prayed, saying: "O Thou

That hauntest dark Dodona, hear me now,

Since that the shadowing arm of Time is flung

Far over me, but cloudeth me full young.

Scatheless I vow them. Let one Trojan cast

His spear and loose my spirit. Rage is past

Though I go forth my most provocative

Adventure: 'tis not I that seek. Receive

My prayer Thou as I have earned it—lo,

Dying I stand, and hail Thee as I go

Lord of the Ægis, wonderful, most great!"

Which done, he took his stand, and bid his mate

Urge on the steeds; and all the Achaian host

Followed him, not with outcry or loud boast

Of deeds to do or done, but silent, grim

As to a shambles—so they followed him,

Eyeing that nodding crest and swaying spear

Shake with the chariot. Solemn thus they near

The Trojan walls, slow-moving, as by a Fate

Driven; and thus before the Skaian Gate

Stands he in pomp of dreadful calm, to die,

As once in dreadful haste to slay.

Thereby

The walls were thick with men, and in the towers

Women stood gazing, clustered close as flowers

That blur the rocks in some high mountain pass

With delicate hues; but like the gray hill-grass

Which the wind sweepeth, till in waves of light

It tideth backwards—so all gray or white

Showed they, as sudden surges moved them cloak

Their heads, or bare their faces. And none spoke

Among them, for there stood not woman there

But mourned her dead, or sensed not in the air

Her pendent doom of death, or worse than death.

Frail as flowers were their faces, and all breath

Came short and quick, as on this dreadful show

Staring, they pondered it done far below

As on a stage where the thin players seem

Unkith to them who watch, the stuff of dream.

Nor else about the plain showed living thing

Save high in the blue where sailed on outspread wing

A vulture bird intent, with mighty span

Of pinion.

In the hush spake the dead man,

Hollow-voiced, terrible: "Ye tribes of Troy,

Here stand I out for death, and ye for joy

Of killing as ye will, by cast of spear,

By bowshot or with sword. If any peer

Of Hector or Sarpedon care the bout

Which they both tried aforetime let him out

With speed, and bring his many against one,

Fearing no treachery, for there shall be none

To aid me, God nor man; nor yet will I

Stir finger in the business, but will die

By murder sooner than in battle fall

Under some Trojan hand."

Breathless stood all,

Not moving out; but Paris on the roof

Of his high house, where snug he sat aloof,

Drew taut the bowstring home, and notched a shaft,

Soft whistling to himself, what time with craft

Of peering eyes and narrow twisted face

He sought an aim.

Swift from her hiding-place

Came burning Helen then, in her blue eyes

A fire unquenchable, but cold as ice

That scorcheth ere it strike a mortal chill

Upon the heart. "Darest thou … ?"

Smiling still,

He heeded not her warning, nor he read

The terror of her eyes, but drew and sped

A screaming arrow, deadly, swerving not—

Then stood to watch the ruin he had wrought.

He heard the sob of breath o'er all the host

Of hushing men; he marked, but then he lost,

The blood-spurt at the shaft-head; for the crest

Upheaved, the shoulders stiffen'd, ere to the breast

Bent down the head, as though the glazing sight

Curious would mark the death-spot. Still upright

Stood he; but as a tree that on the side

Of Ida yields to axe her soaring pride

And lightlier waves her leafy crown, and swings

From side to side—so on his crest the wings

Erect seemed shaking upwards, and to sag

The spear's point, and the burden'd head to wag

Before the stricken body felt the stroke,

Or the strong knees grew lax, or the heart broke.

Breathless they waited; then the failing man

Stiffened anew his neck, and changed and wan

Looked for the last time in the face of day,

And seemed to dare the Gods such might to slay

As this, the sanguine splendid thing he was,

Withal now gray of face and pinched. Alas,

For pride of life! Now he had heard his knell.

His spirit passed, and crashing down he fell,

Mighty Achilles, and struck the earth, and lay

A huddled mass, a bulk of bronze and clay

Bestuck with gilt and glitter, like a toy.

There dropt a forest hush on watching Troy,

Upon the plain and watching ranks of men;

And from a tower some woman keened him then

With long thin cry that wavered in the air—

As once before one wailed her Hector there.

Helen Redeemed and Other Poems

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