The Library of Greek Mythology (Oxford World's Classics) (44 page)

BOOK: The Library of Greek Mythology (Oxford World's Classics)
6.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

entangled in a vine branch
: through the anger of Dionysos, because Telephos had deprived him of his cult (sc.
Il
. 1. 59); hence the vine, which is emblematic of the god.

lasted twenty years
: this is clearly problematic, as the war would then end twenty (rather than ten) years after the portent of the sparrows (which is said to have been revealed at the
first
muster by both Ap. above and Procl.). But there are indications that this was not a fancy of late origin. In the
Cypria
(Procl.) and
Little Iliad
(sc.
Il
. 19. 326) Achilles married Deidameia (and thus fathered Neoptolemos) on his way back from Mysia, and Neoptolemos must have had time to grow to fighting age before joining the Greeks in the final year of the war (see p. 156); and there is the anomalous statement by Helen in
Il
. 24. 765 f, where she says that it is the twentieth year since she left her homeland.

scraping rust from his Pelian spear
: following the principle of sympathetic magic noted for Iphiclos’ knife on p. 47, that what inflicts harm can cure it. The Pelian spear was the ashwood spear cut on Mount Pelion by Cheiron as a wedding present for Peleus, see p. 129 with
Il
. 16. 143 f.

Not even Artemis
: following the Vatican epitome, where the meaning of this is left to the reader’s understanding; I have completed the sentence following sc.
Il
. 1. 108 (cf. sc. Eur.
Orest
. 658). The reading in the Sabbaitic epitome, ‘it could not escape alive even if Artemis wanted it to,’ is surely a misinterpretation of the statement in its abbreviated form.

Agamemnon brought her. . . at the altar
: as in the
Cypria
(Procl.). See also Euripides’
Iphigeneia in Aulis
and the introductory speech of his
Iphigeneia in Tauris
.

Cycnos
: not the adversary of Heracles (pp. 82, 90) but a son of Poseidon who ruled at Colonai in the Troad (cf. P. 10. 14. 1 ff). Tenedos was a small island lying off the coast of the Troad.

While. . . offering a sacrifice to Apollo
: on Tenedos, following the
Cypria
(Procl.). Homer mentions the water-snake,
hydros
, as the cause of his wound,
Il
. 2. 723. The later tradition varies; in Soph.
Philoct. Mil
f, he is bitten on Chryse, an island near Lemnos, by a serpent guarding the local temple of Athene; or he is bitten where his comrades abandon him, on Lemnos (e.g. Hyg. 102).

the bow of Heracles
: Heracles gave it to his father Poias (or to Philoctetes himself) for lighting his pyre, see p. 91 and note.

sending Odysseus and Menelaos
: cf.
Il
. 3. 205 ff.

first. . . to disembark
: cf.
Il
. 2. 701 f., where his killer is a nameless Dardanian (as against Hector in the
Cypria
, see Procl.); that Protesilaos would be the first to enter battle is suggested in his name.

Laodameia
: there seems to have been some coverage of her story in the
Cypria
(P. 4. 2. 7; there she was described as Polydora, daughter of Meleager, but the present name is general in later authors). The pathetic tale appealed to later sentiment and was much developed and varied. Protesilaos was to be released from Hades for a limited period only. (See also Ovid
Heroides
18. and Hyg. 103 and 104. In Hyg. 103, Laodameia prays to be allowed three hours with him, and is unable to endure the sorrow when he dies for a second time.)

by hurling a stone at his head
: Cycnos (the father of Tenes, see above) was said to be invulnerable except in his head (sc. Lcophr. 232). There was another tradition that he was wholly invulnerable and Achilles had to strangle him as Heracles strangled the Nemean lion (e.g. Ov.
Met
. 12. 144, with the thong of his helmet).

Troilos
: a son of Priam (or Apollo, p. 125) and Hecuba (
Il
. 24. 257). There was a tradition that Troy could not be taken if he remained alive (Plautus
Bacchides
953 f, or if he lived to the age of twenty, VM 1. 210).

captured Lycaon
: see
Il
. 21. 34 ff. for the full story. Lycaon was sold into slavery in Lemnos (also Procl.), but was ransomed, and came up against Achilles on the twelfth day after his return, giving rise to the memorable scene in which he entreats the pitiless Achilles to spare him.

rustle the cattle of Aeneas
: cf.
Il
. 20. 90 ff. and 188 ff.

the following allies
: for the Trojan allies cf. Homer’s catalogue,
Il
. 2. 819 ff.

performed deeds of valour
: for
aristeuein;
the
aristeiai
of the various heroes, episodes in which an individual comes to the fore and remains the centre of attention while he performs exceptional feats, formed set-pieces in the epic narrative.

exchanged armour
: in Homer’s account, Glaucos exchanged ‘gold for bronze’ (the phrase became proverbial), provoking the poet to observe, in a rare personal comment, that Zeus must have deprived him of his wits (
Il
. 6. 234 ff.).

The river rushed out. . . massive flame
: this is rather unsatisfactory as a summary of
Il
. 21. 211 ff.

accidentally killed Hippolyte
: her sister, whom she killed with her lance while aiming at a deer, according to QS 1. 21 ff.; see also Appendix, 8 and note. The tradition that she came there to win glory to enable her to marry (Tzetz. Posthom. 14, referring to Hellanicos and others) reflects later ethnographical interests (see Hdt. 4. 117).

Thersites
: he abused Achilles ‘for his alleged passion’ (Procl.) for the Amazon, apparently an accusation of necrophilia (Eustath. on
Il
. 2. 219), and gouged out her eyes with his spear-point (Tzetz. sc. Lycophr. 999). The
Aethiopis
(Procl.) went on to say that Achilles sailed to Lesbos, sacrificed to Apollo, and was purified from the murder of Thersites by Odysseus (the first known reference to such a purification in Greek literature, for none is mentioned in Homer). On Thersites, see also p. 42 and
Il
. 2. 211 ff.

Memnon
: to provide a suitable opponent for Achilles, a warrior who resembles him in being the son of a goddess and having a set of arms made by Hephaistos (Procl.; cf. Achilles’ arms in
Il
. 18. 457 ff.). Proclus further reports that Thetis told her son Achilles of the fate in store for Memnon, and that Dawn asked Zeus to grant him immortality.

shot down . . . Scaean Gates
: as foretold in
Il
. 22. 359 f.

in the ankle
: it is said in late sources at least that his mother Thetis held Achilles by the ankle when dipping him into the Styx, or the fire (cf. p. 129), to make him immortal (e.g. Serv. on
Aen
. 6. 57).

on the White Island
: in the
Aethiopis
(Procl.) Thetis, with the Muses and her sisters, snatched Achilles’ body from the fire and conveyed it to the White Island (Leuke, in the Black Sea). But the present passage surely refers to the Homeric account in
Od
. 24. 43 ff., where the Greeks mix the bones in a golden urn for burial in a mound by the Hellespont; as Wagner observed, the phrase must have originated as a gloss on the Isles of the Blessed in the next sentence.

on the Isles of the Blessed
: a home at the ends of the earth for those whom the gods absolved from death, see Hes.
WD
167 ff. In Homer, Achilles descends to Hades, where he complains to Odysseus of his fate as king of the shades,
Od
. 11. 473 ff., but in
the
Aethiopis
, it can be inferred from Proclus’ summary that Thetis would have revived him and made him immortal after taking him to the White Island. In Pind.
ol. 2
. 79 ff., she conveyed him to the Isles of the Blessed. Ibycus, a sixth-century lyric poet, and Simonides are said to have placed him in Elysium (which was much the same) with Medea (sc. AR 4. 816).

the Trojans acting as judges
: in
Od
. 11. 542 ff., the Trojans and Athene are said to be the judges. In the
Little Iliad
(sc. Aristophanes.
Eq
. 1056) spies are sent to listen under the walls of Troy, and they hear two girls discussing the matter; when one says that Aias must have been the bravest because he carried off the body of Achilles, the other counters that Odysseus was even braver because he covered their retreat. There was also a tradition that they simply asked the Trojan prisoners (sc.
Od
. 11. 547).

the allies
: cf. Pind.
Nem
. 8. 26, where the Greeks decide the matter by secret ballot.

the Achaeans
: the Greeks (as in Homeric usage).

Aias killed himself
: see Sophocles’
Ajax
.

Calchas prophesied. . . bow of Heracles
: in the
Little Iliad
(Procl.) this was revealed by the Trojan Helenos, see below, and it seems to have been his only prophecy; in the later tradition the prophecies multiply, and are shared between Calchas and Helenos (to whom three different prophecies are attributed below). For a fuller account of the following see QS 9. 325 ff., which follows the same pattern. For the bow of Heracles, now owned by Philoctetes, see p. 151 and note. It was needed to kill Paris.

Odysseus. . . to see Philoctetes
: cf. QS 9. 333 ff. In the
Little Iliad
(Procl.) he was fetched by Diomedes alone.

cured by Podaleirios
: as sons of Ascler’js, he and his brother, Machaon, performed valuable services as healers while serving with the Greeks (cf.
Il
. 2. 731 f.). In the
Little Iliad
he was healed by Machaon (Procl.), here as in QS 9. 461 ff.

Helenos.. . to reveal
: a son of Priam and Hecuba, p. 125, whose qualities as a diviner are mentioned by Homer (
Il
. 6. 76, cf. 7. 44 ff.).

bones of Pelops
: see also P. 5. 13. 4 ff.

Neoptolemos
: the son of Achilles by Deidameia, the daughter of Lycomedes (see p. 129); he is still on Scyros, the island off Euboea where he was born. For Odysseus’ journey, cf.
Od
. 11. 506 ff. (where there is no mention of Phoenix).

Eurypylos . . . at the hand of Neoptolemos
: cf.
Od
. 11. 519 ff., he was killed with many others, ‘for the sake of a woman’s gifts’; for Priam had bribed his mother, Astyoche, to send him by offering her a golden vine made by Hephaistos (sc.
Od
. 11. 520, following Acousilaos).

Odysseus went. . . aid of Diomedes
: in the
Little Iliad
(Procl.), these were two separate expeditions. In the first, in which Diomedes played no part, Odysseus disguised himself to enter the city as a spy, where he was recognized by Helen (compare Helen’s own account in
Od
. 4. 242 ff.); in the second, he stole the Palladion with the help of Diomedes.

Odysseus. . . suggested it to Epeios
: in the
Little Iliad
, Epeios acted on Athene’s advice (Procl.; cf.
Od
. 8. 493). It is understandable that the idea should also have been attributed to the crafty Odysseus.

three thousand
: the text is surely defective here. Stesichorus said that there were a hundred (Eustathius 1698), and later authors give lower figures. Their function was merely to open the city to the main army.

devoured the sons of Laocoon
: in the
Sack of Troy
(Procl.) in the epic cycle, Laocoon was killed with one of his two sons; the portent signified that Troy would be destroyed along with the senior branch of the Trojan royal family, and understanding its meaning, Aeneas, who belonged to the junior branch, withdrew to Mount Ida. Although later authors disagreed on the cause and significance of the episode, it can be assumed here that the snakes are sent by Apollo as a sign of the coming destruction.

Helen. . . Odysseus covered his mouth
: see
Od
. 4. 274 ff.

came to his rescue
: because his father Antenor had offered them his hospitality and protection when they visited the city as ambassadors before the Greek landing, see p. 151 and
Il
. 3. 205 ff.

Aeneas . . . his piety
: cf. Xen.
On Hunting
1. 15 (where he takes the household gods also); this is the tradition developed by Virgil
Aen. 2
. 699 ff. For the ancients, respect and care for parents was a religious duty (cf. Plato
Laws
930e ff.). In the
Sack of Troy
(Procl.) Aeneas left before the sack, while in the
Iliad
(20. 307 ff.), Poseidon prophesied that he and his descendants would rule in Troy after the destruction of Priam’s family.

Aithra
: she was taken captive by the Dioscuri when they were recovering Helen from Attica, p. 143, and became Helen’s maid and went to Troy with her (
Il
. 3. 143 f., Plut.
Thes
. 34).

had later arrived at Troy
: i.e. after the period covered by the
Iliad;
a similar phrase is used of Amphilochos on p. 162, another figure not mentioned by Homer.

Locrian Aias .. . towards the sky
: ‘lesser’ Aias (cf.
Il
. 2. 527 ff), not to be confused with the more famous son of Telamon (who killed himself before the sack, p. 155). In early epic, Aias merely dragged her away, pulling the statue over as he did so (Procl., cf. P. 5. 19. 5); the rape and the statue’s shocked response are Hellenistic developments (first attested for Callimachus in the third century, sc.
Il
. 13. 66). An important episode, because it gives rise to the wrath of Athene, which plays such an important part in the story of the return voyages.

they hurled Astyanax from the ramparts
: as in Proclus’ summary of the
Sack of Troy
, the killing of Hector’s son (and slaughter of Polyxena) take place after the burning of Troy; Proclus states that in the epic Odysseus killed him, but the full story may have accorded with Eur.
Troades
721 ff., where it is said that Odysseus argued for his death before the assembly and the Greeks carried out the sentence. In the
Little Iliad
, Neoptolemos hurled him down
during
the sack, after seizing him from his nurse (quotation in Tzetz. sc. Lycophr. 1268). His fate was predicted in the
Iliad
(24. 734 ff.).

Other books

Lucky Billy by John Vernon
2B or Not 2B (Roomies Series) by Stephanie Witter
The Dead Place by Stephen Booth
Cop Out by Ellery Queen
A Game of Universe by Eric Nylund
Henry IV by Chris Given-Wilson
Alcatraz vs. the Shattered Lens by Brandon Sanderson