Buried in her palace-that the thick walls may deaden the horror breathed from the field where her husband fights. Too sacred a thing was such sorrow as hers to Homer's soul, to suffer the Bard of Nature to smite it with such affliction as the sight of him alive, and about to die, under the hands of that inexorable homicide. He mentions her not; but all the people thought of her then-and how many million eyes have since wept for her, unnamed at that catastrophe! We remember the parting between her and her hero-her her hopes and her fears-her tears and her smiles-as their Astyanax hung back alarmed from the waving crest of his father. At this moment her once prophetic soul has lost its gifted vision-and she is dreaming of his return! But how fares it now with the noble Hector? Not unheard had been the outcries of his parents-for Hector to them was pious, as he was to the gods. For their sakes he desired to live-and think ye, that at that moment, though he names not her name, that the image of his Andromache came not across him with Astyanax on her "fragrant bosom?" But Polydamas would reproach him-if now he shunned the combat-Polydamas, who bade him lead the Trojans back that last calamitous night " In which Achilles rose to arms again!" Man and matron-base and brave alike-will dishonour Hector as the cause of all that slaughter-if he slay not or be slain by Achilles. Shall he then seek to parley with the king of the Myrmidons, and offer to restore Helen to the sons of Atreus, and all the treasures Paris brought with her in his fleet to Troy? Perish all such thoughts-let them meet at once in mortal combat, and leave the victory in the hands of Jove! So communed Hector with his own heart; nor can we imagine words more affecting than are Homer's in this place-in the divine skill of Genius, instructed by the nobility of nature. He shews us a hero struggling against fear-and at last overcome-taking to flight-and yet still a hero. Should any one deny it-he may depend upon it that he is himself a cowardand what is worse-a blockhead. Not so thought Homer-not sc though ight the immortal gods. gods. They saw Hector flying before Achillesas flies a dove before a hawkfawn before a hound, " as trembling she skulks among the shrubs"-and yet they despised him not-but they pitied the hero. The sire of god exclaimed "Ah! I behold a warrior dear to me Around the walls of Ilium driven, and grieve For Hector! who the thighs of fatte bulls On yonder heights of Ida many-valed Burn'd oft to me, and in the heights c Troy. But him Achilles, glorious chief, around The city walls of Priam now pursues. Think then, ye gods, delay not to decide Shall we preserve, or leave him now t fall, Brave as he is, by Peleus' mighty son?' So said Jupiter-and therefore it sig nifies nothing what says Jew Peter. But we are hurried away by ou scorn of hypocrisy;-look at Achil les ere Hector flies, and then at the Flight and the Pursuit, all of whicl you must be contented with in our prose-for we have not room always to quote all the great trans lators. NORTH. These (thoughts) he revolved while tarrying: but near to him came Achilles, Equal to the helm-shaking warrior Mars, Over his right shoulder brandishing the Pelian spear Terrible: and around him shone the brass like to the flash Of blazing fire, or of the rising sun. Hector, therefore, when he saw (him), trembling seized, nor dared he There remain, but left the gates, and flying went. The son of Peleus, to his swift feet trusting, rushed after, Like as a falcon on the mountains, the swiftest of birds, Darts easily on a trembling dove : But it flies aslant; and he near-at-hand shrill screaming, Rushes frequently, and his appetite impels him to take her : Thus eagerly indeed did he (Achilles) flee on him directly: trembling, fled Hector Under the walls of the Trojans, and plied his agile limbs. But they past the prospect-mount and the wind-exposed fig-tree, But the other in summer even out-rushes, like to hail The Trojan dames, and their daughters fair, were-wont-to-wash Erst in time of peace, ere the sons of the Greeks had come. The moment Homer's imagination re-creates Achilles, he re-appears terrible, and more terrible, his figure and his aspect sublimed by more transcendent imagery, borrowed from the great phenomena of earth and heaven. Stars, comets, moon, and sun-and no objects less glorious -are made to aggrandize the hero of the Iliad; and yet the same images are always, in something mighty, when applied to him, new; as, indeed, to the eye of a poet, they are always new, even in themselvesno two sunrises, or sunsets, being identical to the vision of a "Maker." The Apparition that puts Hector to flight, is the most insupportable of all; and, though seen from afar, felt, on its close approach, sudden as supernatural. More deadly is he, thus opposed, Mars to mortal, than when the whole army fled before him;there is intenser concentration of terror in his armour, "like lightning, or like flame, or like the sun ascending." Had Hector not fled, Homer had nodded when broad awake. The Prince of Troy would not have fled from Ajax, the son of Telamon, nor from Diomed, who, when Achilles lay in his wrath among his ships, was thought equal to Achilles, nor from Agamemnon, king of men. But there was one, in presence of whose spear no hero might abide-before whom the river gods themselves quailed, " and hid themselves among their reedy banks;" and at close of that combat, in which he shone brightest even in the midst of the celestials, it was inevitable in nature, that even the defender of his country should be appalled. For he was not goddess-born; bright indeed were the arms he wore -once worn by Achilles-but what were they to the Vulcanian panoply, at whose sound, as Thetis let them fall at her son's feet, fear "bowed the astonished souls" of the Myr midons? It would have been most "The son of Peleus, as he ran, his brows MOST PRAISE," So blent into one in his fiery spirit were Revenge and the Love of Glory. Apollo still strove to save his be loved prince; but now, balancing his golden scales, Jove placed in each a lot-one Achilles, and one consigning Hector to the shades. "Seized by the central hold, he poised the The blue-eyed Pallas exultingly cried to Achilles that he should return, "crowned with great glory, to the fleet of Greece," for that not even could the King of radiant shafts himself now save the life of Hector, not even were Apollo to roll himself in supplication at the feet of the Thunderer. By her deceived, Hector turns and faces Achilles. The heroes seem to our ears to speak well-thus - in our Greek-resembling English Thee no more, son of Peleus, shall I fly as before: Thrice around Priam's mighty city have I fled, nor ever durst I Await thy onset;-but now doth my spirit impel me To withstand thee-slay I, or be slain. But come now, call we the gods (to testify), for they the best Not savagely will I dishonour thee, if to me Jupiter Vouchsafe a steady-fought-victory (καμμονίην), and I shall take away thy life: Thy corse to the Greeks will I restore: do thou so likewise." Him eyeing sternly, the swift-footed Achilles address'd "Hector, thou never-to-be-forgotten one, speak not to me of covenants. As between lions and men there are no faithful covenants, Nor have wolves and lambs a same-thinking disposition, But perpetually are plotting evil to each other; In like manner it cannot be that I and thou can have friendship, nor between us Can covenants exist, until one of us prostrate Shall satisfy with his blood Mars, the indefatigable warrior. Call to mind (thy) every-kind of valour: much now it behoves thee To be a combatant, and a doughty warrior. There is no escape for thee more; thee forthwith Pallas Minerva By my spear subdues: now at once shalt thou expiate all The agonies of my companions-whom with the spear in thy fury thou did'st slay." The combat-though we know it must be fatal to Hector-is not felt to be altogether hopeless on his part, because of the uplifting of our spirits by the return of his heroism to its former high pitch, and because of the love and admiration with which we regard his character, that has sustained no loss from his god-driven flight thrice round the towers of the city which his valour was unavailing to save. There is now glory accumulated on glory around each illustrious crest. Hector's has not been “shorn of its beams" by any disgrace. His flight is more than forgiven; and we admire him more now than when he set fire to the fleet. It has been said that Homer was partial to Hector. So are all men. But believe us when we say, that his favourite was Achilles. He in all things was the greater spirit. From whom would he have fled? Not from Mars and Bellona. One qualm of fear would have destroyed that transcendent ideal of unconquerable will. But he was invulnerable. Would that in our boyhood we had never been confounded by that lie! He was of all the heroes who fought before Troy the sole Doom'd Man, yet never knew he fear within the perpetual shadows of death. But again behold Achilles! NORTH. Achilles too rush'd forward, and his soul he fill'd with anger Beautiful, Dædalean: with his shining helm he nodded Of-gold, which in profusion Vulcan around the crest had placed. Looking-into his beautiful body, where it might yield (to the spear-point) most easily: CHAPMAN. So fell in Hector; and at him Achilles; his mind's fare Was fierce and mighty; his shield cast a sun-like radiance; Helm nodded; and his four plumes shook; and when he raised his lance, Up Hesperus rose 'mongst th' evening stars! His bright and sparkling eyes Look't through the body of his foe, &c. POPE. Nor less Achilles his fierce soul prepares; Before his breast the flaming shield he bears, * Vid, Milton-" Hesperus, that led the starry host," &c. L Refulgent orb! Above his fourfold cone COWPER. Achilles opposite, with fellest ire, SOTHEBY. Thus Hector rush'd, and as he onward flew, All the versions are very nobleChapman's the most so-then perhaps Sotheby's, which is more liberal than usual, but splendid;-but take your choice of the four, heroic reader of Homer. Such combat soon comes to a close. The "ashen beam" is driven through his throat-but it takes not from Hector-now lying in the dust-the power of utterance. You must be contented with the colloquy in prose-perhaps it may be felt more touching so than in " numerous verse." NORTH. In the dust, therefore, he fell, and over him gloried the illustrious Achilles,- At the hollow ships was left behind And have unnerved thy limbs: thee, indeed, the dogs and birds of prey As gifts, which my father and my venerable mother will give thee; 'Dog, me supplicate-not-embracing-my-knees, by my knees, nor by my parents. Vould that my rage and fury would by any means permit me To chop and devour thy raw flesh, for what thou hast done to me. No-not even if ten or twenty-fold-equally-great ransoms Were they to bring hither and place (in the balance), and promise others besides : Priam, the son of Dardanus; - not even thus should thy venerable mother, Beware now, lest towards thee I become the subject-of-anger to the gods Brave though thou be, shall destroy in the Scæan gate." "Die! fate will I then receive whenever Jove may wish to bring it about, and the other immortal gods." And placed it apart; and from his (Hector's) shoulders forced away his armour, Who gazed-with-wonder on the size and the grand form Of Hector: nor did any approach without-inflicting-a-wound (on the corpse); Is Hector, than when he fired the fleet with glowing flames." Thus, indeed, spoke each; and, standing near, inflicted wounds. This is tragical-for it is surcharged with pity and terror. We weep for the dying Hero, whose last words betray the anguish of nature, for his own miserable fate even beyond the sable flood, -for the wretchedness of his father and mother, in vain longing for his corpse, which is out of the reach of ransom. There is no savage spirit of revenge in the prophecy that expires on his lips ;it is almost a passionless prediction of death to one who feared not death -an enunciation of the will of heaven about to be executed by a god. It adds to the greatness of Achilles; for he was not to fall by the unaided arrow of such a person as Paris, but to receive the winged fate from Phœbus Apollo; and what moral sublimity in the answer of "the dreadless angel!" "Die Thou the first! when Jove and Heaven ordain I follow thee, he said, and stripp'd the slain." And what must we say of the behaviour of the common soldiers? Eustathius tells us that Homer introduces them wounding the dead body of Hector, in order to mitigate the cruelties which Achilles exercises upon it; for if every common soldier takes a pride in giving him a wound, what insults may we not expect from the inexorable inflamed Achilles? Pope, whose notes are almost all good, confesses himself unable to vindicate Homer in giving us such an idea of his countrymen; for what they say over Hector's body is a mean insult, and the stabs they give it are cowardly and barbarous. We cannot deny the truth of Pope's remark. But vulgar souls-and there were many such, doubtless, who fought at Troy as well as at Waterloo -are subject to strange fits of vulgar passion; and their own mean nature will at times suddenly ooze out, repressed, for the most part, by the glorious deeds, looks, and words of the Heroes. They misunderstood the character and conduct of Achilles. They beheld him triumphing, exulting, insulting, over Hector. But they knew not, neither could they conceive, the trouble of his soul-to them the flashings of his eyes were a mystery-they comprehended not, even in his agonies, his own sublime submission to the decrees of heaven. See ing how, "with visage all inflamed," |