第 8 节
作者:恐龙王      更新:2022-07-12 16:21      字数:9322
  alarm all our army;〃 said Menelaus; 〃the arrow has done me little harm;〃
  and so it proved; for the surgeon easily drew the arrow out of the wound。
  Then Agamemnon   hastened   here   and   there;   bidding   the   Greeks   arm
  and   attack   the   Trojans;   who   would   certainly   be   defeated;   for   they   had
  broken   the   oaths   of   peace。    But   with   his   usual   insolence   he   chose   to
  accuse Ulysses and Diomede of cowardice; though Diomede was as brave
  as    any   man;    and   Ulysses    had    just  prevented     the  whole     army    from
  launching their ships and going home。             Ulysses answered him with spirit;
  but   Diomede  said   nothing   at   the  moment;   later  he spoke  his   mind。        He
  leaped from his chariot; and all the chiefs leaped down and advanced in
  line;   the   chariots    following    them;    while    the  spearmen      and   bowmen
  followed the chariots。         The Trojan   army  advanced; all   shouting   in  their
  different languages; but the Greeks came on silently。               Then the two front
  lines clashed; shield against shield; and the noise was like the roaring of
  many   flooded   torrents   among   the   hills。     When   a   man   fell   he   who   had
  slain him tried to strip off his armour; and his friends fought over his body
  to save the dead from this dishonour。
  Ulysses fought above a wounded friend; and drove his spear through
  head   and   helmet   of   a   Trojan   prince;   and   everywhere   men   were   falling
  beneath   spears   and   arrows   and   heavy   stones   which   the   warriors   threw。
  Here Menelaus speared the man who built the ships with which Paris had
  sailed to Greece; and the dust rose like a cloud; and a mist went up from
  the fighting men; while Diomede stormed across the plain like a river in
  flood; leaving dead bodies behind him as the river leaves boughs of trees
  and grass to mark its course。         Pandarus wounded Diomede with an arrow;
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  but Diomede slew him; and the Trojans were being driven in flight; when
  Sarpedon   and   Hector   turned   and   hurled   themselves   on   the   Greeks;   and
  even Diomede shuddered when Hector came on; and charged at Ulysses;
  who was slaying Trojans as he went; and the battle swayed this way and
  that; and the arrows fell like rain。
  But Hector was sent into the city to bid the women pray to the goddess
  Athene   for   help;   and   he   went   to   the   house   of   Paris;   whom   Helen   was
  imploring to go and fight like a man; saying:              〃Would that the winds had
  wafted me away; and the tides drowned me; shameless that I am; before
  these things came to pass!〃
  Then Hector went to see his dear wife; Andromache; whose father had
  been slain by Achilles early in the siege; and he found her and her nurse
  carrying her little boy; Hector's son; and like a star upon her bosom lay his
  beautiful and shining golden head。            Now; while Helen urged Paris to go
  into the fight; Andromache prayed Hector to stay with her in the town; and
  fight no more lest he should be slain and leave her a widow; and the boy
  an   orphan;  with   none  to   protect   him。    The  army  she  said;  should   come
  back within the walls; where they had so long been safe; not fight in the
  open plain。      But Hector answered that he would never shrink from battle;
  〃yet I know this in my heart; the day shall come for holy Troy to be laid
  low; and Priam and the people of Priam。               But this and my own death do
  not trouble me so much as the thought of you; when you shall be carried as
  a slave to Greece; to spin at another woman's bidding; and bear water from
  a Grecian well。       May the heaped up earth of my tomb cover me ere I hear
  thy cries and the tale of thy captivity。〃
  Then Hector stretched out his hands to his little boy; but the child was
  afraid    when    he   saw   the  great   glittering   helmet    of  his  father   and   the
  nodding   horsehair   crest。      So   Hector   laid   his   helmet   on   the   ground   and
  dandled the child in his arms; and tried to comfort his wife; and said good…
  bye for the last time; for he never came back to Troy alive。                 He went on
  his way back to the battle; and Paris went with him; in glorious armour;
  and soon they were slaying the princes of the Greeks。
  The battle raged till nightfall; and in the night the Greeks and Trojans
  burned   their   dead;   and   the   Greeks   made   a   trench   and   wall   round   their
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  camp; which they needed for safety now that the Trojans came from their
  town and fought in the open plain。
  Next   day   the    Trojans     were   so   successful     that  they   did   not   retreat
  behind   their   walls   at   night;   but   lit   great   fires   on   the   plain: a   thousand
  fires; with fifty men taking supper round each of them; and drinking their
  wine to the music of flutes。           But the Greeks were much discouraged; and
  Agamemnon          called    the  whole     army    together;    and   proposed      that  they
  should      launch    their   ships   in   the   night   and    sail  away     home。     Then
  Diomede stood up; and said:              〃You called me a coward lately。              You are
  the coward!        Sail away if you are afraid to remain here; but all the rest of
  us will fight till we take Troy town。〃
  Then   all   shouted   in   praise   of   Diomede;   and   Nestor   advised   them   to
  send five hundred young men; under his own son; Thrasymedes; to watch
  the   Trojans;   and   guard   the   new   wall   and   the   ditch;   in   case   the   Trojans
  attacked   them   in   the   darkness。      Next   Nestor   counselled Agamemnon   to
  send Ulysses and Aias to Achilles; and promise to give back Briseis; and
  rich presents of gold; and beg pardon for his insolence。                  If Achilles would
  be   friends   again   with   Agamemnon;   and   fight   as   he   used   to   fight;   the
  Trojans would soon be driven back into the town。
  Agamemnon   was   very   ready   to   beg   pardon;   for   he   feared   that   the
  whole army would be defeated; and cut off from their ships; and killed or
  kept    as   slaves。    So    Ulysses     and   Aias   and    the  old   tutor   of  Achilles;
  Phoenix; went to Achilles and argued with him; praying him to accept the
  rich presents; and help the Greeks。             But Achilles answered that he did not
  believe a word that Agamemnon said; Agamemnon had always hated him;
  and   always   would   hate   him。        No;   he   would   not   cease   to   be   angry;   he
  would sail away next day with all his men; and he advised the rest to come
  with him。      〃Why be so fierce?〃 said tall Aias; who seldom spoke。                    〃Why
  make   so   much   trouble   about   one   girl?       We   offer   you   seven   girls;   and
  plenty of other gifts。〃
  Then Achilles said that he would not sail away next day; but he would
  not fight till the Trojans tried to burn his own ships; and there he thought
  that   Hector     would    find   work    enough     to   do。   This    was    the  most    that
  Achilles   would   promise;   and   all   the   Greeks   were   silent   when   Ulysses
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  delivered his message。         But Diomede arose and said that; with or without
  Achilles;   fight   they   must;   and   all   men;   heavy   at   heart;   went   to   sleep   in
  their huts or in the open air at their doors。
  Agamemnon was much too anxious to sleep。                   He saw the glow of the
  thousand fires of the Trojans in the dark; and heard their merry flutes; and
  he groaned and pulled out his long hair by handfuls。 When he was tired of
  crying and groaning and tearing his hair; he thought that he would go for
  advice to old Nestor。         He threw a lion skin; the coverlet of his bed; over
  his shoulder; took his spear; went out and met Menelausfor he; too; could
  not sleepand Menelaus proposed to send a spy among the Trojans; if any
  man were brave enough to go; for the Trojan camp was all alight with fires;
  and   the   adventure   was   dangerous。        Therefore   the   two   wakened   Nestor
  and   the   other   chiefs;   who   came   just   as   they   were;   wrapped   in   the   fur
  coverlets   of   their   beds;   without   any   armour。    First   they   visited   the   five
  hundred young men set to watch the wall; and then they crossed the ditch
  and sat down outside and cons