The Kingdom of the Dead

 “Now down we came to the ship at the water’s edge,

 we hauled and launched her into the sunlit breakers first,

 stepped the mast in the black craft and set our sail

 and loaded the sheep aboard, the ram and ewe,

 then we ourselves embarked, streaming tears,

 our hearts weighed down with anguish . . .

 But Circe, the awesome nymph with lovely braids

 who speaks with human voice, sent us a hardy shipmate,

 yes, a fresh following wind ruffling up in our wake,

10 bellying out our sail to drive our blue prow on as we,

 securing the running gear from stem to stern, sat back

 while the wind and helmsman kept her true on course.

 The sail stretched taut as she cut the sea all day

 and the sun sank and the roads of the world grew dark.

   And she made the outer limits, the Ocean River’s bounds

16 where Cimmerian people have their homes —their realm and city

 shrouded in mist and cloud. The eye of the Sun can never

 flash his rays through the dark and bring them light,

 not when he climbs the starry skies or when he wheels

20 back down from the heights to touch the earth once more —

 an endless, deadly night overhangs those wretched men.

 There, gaining that point, we beached our craft

 and herding out the sheep, we picked our way

 by the Ocean’s banks until we gained the place

 that Circe made our goal.

                           Here at the spot

26 Perimedes and Eurylochus held the victims fast,

 and I, drawing my sharp sword from beside my hip,

 dug a trench of about a forearm’s depth and length

 and around it poured libations out to all the dead,

30 first with milk and honey, and then with mellow wine,

 then water third and last, and sprinkled glistening barley

 over it all, and time and again I vowed to all the dead,

 to the drifting, listless spirits of their ghosts,

 that once I returned to Ithaca I would slaughter

 a barren heifer in my halls, the best I had,

 and load a pyre with treasures —and to Tiresias,

 alone, apart, I would offer a sleek black ram,

 the pride of all my herds. And once my vows

 and prayers had invoked the nations of the dead,

40 I took the victims, over the trench I cut their throats

 and the dark blood flowed in —and up out of Erebus they came,

 flocking toward me now, the ghosts of the dead and gone . . .

 Brides and unwed youths and old men who had suffered much

 and girls with their tender hearts freshly scarred by sorrow

 and great armies of battle dead, stabbed by bronze spears,

 men of war still wrapped in bloody armor —thousands

 swarming around the trench from every side —

 unearthly cries —blanching terror gripped me!

 I ordered the men at once to flay the sheep

50 that lay before us, killed by my ruthless blade,

 and burn them both, and then say prayers to the gods,

 to the almighty god of death and dread Persephone.

 But I, the sharp sword drawn from beside my hip,

 sat down on alert there and never let the ghosts

 of the shambling, shiftless dead come near that blood

 till I had questioned Tiresias myself.

                                         But first

 the ghost of Elpenor, my companion, came toward me.

 He’d not been buried under the wide ways of earth,

 not yet, we’d left his body in Circe’s house,

60 unwept, unburied —this other labor pressed us.

 But I wept to see him now, pity touched my heart

 and I called out a winged word to him there: ‘Elpenor,

 how did you travel down to the world of darkness?

 Faster on foot, I see, than I in my black ship.’

   My comrade groaned as he offered me an answer:

 ‘Royal son of Laertes, Odysseus, old campaigner,

 the doom of an angry god, and god knows how much wine —

 they were my ruin, captain . . . I’d bedded down

 on the roof of Circe’s house but never thought

70 to climb back down again by the long ladder —

 headfirst from the roof I plunged, my neck snapped

 from the backbone, my soul flew down to Death. Now,

 I beg you by those you left behind, so far from here,

 your wife, your father who bred and reared you as a boy,

 and Telemachus, left at home in your halls, your only son.

 Well I know when you leave this lodging of the dead

 that you and your ship will put ashore again

 at the island of Aeaea —then and there,

 my lord, remember me, I beg you! Don’t sail off

80 and desert me, left behind unwept, unburied, don’t,

 or my curse may draw god’s fury on your head.

 No, burn me in full armor, all my harness,

 heap my mound by the churning gray surf —

 a man whose luck ran out —

 so even men to come will learn my story.

 Perform my rites, and plant on my tomb that oar

 I swung with mates when I rowed among the living.’

   ‘All this, my unlucky friend,’ I reassured him,

 ‘I will do for you. I won’t forget a thing.’

                                               So we sat

90 and faced each other, trading our bleak parting words,

 I on my side, holding my sword above the blood,

 he across from me there, my comrade’s phantom

 dragging out his story.

                          But look, the ghost

 of my mother came! My mother, dead and gone now . . .

95 Anticleia —daughter of that great heart Autolycus —

 whom I had left alive when I sailed for sacred Troy.

 I broke into tears to see her here, but filled with pity,

 even throbbing with grief, I would not let her ghost

 approach the blood till I had questioned Tiresias myself.

100 At last he came. The shade of the famous Theban prophet,

 holding a golden scepter, knew me at once and hailed me:

 ‘Royal son of Laertes, Odysseus, master of exploits,

 man of pain, what now, what brings you here,

 forsaking the light of day

 to see this joyless kingdom of the dead?

 Stand back from the trench —put up your sharp sword

 so I can drink the blood and tell you all the truth.’

   Moving back, I thrust my silver-studded sword

 deep in its sheath, and once he had drunk the dark blood

110 the words came ringing from the prophet in his power:

 ‘A sweet smooth journey home, renowned Odysseus,

 that is what you seek

 but a god will make it hard for you —I know —

 you will never escape the one who shakes the earth,

 quaking with anger at you still, still enraged

 because you blinded the Cyclops, his dear son.

 Even so, you and your crew may still reach home,

 suffering all the way, if you only have the power

 to curb their wild desire and curb your own, what’s more,

120 from the day your good trim vessel first puts in

121 at Thrinacia Island, flees the cruel blue sea.

 There you will find them grazing,

 herds and fat flocks, the cattle of Helios,

 god of the sun who sees all, hears all things.

125 Leave the beasts unharmed, your mind set on home,

 and you all may still reach Ithaca —bent with hardship,

 true —but harm them in any way, and I can see it now:

 your ship destroyed, your men destroyed as well.

 And even if you escape, you’ll come home late

130 and come a broken man —all shipmates lost,

 alone in a stranger’s ship —

 and you will find a world of pain at home,

 crude, arrogant men devouring all your goods,

 courting your noble wife, offering gifts to win her.

 No doubt you will pay them back in blood when you come home!

 But once you have killed those suitors in your halls —

 by stealth or in open fight with slashing bronze —

 go forth once more, you must . . .

 carry your well-planed oar until you come

140 to a race of people who know nothing of the sea,

 whose food is never seasoned with salt, strangers all

 to ships with their crimson prows and long slim oars,

 wings that make ships fly. And here is your sign —

 unmistakable, clear, so clear you cannot miss it:

 When another traveler falls in with you and calls

146 that weight across your shoulder a fan to winnow grain,

 then plant your bladed, balanced oar in the earth

 and sacrifice fine beasts to the lord god of the sea,

 Poseidon —a ram, a bull and a ramping wild boar —

150 then journey home and render noble offerings up

 to the deathless gods who rule the vaulting skies,

 to all the gods in order.

153 And at last your own death will steal upon you . . .

154 a gentle, painless death, far from the sea it comes

 to take you down, borne down with the years in ripe old age

 with all your people there in blessed peace around you.

 All that I have told you will come true.’

                                             ‘Oh Tiresias,’

 I replied as the prophet finished, ‘surely the gods

 have spun this out as fate, the gods themselves.

160 But tell me one thing more, and tell me clearly.

 I see the ghost of my long-lost mother here before me.

 Dead, crouching close to the blood in silence,

 she cannot bear to look me in the eyes —

 her own son —or speak a word to me. How,

 lord, can I make her know me for the man I am?’

   ‘One rule there is,’ the famous seer explained,

 ‘and simple for me to say and you to learn.

 Any one of the ghosts you let approach the blood

 will speak the truth to you. Anyone you refuse

 will turn and fade away.’

170 And with those words,

 now that his prophecies had closed, the awesome shade

 of lord Tiresias strode back to the House of Death.

 But I kept watch there, steadfast till my mother

 approached and drank the dark, clouding blood.

175 She knew me at once and wailed out in grief

 and her words came winging toward me, flying home:

 ‘Oh my son —what brings you down to the world

 of death and darkness? You are still alive!

 It’s hard for the living to catch a glimpse of this . . .

180 Great rivers flow between us, terrible waters,

 the Ocean first of all —no one could ever ford

 that stream on foot, only aboard some sturdy craft.

 Have you just come from Troy, wandering long years

 with your men and ship? Not yet returned to Ithaca?

 You’ve still not seen your wife inside your halls?’

                                                     ‘Mother,’

 I replied, ‘I had to venture down to the House of Death,

 to consult the shade of Tiresias, seer of Thebes.

 Never yet have I neared Achaea, never once

 set foot on native ground,

190 always wandering —endless hardship from that day

 I first set sail with King Agamemnon bound for Troy,

 the stallion-land, to fight the Trojans there.

 But tell me about yourself and spare me nothing.

 What form of death overcame you, what laid you low,

 some long slow illness? Or did Artemis showering arrows

 come with her painless shafts and bring you down?

 Tell me of father, tell of the son I left behind:

 do my royal rights still lie in their safekeeping?

 Or does some stranger hold the throne by now

200 because men think that I’ll come home no more?

 Please, tell me about my wife, her turn of mind,

 her thoughts . . . still standing fast beside our son,

 still guarding our great estates, secure as ever now?

 Or has she wed some other countryman at last,

 the finest prince among them?’

                                 ‘Surely, surely,’

 my noble mother answered quickly, ‘she’s still waiting

 there in your halls, poor woman, suffering so,

 her life an endless hardship like your own . . .

 wasting away the nights, weeping away the days.

210 No one has taken over your royal rights, not yet.

 Telemachus still holds your great estates in peace,

 he attends the public banquets shared with all,

 the feasts a man of justice should enjoy,

 for every lord invites him. As for your father,

 he keeps to his own farm —he never goes to town —

 with no bed for him there, no blankets, glossy throws;

 all winter long he sleeps in the lodge with servants,

 in the ashes by the fire, his body wrapped in rags.

 But when summer comes and the bumper crops of harvest,

220 any spot on the rising ground of his vineyard rows

 he makes his bed, heaped high with fallen leaves,

 and there he lies in anguish . . .

 with his old age bearing hard upon him, too,

 and his grief grows as he longs for your return.

 And I with the same grief, I died and met my fate.

 No sharp-eyed Huntress showering arrows through the halls

 approached and brought me down with painless shafts,

 nor did some hateful illness strike me, that so often

 devastates the body, drains our limbs of power.

230 No, it was my longing for you, my shining Odysseus —

 you and your quickness, you and your gentle ways —

 that tore away my life that had been sweet.’

   And I, my mind in turmoil, how I longed

 to embrace my mother’s spirit, dead as she was!

 Three times I rushed toward her, desperate to hold her,

 three times she fluttered through my fingers, sifting away

 like a shadow, dissolving like a dream, and each time

 the grief cut to the heart, sharper, yes, and I,

 I cried out to her, words winging into the darkness:

240 ‘Mother —why not wait for me? How I long to hold you! —

 so even here, in the House of Death, we can fling

 our loving arms around each other, take some joy

 in the tears that numb the heart. Or is this just

 some wraith that great Persephone sends my way

 to make me ache with sorrow all the more?’

   My noble mother answered me at once:

 ‘My son, my son, the unluckiest man alive!

 This is no deception sent by Queen Persephone,

 this is just the way of mortals when we die.

250 Sinews no longer bind the flesh and bones together —

 the fire in all its fury burns the body down to ashes

 once life slips from the white bones, and the spirit,

 rustling, flitters away . . . flown like a dream.

 But you must long for the daylight. Go, quickly.

 Remember all these things

 so one day you can tell them to your wife.’

   And so we both confided, trading parting words,

 and there slowly came a grand array of women,

 all sent before me now by august Persephone,

260 and all were wives and daughters once of princes.

 They swarmed in a flock around the dark blood

 while I searched for a way to question each alone,

 and the more I thought, the more this seemed the best:

 Drawing forth the long sharp sword from beside my hip,

 I would not let them drink the dark blood, all in a rush,

 and so they waited, coming forward one after another.

 Each declared her lineage, and I explored them all.

268 And the first I saw there? Tyro, born of kings,

269 who said her father was that great lord Salmoneus,

270 said that she was the wife of Cretheus, Aeolus’ son.

271 And once she fell in love with the river god, Enipeus,

 far the clearest river flowing across the earth,

 and so she’d haunt Enipeus’ glinting streams,

 till taking his shape one day

 the god who girds the earth and makes it tremble

 bedded her where the swirling river rushes out to sea,

 and a surging wave reared up, high as a mountain, dark,

 arching over to hide the god and mortal girl together.

 Loosing her virgin belt, he lapped her round in sleep

280 and when the god had consummated his work of love

 he took her by the hand and hailed her warmly:

 ‘Rejoice in our love, my lady! And when this year

 has run its course you will give birth to glorious children —

 bedding down with the gods is never barren, futile —

 and you must tend them, breed and rear them well.

 Now home you go, and restrain yourself, I say,

 never breathe your lover’s name but know —

 I am Poseidon, god who rocks the earth!’

   With that he dove back in the heaving waves

290 and she conceived for the god and bore him Pelias, Neleus,

 and both grew up to be stalwart aides of Zeus almighty,

292 both men alike. Pelias lived on the plains of Iolcos,

 rich in sheepflocks, Neleus lived in sandy Pylos.

 And the noble queen bore sons to Cretheus too:

295 Aeson, Pheres and Amythaon, exultant charioteer.

296 And after Tyro I saw Asopus’ daughter Antiope,

 proud she’d spent a night in the arms of Zeus himself

298 and borne the god twin sons, Amphion and Zethus,

 the first to build the footings of seven-gated Thebes,

300 her bastions too, for lacking ramparts none could live

 in a place so vast, so open —strong as both men were.

302 And I saw Alcmena next, Amphitryon’s wife,

 who slept in the clasp of Zeus and merged in love

 and brought forth Heracles, rugged will and lion heart.

305 And I saw Megara too, magnanimous Creon’s daughter

 wed to the stalwart Heracles, the hero never daunted.

307 And I saw the mother of Oedipus, beautiful Epicaste.

 What a monstrous thing she did, in all innocence —

 she married her own son . . .

310 who’d killed his father, then he married her!

 But the gods soon made it known to all mankind.

 So he in growing pain ruled on in beloved Thebes,

 lording Cadmus’ people —thanks to the gods’ brutal plan —

 while she went down to Death who guards the massive gates.

 Lashing a noose to a steep rafter, there she hanged aloft,

 strangling in all her anguish, leaving her son to bear

317 the world of horror a mother’s Furies bring to life.

318 And I saw magnificent Chloris, the one whom Neleus

 wooed and won with a hoard of splendid gifts,

320 so dazzled by her beauty years ago . . .

321 the youngest daughter of Iasus’ son Amphion,

322 the great Minyan king who ruled Orchomenos once.

 She was his queen in Pylos, she bore him shining sons,

324 Nestor and Chromius, Periclymenus too, good prince.

325 And after her sons she bore a daughter, majestic Pero,

 the marvel of her time, courted by all the young lords

 round about. But Neleus would not give her to any suitor,

 none but the man who might drive home the herds

329 that powerful Iphiclus had stolen. Lurching,

330 broad in the brow, those longhorned beasts,

331 and no small task to round them up from Phylace.

332 Only the valiant seer Melampus volunteered —

 he would drive them home —

 but a god’s iron sentence bound him fast:

 barbarous herdsmen dragged him off in chains.

 Yet when the months and days had run their course

 and the year wheeled round and the seasons came again,

 then mighty Iphiclus loosed the prophet’s shackles,

 once he had told him all the gods’ decrees.

340 And so the will of Zeus was done at last.

341 And I saw Leda next, Tyndareus’ wife,

 who’d borne the king two sons, intrepid twins,

343 Castor, breaker of horses, and the hardy boxer Polydeuces,

 both buried now in the life-giving earth though still alive.

 Even under the earth Zeus grants them that distinction:

 one day alive, the next day dead, each twin by turns,

 they both hold honors equal to the gods’.

348 And I saw Iphimedeia next, Aloeus’ wife,

 who claimed she lay in the Sea-lord’s loving waves

350 and gave the god two sons, but they did not live long,

351 Otus staunch as a god and far-famed Ephialtes.

 They were the tallest men the fertile earth has borne,

 the handsomest too, by far, aside from renowned Orion.

 Nine yards across they measured, even at nine years old,

 nine fathoms tall they towered. They even threatened

 the deathless gods they’d storm Olympus’ heights

 with the pounding rush and grinding shock of battle.

358 They were wild to pile Ossa upon Olympus, then on Ossa

359 Pelion dense with timber —their toeholds up the heavens.

360 And they’d have won the day if they had reached peak strength

 but Apollo the son of Zeus, whom sleek-haired Leto bore,

 laid both giants low before their beards had sprouted,

 covering cheek and chin with a fresh crop of down.

364 Phaedra and Procris too I saw, and lovely Ariadne,

365 daughter of Minos, that harsh king. One day Theseus tried

366 to spirit her off from Crete to Athens’ sacred heights

 but he got no joy from her. Artemis killed her first

368 on wave-washed Dia’s shores, accused by Dionysus.

369 And I saw Clymene, Maera and loathsome Eriphyle —

370 bribed with a golden necklace

 to lure her lawful husband to his death . . .

 But the whole cortege I could never tally, never name,

 not all the daughters and wives of great men I saw there.

 Long before that, the godsent night would ebb away.

 But the time has come for sleep, either with friends

 aboard your swift ship or here in your own house.

 My passage home will rest with the gods and you.”

   Odysseus paused . . . They all fell silent, hushed,

 his story holding them spellbound down the shadowed halls

380 till the white-armed queen Arete suddenly burst out,

 “Phaeacians! How does this man impress you now,

 his looks, his build, the balanced mind inside him?

 The stranger is my guest

 but each of you princes shares the honor here.

 So let’s not be too hasty to send him on his way,

 and don’t scrimp on his gifts. His need is great,

 great as the riches piled up in your houses,

 thanks to the gods’ good will.”

                                   Following her,

 the old revered Echeneus added his support,

390 the eldest lord on the island of Phaeacia:

 “Friends, the words of our considerate queen —

 they never miss the mark or fail our expectations.

 So do as Arete says, though on Alcinous here

 depend all words and action.”

                                “And so it will be” —

 Alcinous stepped in grandly —“sure as I am alive

 and rule our island men who love their oars!

 Our guest, much as he longs for passage home,

 must stay and wait it out here till tomorrow,

 till I can collect his whole array of parting gifts.

400 His send-off rests with every noble here

 but with me most of all:

 I hold the reins of power in the realm.”

   Odysseus, deft and tactful, echoed back,

 “Alcinous, majesty, shining among your island people,

 if you would urge me now to stay here one whole year

 then speed me home weighed down with lordly gifts,

 I’d gladly have it so. Better by far, that way.

 The fuller my arms on landing there at home,

 the more respected, well received I’d be

410 by all who saw me sailing back to Ithaca.”

   “Ah Odysseus,” Alcinous replied, “one look at you

 and we know that you are no one who would cheat us —

 no fraud, such as the dark soil breeds and spreads

 across the face of the earth these days. Crowds of vagabonds

 frame their lies so tightly none can test them. But you,

416 what grace you give your words, and what good sense within!

 You have told your story with all a singer’s skill,

 the miseries you endured, your great Achaeans too.

 But come now, tell me truly: your godlike comrades —

420 did you see any heroes down in the House of Death,

 any who sailed with you and met their doom at Troy?

 The night’s still young, I’d say the night is endless.

 For us in the palace now, it’s hardly time for sleep.

 Keep telling us your adventures —they are wonderful.

 I could hold out here till Dawn’s first light

 if only you could bear, here in our halls,

 to tell the tale of all the pains you suffered.”

   So the man of countless exploits carried on:

 “Alcinous, majesty, shining among your island people,

430 there is a time for many words, a time for sleep as well.

 But if you insist on hearing more, I’d never stint

 on telling my own tale and those more painful still,

 the griefs of my comrades, dead in the war’s wake,

 who escaped the battle-cries of Trojan armies

 only to die in blood at journey’s end —

 thanks to a vicious woman’s will.

                                     Now then,

 no sooner had Queen Persephone driven off

 the ghosts of lovely women, scattering left and right,

 than forward marched the shade of Atreus’ son Agamemnon,

440 fraught with grief and flanked by all his comrades,

 troops of his men-at-arms who died beside him,

 who met their fate in lord Aegisthus’ halls.

 He knew me at once, as soon as he drank the blood,

 and wailed out, shrilly; tears sprang to his eyes,

 he thrust his arms toward me, keen to embrace me there —

 no use —the great force was gone, the strength lost forever,

 now, that filled his rippling limbs in the old days.

 I wept at the sight, my heart went out to the man,

 my words too, in a winging flight of pity:

450 ‘Famous Atrides, lord of men Agamemnon!

 What fatal stroke of destiny brought you down?

 Wrecked in the ships when lord Poseidon roused

 some punishing blast of stormwinds, gust on gust?

 Or did ranks of enemies mow you down on land

 as you tried to raid and cut off herds and flocks

 or fought to win their city, take their women?’

457 The field marshal’s ghost replied at once:

 ‘Royal son of Laertes, Odysseus, mastermind of war,

 I was not wrecked in the ships when lord Poseidon

460 roused some punishing blast of stormwinds, gust on gust,

 nor did ranks of enemies mow me down on land —

 Aegisthus hatched my doom and my destruction,

 he killed me, he with my own accursed wife . . .

 he invited me to his palace, sat me down to feast

 then cut me down as a man cuts down some ox at the trough!

 So I died —a wretched, ignominious death —and round me

 all my comrades killed, no mercy, one after another,

 just like white-tusked boars

 butchered in some rich lord of power’s halls

470 for a wedding, banquet or groaning public feast.

 You in your day have witnessed hundreds slaughtered,

 killed in single combat or killed in pitched battle, true,

 but if you’d laid eyes on this it would have wrenched your heart —

 how we sprawled by the mixing-bowl and loaded tables there,

 throughout the palace, the whole floor awash with blood.

476 But the death-cry of Cassandra, Priam’s daughter —

 the most pitiful thing I heard! My treacherous queen,

 Clytemnestra, killed her over my body, yes, and I,

 lifting my fists, beat them down on the ground,

480 dying, dying, writhing around the sword.

 But she, that whore, she turned her back on me,

 well on my way to Death —she even lacked the heart

 to seal my eyes with her hand or close my jaws.

                                                     So,

 there’s nothing more deadly, bestial than a woman

 set on works like these —what a monstrous thing

 she plotted, slaughtered her own lawful husband!

 Why, I expected, at least, some welcome home

 from all my children, all my household slaves

 when I came sailing back again . . . But she —

490 the queen hell-bent on outrage —bathes in shame

 not only herself but the whole breed of womankind,

 even the honest ones to come, forever down the years!’

   So he declared and I cried out, ‘How terrible!

 Zeus from the very start, the thunder king

 has hated the race of Atreus with a vengeance —

 his trustiest weapon women’s twisted wiles.

 What armies of us died for the sake of Helen . . .

 Clytemnestra schemed your death while you were worlds away!’

   ‘True, true,’ Agamemnon’s ghost kept pressing on,

500 ‘so even your own wife —never indulge her too far.

 Never reveal the whole truth, whatever you may know;

 just tell her a part of it, be sure to hide the rest.

 Not that you, Odysseus, will be murdered by your wife.

 She’s much too steady, her feelings run too deep,

 Icarius’ daughter Penelope, that wise woman.

 She was a young bride, I well remember . . .

 we left her behind when we went off to war,

 with an infant boy she nestled at her breast.

 That boy must sit and be counted with the men now —

510 happy man! His beloved father will come sailing home

 and see his son, and he will embrace his father,

 that is only right. But my wife —she never

 even let me feast my eyes on my own son;

 she killed me first, his father!

 I tell you this —bear it in mind, you must —

 when you reach your homeland steer your ship

 into port in secret, never out in the open . . .

 the time for trusting women’s gone forever!

   Enough. Come, tell me this, and be precise.

520 Have you heard news of my son? Where’s he living now?

 Perhaps in Orchomenos, perhaps in sandy Pylos

 or off in the Spartan plains with Menelaus?

 He’s not dead yet, my Prince Orestes, no,

 he’s somewhere on the earth.’

                                 So he probed

 but I cut it short: ‘Atrides, why ask me that?

 I know nothing, whether he’s dead or alive.

 It’s wrong to lead you on with idle words.’

   So we stood there, trading heartsick stories,

 deep in grief, as the tears streamed down our faces.

530 But now there came the ghosts of Peleus’ son Achilles,

 Patroclus, fearless Antilochus —and Great Ajax too,

 the first in stature, first in build and bearing

 of all the Argives after Peleus’ matchless son.

 The ghost of the splendid runner knew me at once

 and hailed me with a flight of mournful questions:

 ‘Royal son of Laertes, Odysseus, man of tactics,

 reckless friend, what next?

 What greater feat can that cunning head contrive?

 What daring brought you down to the House of Death? —

540 where the senseless, burnt-out wraiths of mortals make their home.’

   The voice of his spirit paused, and I was quick to answer:

 ‘Achilles, son of Peleus, greatest of the Achaeans,

 I had to consult Tiresias, driven here by hopes

 he would help me journey home to rocky Ithaca.

 Never yet have I neared Achaea, never once

 set foot on native ground . . .

547 my life is endless trouble.

                            But you, Achilles,

 there’s not a man in the world more blest than you —

 there never has been, never will be one.

550 Time was, when you were alive, we Argives

 honored you as a god, and now down here, I see,

 you lord it over the dead in all your power.

 So grieve no more at dying, great Achilles.’

   I reassured the ghost, but he broke out, protesting,

555 ‘No winning words about death to me, shining Odysseus!

556 By god, I’d rather slave on earth for another man —

 some dirt-poor tenant farmer who scrapes to keep alive —

 than rule down here over all the breathless dead.

 But come, tell me the news about my gallant son.

560 Did he make his way to the wars,

 did the boy become a champion —yes or no?

 Tell me of noble Peleus, any word you’ve heard —

 still holding pride of place among his Myrmidon hordes,

564 or do they despise the man in Hellas and in Phthia

 because old age has lamed his arms and legs?

 For I no longer stand in the light of day —

 the man I was —comrade-in-arms to help my father

 as once I helped our armies, killing the best fighters

 Troy could field in the wide world up there . . .

570 Oh to arrive at father’s house —the man I was,

 for one brief day —I’d make my fury and my hands,

 invincible hands, a thing of terror to all those men

 who abuse the king with force and wrest away his honor!’

   So he grieved but I tried to lend him heart:

 ‘About noble Peleus I can tell you nothing,

576 but about your own dear son, Neoptolemus,

 I can report the whole story, as you wish.

 I myself, in my trim ship, I brought him

579 out of Scyros to join the Argives under arms.

580 And dug in around Troy, debating battle-tactics,

 he always spoke up first, and always on the mark —

 godlike Nestor and I alone excelled the boy. Yes,

583 and when our armies fought on the plain of Troy

 he’d never hang back with the main force of men —

 he’d always charge ahead,

 giving ground to no one in his fury,

587 and scores of men he killed in bloody combat.

 How could I list them all, name them all, now,

 the fighting ranks he leveled, battling for the Argives?

590 But what a soldier he laid low with a bronze sword:

591 the hero Eurypylus, Telephus’ son, and round him

592 troops of his own Cetean comrades slaughtered,

 lured to war by the bribe his mother took.

 The only man I saw to put Eurypylus

 in the shade was Memnon, son of the Morning.

 Again, when our champions climbed inside the horse

 that Epeus built with labor, and I held full command

 to spring our packed ambush open or keep it sealed,

 all our lords and captains were wiping off their tears,

600 knees shaking beneath each man —but not your son.

 Never once did I see his glowing skin go pale;

 he never flicked a tear from his cheeks, no,

 he kept on begging me there to let him burst

 from the horse, kept gripping his hilted sword,

 his heavy bronze-tipped javelin, keen to loose

 his fighting fury against the Trojans. Then,

 once we’d sacked King Priam’s craggy city,

 laden with his fair share and princely prize

 he boarded his own ship, his body all unscarred.

610 Not a wound from a flying spear or a sharp sword,

 cut-and-thrust close up —the common marks of war.

 Random, raging Ares plays no favorites.’

                                             So I said and

613 off he went, the ghost of the great runner, Aeacus’ grandson

614 loping with long strides across the fields of asphodel,

 triumphant in all I had told him of his son,

 his gallant, glorious son.

   Now the rest of the ghosts, the dead and gone

 came swarming up around me —deep in sorrow there,

 each asking about the grief that touched him most.

620 Only the ghost of Great Ajax, son of Telamon,

 kept his distance, blazing with anger at me still

 for the victory I had won by the ships that time

 I pressed my claim for the arms of Prince Achilles.

 His queenly mother had set them up as prizes,

625 Pallas and captive Trojans served as judges.

 Would to god I’d never won such trophies!

 All for them the earth closed over Ajax,

 that proud hero Ajax . . .

 greatest in build, greatest in works of war

630 of all the Argives after Peleus’ matchless son.

 I cried out to him now, I tried to win him over:

 ‘Ajax, son of noble Telamon, still determined,

 even in death, not once to forget that rage

 you train on me for those accursed arms?

 The gods set up that prize to plague the Achaeans —

 so great a tower of strength we lost when you went down!

 For your death we grieved as we did for Achilles’ death —

 we grieved incessantly, true, and none’s to blame

 but Zeus, who hated Achaea’s fighting spearmen

640 so intensely, Zeus sealed your doom.

 Come closer, king, and listen to my story.

 Conquer your rage, your blazing, headstrong pride!’

   So I cried out but Ajax answered not a word.

 He stalked off toward Erebus, into the dark

 to join the other lost, departed dead.

 Yet now, despite his anger,

 he might have spoken to me, or I to him,

 but the heart inside me stirred with some desire

 to see the ghosts of others dead and gone.

650 And I saw Minos there, illustrious son of Zeus,

 firmly enthroned, holding his golden scepter,

 judging all the dead . . .

 Some on their feet, some seated, all clustering

 round the king of justice, pleading for his verdicts

 reached in the House of Death with its all-embracing gates.

   I next caught sight of Orion, that huge hunter,

 rounding up on the fields of asphodel those wild beasts

 the man in life cut down on the lonely mountain-slopes,

 brandishing in his hands the bronze-studded club

 that time can never shatter.

660 I saw Tityus too,

 son of the mighty goddess Earth —sprawling there

 on the ground, spread over nine acres —two vultures

 hunched on either side of him, digging into his liver,

 beaking deep in the blood-sac, and he with his frantic hands

 could never beat them off, for he had once dragged off

 the famous consort of Zeus in all her glory,

 Leto, threading her way toward Pytho’s ridge,

668 over the lovely dancing-rings of Panopeus.

669 And I saw Tantalus too, bearing endless torture.

670 He stood erect in a pool as the water lapped his chin —

 parched, he tried to drink, but he could not reach the surface,

 no, time and again the old man stooped, craving a sip,

 time and again the water vanished, swallowed down,

 laying bare the caked black earth at his feet —

 some spirit drank it dry. And over his head

 leafy trees dangled their fruit from high aloft,

 pomegranates and pears, and apples glowing red,

 succulent figs and olives swelling sleek and dark,

 but as soon as the old man would strain to clutch them fast

680 a gust would toss them up to the lowering dark clouds.

681 And I saw Sisyphus too, bound to his own torture,

 grappling his monstrous boulder with both arms working,

 heaving, hands struggling, legs driving, he kept on

 thrusting the rock uphill toward the brink, but just

 as it teetered, set to topple over —

                                  time and again

 the immense weight of the thing would wheel it back and

 the ruthless boulder would bound and tumble down to the plain again —

 so once again he would heave, would struggle to thrust it up,

 sweat drenching his body, dust swirling above his head.

690 And next I caught a glimpse of powerful Heracles —

 his ghost, I mean: the man himself delights

 in the grand feasts of the deathless gods on high,

693 wed to Hebe, famed for her lithe, alluring ankles,

 the daughter of mighty Zeus and Hera shod in gold.

 Around him cries of the dead rang out like cries of birds,

 scattering left and right in horror as on he came like night,

 naked bow in his grip, an arrow grooved on the bowstring,

 glaring round him fiercely, forever poised to shoot.

 A terror too, that sword-belt sweeping across his chest,

700 a baldric of solid gold emblazoned with awesome work . . .

 bears and ramping boars and lions with wild, fiery eyes,

 and wars, routs and battles, massacres, butchered men.

 May the craftsman who forged that masterpiece —

 whose skills could conjure up a belt like that —

 never forge another!

 Heracles knew me at once, at first glance,

 and hailed me with a winging burst of pity:

 ‘Royal son of Laertes, Odysseus famed for exploits,

 luckless man, you too? Braving out a fate as harsh

710 as the fate I bore, alive in the light of day?

 Son of Zeus that I was, my torments never ended,

 forced to slave for a man not half the man I was:

 he saddled me with the worst heartbreaking labors.

 Why, he sent me down here once, to retrieve the hound

 that guards the dead —no harder task for me, he thought —

 but I dragged the great beast up from the underworld to earth

 and Hermes and gleaming-eyed Athena blazed the way!’

   With that he turned and back he went to the House of Death

 but I held fast in place, hoping that others might still come,

720 shades of famous heroes, men who died in the old days

 and ghosts of an even older age I longed to see,

 Theseus and Pirithous, the gods’ own radiant sons.

723 But before I could, the dead came surging round me,

 hordes of them, thousands raising unearthly cries,

 and blanching terror gripped me —panicked now

 that Queen Persephone might send up from Death

726 some monstrous head, some Gorgon’s staring face!

 I rushed back to my ship, commanded all hands

 to take to the decks and cast off cables quickly.

 They swung aboard at once, they sat to the oars in ranks

730 and a strong tide of the Ocean River swept her on downstream,

 sped by our rowing first, then by a fresh fair wind.”

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