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The Greatest World Classics Retold for Children. Гарриет Бичер-СтоуЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Greatest World Classics Retold for Children - Гарриет Бичер-Стоу


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face, he knew that in all the world there was no woman half so fair as the wife of Menelaus.

      Then did Aphrodite cast her magic upon Helen.

      No longer did she love her husband, nor did she remember little Hermione, her own dear child.

      When Paris spoke to her words of love, and begged her to flee with him, and to be his wife, she knew only that she loved Paris more than all else. Gladly she went with him, and in his red-prowed ship together they sailed across the green waves to Troyland, where Mount Ida showed her snowy crown high above the forests.

      An angry man was Menelaus when he found that Paris had stolen from him the fair wife who was to him as his own heart.

      To his elder brother Agamemnon, overlord of all the Greeks, he went and told his grievous tale.

      And from far and wide did the Greek hosts gather, until a hundred thousand men and eleven hundred fourscore and six ships were ready to cross the seas to Troyland.

      Many were the heroes who sailed away from Greece to punish Paris and his kin, and to bring back fair Helen to her own land.

      Few there were who came home, for ten long years of woe and of spilling of blood came to the men of Greece and of Troy from the fatal beauty of Helen the queen.

      THE COUNCIL

       Table of Contents

      That night both gods and men slept long; only Zeus, king of the gods, lay wakeful, pondering in his heart how best he might do honor to Achilles. "I shall send a Dream to beguile Agamemnon," at length he resolved.

      Then did he call to a Dream, for by Dreams the gods sent their messages to mortal men.

      "Go now, thou evil Dream," said Zeus, "go to where Agamemnon sleeps in his tent near to his fleet ships, and tell him every word as I shall tell it thee. Bid him call to arms with speed his warriors, for now he shall take the strong city of Troy."

      To the tent of Agamemnon sped the Dream. Taking the form of the old warrior who had striven to make peace between Agamemnon and Achilles, the Dream stooped over the sleeping warrior, and thus to him it spoke:

      "Sleepest thou, Agamemnon? Ill fits it for the overlord of so mighty a host to sleep all through the night. From Zeus I come, and to thee he sends this message: 'Call to arms with speed thy warriors, Agamemnon, for now shalt thou take the strong city of Troy.'"

      Off then sped the Dream, winging its way like a strip of gray mist aloft to Mount Olympus.

      Then Agamemnon awoke from sleep, and the voice of the Dream still rang in his ears.

      Speedily he arose from his bed, donned his fair tunic, cast around him his great cloak, and bound his sandals on his feet. Then over his shoulder he cast his silver-studded sword, and with the scepter of his house, token of his overlordship, in his hand, he went down to where the Greek ships lay, and called a council together.

      To his lords he told what had befallen him as they slept.

      "Call to arms!" had been the message from Zeus. "Call to arms! for victory shall be thine."

      Then said the old warrior in whose likeness the Dream had come:

      "My friends, had any other told us this dream we might deem it false; but to our overlord the Dream hath come. Let us then call our men to arms."

      So did all the lords follow his counsel, and quickly did the Greeks obey their summons. Like bees that pour from out their nests in some hollow rock, and fly to where the spring flowers grow most sweet, even so did the warriors pour forth from their ships and their huts by the sea. Loudly they shouted as they came, till all the earth echoed. Nine heralds sought to quiet them, but it was long before they would cease their noise, and sit silent to listen to the voice of Agamemnon their lord.

      Then did Agamemnon prove his people. "Ill hath Zeus dealt with us, my friends," he said. "To us he promised ere we sailed hither that victory should be ours. But nine years have passed away, and our ships' timbers have rotted, and the rigging is worn. In our halls our wives and children still sit awaiting us, yet are we no nearer victory than we were on the day that we came hither. Come then, let us flee with our ships to our dear native land, for never shall Troy be ours."

      So spake Agamemnon, and stirred the hearts of all that had not heard his secret council.

      As the high sea-waves are swayed by the winds that rush upon them from the east and from the south, even so the Greek host was swayed. And even as the west wind sweeps over a cornfield and all the ears bow down before the blast, so were the warriors stirred.

      Shouting, they hastened down to their ships. And the dust rose up in clouds from under their hurrying feet.

      Quickly did they prepare their ships, and gladly did they make them ready to sail homeward across the bright salt sea.

      Then would the Greeks have returned, even though fate willed it not. But Hera spoke to Athene.

      "Shall we indeed allow the Greeks thus to flee homeward?" she cried. "Shame it will be to us if Helen is left, in Troy, and Paris goes unpunished. Haste, then, and with thy gentle words hold back the men from setting forth in their ships for their own homeland."

      Down from the peaks of Olympus darted the bright-eyed Athene, clown to where the dark ships were being dragged to the launching ways.

      By his ship stood Odysseus of the many devices, and heavy of heart was he.

      As one who speaks aloud the thoughts of another, so then to Odysseus spake the fair goddess who was ever his guide.

      "Will ye indeed fling yourselves upon your ships and flee homeward to your own land?" she said. "Will brave Odysseus leave Helen, for whose sake so many Greeks have died, to be the boast of the men of Troy? Hasten, then, and suffer not the Greeks to drag their ships down to the sea."

      At the sound of the voice of Athene, Odysseus cast away his mantle and ran to meet Agamemnon. From him he received the scepter of overlordship, and bearing it he went among the ships.

      Whenever he saw a chief, he would say to him with gentle words:

      "Good sir, it fits thee ill to be a coward. Stay, now, for thou knowest not what is the will of Agamemnon. He is only making trial of thee. Hold back then thy people, and anger him not."

      But when Odysseus met a common man hasting to the ships, with his scepter he smote him, saying:

      "Sit still, sir, and listen to the words of thy betters. No warrior art thou, but a weakling. One king only hath Zeus given to us. Hearken then to the will of Agamemnon!"

      Thus did Odysseus rule the people, driving them back from the ships to where sat Agamemnon.

      And the noise they made in returning was as the noise of mighty waves of the sea, when they crash upon the beach and drive their roaring echoes far abroad.

      Silence came upon them as they sat themselves down before Agamemnon and their lords. Upon all but one did silence fall. Thersites, bandy-legged, round-shouldered, lame of one foot, with ugly head covered with scanty stubble, most ill-favored of all men in the host, would not hold his peace.

      Shrilly he poured his upbraidings upon Agamemnon.

      "What lackest thou now?" he cried. "Surely thy huts are full of the spoils we have brought to thee each time we have taken a town. What more dost thou want? Soft fools, women, not men, are ye Greeks, else would ye return home now with the ships, and leave this fellow here in Troyland gorging himself on the spoils for which he himself hath never fought. To brave Achilles hath he done dishonor, a far better man than he!"

      Straight to the side of Thersites came the goodly Odysseus.

      "Hold thy peace," he sternly said. "Plainly I tell thee that if ever again I find thee raving as thou hast raved


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