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The Achilles of myth ....
Achilles was
the son of the mortal Peleus and the Nereid Thetis. He was the mightiest
of the Greeks who fought in the Trojan War, and was the hero of
Homer's Iliad.
Thetis attempted
unsuccessfully to make her son immortal. There are two versions
of the story. In the earlier version, Thetis anointed the infant
with ambrosia and then placed him upon a fire to burn away his mortal
portions; she was interrupted by Peleus, whereupon she abandoned
both father and son in a rage. Peleus placed the child in the care
of the Centaur Chiron, who raised and educated the boy. In the later
version, she held the young Achilles by the heel and dipped him
in the river Styx; everything the sacred waters touched became invulnerable,
but the heel remained dry and therefore unprotected.
When Achilles
was a boy, the seer Calchas prophesied that the city of Troy could
not be taken without his help. Thetis knew that, if her son went
to Troy, he would die an early death, so she sent him to the court
of Lycomedes, in Scyros; there he was hidden, disguised as a young
girl. During his stay he had an affair with Lycomedes' daughter,
Deidameia, and she had a son, Pyrrhus (or Neoptolemus), by him.
Achilles' disguise was finally penetrated by Odysseus, who placed
arms and armor amidst a display of women's finery and seized upon
Achilles when he was the only "maiden" to be fascinated
by the swords and shields. Achilles then went willingly with Odysseus
to Troy, leading a host of his father's Myrmidons and accompanied
by his tutor Phoenix and his close friend Patroclus. At Troy, Achilles
distinguished himself as an undefeatable warrior. Among his other
exploits, he captured twenty-three towns in Trojan territory, including
the town of Lyrnessos, where he took the woman Briseis as a war-prize.
Later on Agamemnon, the leader of the Greeks, was forced by an oracle
of Apollo to give up his own war-prize, the woman Chryseis, and
took Briseis away from Achilles as compensation for his loss. This
action sparked the central plot of the Iliad, for Achilles became
enraged and refused to fight for the Greeks any further. The war
went badly, and the Greeks offered handsome reparations to their
greatest warrior; Achilles still refused to fight in person, but
he agreed to allow his friend Patroclus to fight in his place, wearing
his armor. The next day Patroclus was killed and stripped of the
armor by the Trojan hero Hector, who mistook him for Achilles.
Achilles was
overwhelmed with grief for his friend and rage at Hector. His mother
obtained magnificent new armor for him from Hephaestus, and he returned
to the fighting and killed Hector. He desecrated the body, dragging
it behind his chariot before the walls of Troy, and refused to allow
it to receive funeral rites. When Priam, the king of Troy and Hector's
father, came secretly into the Greek camp to plead for the body,
Achilles finally relented; in one of the most moving scenes of the
Iliad, he received Priam graciously and allowed him to take the
body away.
After the death
of Hector, Achilles' days were numbered. He continued fighting heroically,
killing many of the Trojans and their allies, including Memnon and
the Amazon warrior Penthesilia. Finally Priam's son Paris (or Alexander),
aided by Apollo, wounded Achilles in the heel with an arrow; Achilles
died of the wound. After his death, it was decided to award Achilles'
divinely-wrought armor to the bravest of the Greeks. Odysseus and
Ajax competed for the prize, with each man making a speech explaining
why he deserved the honor; Odysseus won, and Ajax then went mad
and committed suicide.
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