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"... all these nights I am
absent from your side, and not demanded back; you
delay, and your anger is slow." [Briseis to
Achilles. Ovid,
Heroides
3.21]
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Briseis lost family, country and freedom when
Achilles sacked
Lyrnessus where she lived; yet she found her
captivity sweet, until the feud between
Achilles and
Agamemnon, which
costed so many lives, made her captive of the
latter.
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Women and trouble
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For the sake of golden-haired Briseis great
trouble came about. But this should cause no
particular surprise, some think, since not seldom
there is a woman behind devastating wars,
overthrown households, and other disasters. For
example Agamemnon,
they reason, was destroyed by his own wife
Clytaemnestra on
account of Iphigenia
and Cassandra; and
Jason's past and
prospective houses were turned into ashes by
Medea on account of his
marriage with Glauce 4; and
Athamas 1, by wedding a
second wife and then a third, let intrigue enter
his home, going mad himself; and
Theseus cursed his own
son and caused his death on account of
Phaedra; and
Heracles 1 was
destroyed by Deianira 1 because of Iole; and for
Hermione's sake
Orestes 2 slew
Neoptolemus, whose
household was already a ruin because of
Andromache.
And for the sake of
Helen, a huge army
gathered to sail against
Troy; and when ten years
later that same army was still beleaguering the
city, a terrible pestilence decimated it because of
Chryseis 3. And Briseis, they reason, is the cause
of Achilles' wrath,
which:
"... brought
countless woes upon the Achaeans, and sent forth to
Hades many valiant souls ..."
[Homer,
Iliad
1.1.]
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Men responsible
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But others say that
Achilles is the sole
responsible; for he forgot that he had come to
Troy in order to fight, and
not for the purpose of spending a wonderful time
with a new sweetheart. Besides, they argue, a man
is angry when he wishes to be and not because
someone else makes him so. Similarly, they add, it
was not the death of
Patroclus 1 who
caused Achilles' deep
grief, for other men do not act like
Achilles when their
friends die, but it was
Achilles' own wish to
grieve deeply that caused his grief.
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Achilles' prize
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Briseis was married to King Mynes 2 of
Lyrnessus, a city east of Mount Ida that was
Troy's ally. When
Achilles sacked
Lyrnessus, he slew Briseis' husband and her three
brothers, and brought her to the Achaean camp as
her prize and concubine. This was a sad day for
this girl; for no one loses family and country
without pain. But
Patroclus 1 comforted
her saying that he would make her
Achilles' wedded wife,
and that on their return to Phthia after the war,
he would arrange a marriage-feast.
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Agamemnon's prize
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In the tenth year of the
Trojan War, however,
while sacking the city of Thebe, east of Mount Ida,
Agamemnon captured
Chryseis 3, and intended to keep the girl as a
prize, take her home, and turn her into both a
slave and a concubine. But her father Chryses 3, a
priest of Apollo, came to
see Agamemnon, and
blessing the whole army, he offered a generous
ransom for her daughter's freedom. The troops
applauded the priest, but
Agamemnon nevertheless
denied Chryses 3's request , threatening the old
man, who left the Achaean camp humiliated.
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Apollo darker than
night
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So soon he found himself alone, Chryses 3 prayed
to Apollo, asking him to
let the Achaeans pay with the god's arrows the
tears he was shedding. And the god, having learned
the outrage his priest had suffered, came down from
Olympus darker than night, though he is known as
the bright one; and shooting his golden arrows
against the Achaean camp, he caused a plague that
decimated the army.
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Agamemnon's threat
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When an assembly was called to discuss the
plague, the seer Calchas
declared that the reason for it was to be found in
Apollo's anger, which
Agamemnon had aroused
by insulting the priest and keeping his daughter.
On hearing this, the king first called
Calchas prophet of evil,
but he nevertheless accepted to give up his prize,
provided another fresh prize was found to replace
Chryseis 3; and if not, he said, he would help
himself to someone else's prize.
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The feud
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Because of this threat,
Achilles called the
king shameless schemer, and accused him of always
taking the lion's share, and using others to pile
wealth and luxuries for himself. But
Agamemnon, displaying
his authority as commander in chief, answered by
letting Achilles know
that, in the same way that
Apollo was robbing him of
Chryseis 3, he was now going to pay a visit to
Achilles' tent, and by
taking away his sweetheart Briseis, teach him a
lesson in power and kingship.
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For having lost Chryseis 3
(here embarked by Odysseus to be given
back to her father), Agamemnon compensated
himself by taking Briseis from
Achilles
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Orders to fetch Briseis
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Agamemnon then set
Chryseis 3 in a ship under
Odysseus' command,
instructing him to sail to her father and give him
his daughter back. But to his heralds Eurybates and
Talthybius he gave the following orders:
"Go to the hut
of Achilles
... take the lady Briseis
into your custody, and bring her here. If he
refuses to let her go, I will myself go with a
larger company and take her, which will be all the
worse for him."
[Agamemnon to his
heralds. Homer,
Iliad
1.320]
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Obeying orders
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These two came to
Achilles' ship and hut,
where they halted abashed without uttering a word;
for those who carry out orders, which they
themselves deem as unjust, suffer a great disgrace
and are filled with shame. But
Achilles helped them
out, breaking the silence himself:
"Heralds ... I
welcome you. Come forward. My quarrel is not with
you but with
Agamemnon, who sent you here to fetch the
girl Briseis."
[Achilles to the
heralds. Homer,
Iliad
1.333]
And addressing
Patroclus 1, he said
for all to hear:
"... will you
bring the lady out and hand her over to these men?
I shall count on them to be my witnesses before the
happy gods, before mankind, before the brutal king
himself, if the Achaeans ever need me again to save
them from disaster."
[Achilles to
Patroclus 1. Homer,
Iliad
1.335]
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Briseis fetched
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Thus began the wrath of
Achilles, who
henceforth refused to fight, and instead amused
himself with the cithara in his tent. Then
Patroclus 1, doing as
his friend has told him, brought out Briseis; and
whispering in her ear, he said:
"Why do you
weep? But a short time ... will you be
here." [Patroclus
1 to Briseis. Ovid,
Heroides
3.24]
With those words he gave her up to the heralds,
who made their way back to
Agamemnon's tent.
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Briseis' reproaches
|
Briseis, who followed them to her second
captivity unwilling and unhappy, is said to have
later reproached her lover the readiness with which
she was delivered to the heralds, without even a
farewell kiss. And while she was away, she wrote to
him saying that his wrath was not deep enough:
"... all these
nights I am absent from your side, and not demanded
back; you delay, and your anger is slow."
[Briseis to
Achilles. Ovid,
Heroides
3.21]
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Agamemnon at odds
with heaven
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But whereas
Achilles' wrath was, in
the eyes of Briseis, not strong enough, in those of
the Achaean army it meant disaster. For
Achilles' mother Thetis
obtained of Zeus the
promise to teach
Agamemnon a lesson for
the outrage her son had suffered, by letting the
army be defeated, for a while, by the Trojans.
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Briseis untouched
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Yet it was not before the military situation had
considerably deteriorated that
Agamemnon tried to
appease Achilles' wrath
so that he would fight again, by offering him the
seven tripods, the seven women, the seven cities,
and many other gifts which included Briseis, whom
Agamemnon swore he had
not touched, an oath that never has been openly
questioned and that also Briseis took:
"By the bones
of my wedded lord, ill covered in hasty sepulture,
bones ever to be held sacred in my eyes; and by the
brave souls of my three brothers ... who died well
for their country ... and by your head and mine,
which we have laid each to each; and by your sword
... I swear that the Mycenaean has shared no couch
with me ..." [Briseis to
Achilles. Ovid,
Heroides
3.103]
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Gifts rejected
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But Achilles'
considered Agamemnon's
gifts hateful, since the king, being
Menelaus' brother, had
done to him what Paris had
done to Menelaus, and
it was just this kind of outrage the Achaeans had
come to avenge at Troy.
Said Achilles:
"Why has he
gathered and led here his host, this son of
Atreus? Was it not for Helen's sake? Do they then alone of
mortal men love their wives, these sons of
Atreus? No, for he who is a true man
loves his own and cherishes her, as I too loved
Briseis with all my heart."
[Achilles to
Agamemnon's envoys.
Homer,
Iliad
9.340]
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Patroclus 1's
death
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This is how Achilles
rejected Agamemnon's
gifts, keeping himself and his men idle. However,
when the Trojans and their fire reached the ships,
he sent Patroclus 1
with a force of Myrmidons to avoid complete
disaster. But when his dear friend died in battle,
then Achilles,
nurturing a grief that was greater than his wrath,
came to life again.
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Briseis despised
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He then called a council and, without asking
anything, officially ended his feud with
Agamemnon. The king in
turn, acknowledging that he himself had been the
one whom the gods blinded, declared that he was
ready to make amends and pay
Achilles the
compensation of the seven tripods, the seven women,
the seven cities, and all other magnificent gifts
which included Briseis. Yet
Achilles, who now had
his mind in the battlefield, replied that
Agamemnon could
produce the gifts or keep them at his convenience.
And regarding Briseis, he uttered these thoughtless
words:
"Has it proved
a good thing, either for you or for me, to keep up
this desperate feud about a girl? I only wish that
Artemis had killed her ... that day I
chose her for myself."
[Achilles to
Agamemnon. Homer,
Iliad
19.55]
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Mourns Patroclus 1
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In this manner the quarrel was ended, and while
the Myrmidons carried the king's gifts to
Achilles' ship, Briseis
returned to his hut, where she discovered
Patroclus 1 lying
dead; and tearing her breast, neck, and cheeks, she
mourned him who had always been so gentle towards
her, and had never let her weep.
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Briseis' farewell to
Achilles
|
Briseis remained with
Achilles until his
death, which soon came in the shape of an arrow
shot by Paris. This
plunged her in even greater grief; for her lover is
said to have been an example of gentleness and
courtesy: a warrior who never dishonoured the
daughters of his foes, as do those who, letting
their minds be perverted by war, exercise their
cowardice upon the defenceless. That is why
Briseis, although a captive, could say before
laying her shorn tresses on
Achilles' corpse:
"Never on me
came anguish like to thisnot when my brethren
died, my fatherland was wastedlike this
anguish for your death! You were my day, my
sunlight, my sweet life, my hope of good, my strong
defence from harm, dearer than all my
beautyyes, more dear than my lost parents!
You were all in all to me, you only, captive though
I be. You took from me every bondmaid's task and
like a wife you hold me." [Briseis to the
dead Achilles. Quintus
Smyrnaeus,
The
Fall of Troy 3.560]
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Reports missing
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Briseis was still heard of at the time when
Achilles' son
Neoptolemus in
her eyes looking like his fathercame to
Troy. But
Neoptolemus, who
after the sack of Troy
received Hector 1's wife
Andromache, did not
take home his father's prize; and Briseis, who once
had been the cause of so much trouble, disappeared
then from the chronicles.
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