Sunday, December 9, 2018

Trojan War Epic: Page 1 Revisited

A revised Page 1 that gets straight to the source of Teliassa's later drama :




Sing, O Muses, the heart of fiery-haired Teliassa, the keen-eyed daughter of Caprias, who longed to wet her trusty arrows in the well of Trojan misery. For the men of Ilium had killed her father, that celebrated Larissan who had sailed with Achilles.

A fierce warrior was Caprias, but in the end he fell, surrounded by many foes, the stench of cloven entrails thick in the dusty air. Indeed he had afflicted the defenders of the Troad grievously before his death.

When Teliassa heard of it, she wept tears of bitter grief and cried out to the heavens: May Troy not see victory, nor sing the glory of its heroes, but let them fall to the last man!

Thus having spoken, she called for a long-horned ram and sacrificed it, eating its eyes and tongue as if they were those of her accursed enemy, promising before the gods to repay the Trojans in kind.

Now, Ares favored Troy, but he was struck by the fervid maiden's desire for vengeance, and he granted her a boon, a peerless bow of yew wood inlaid with silver, saying: The beauty of this weapon is matched only by your own!

Teliassa resisted his advances, but Ares' interest in her aroused the infamous jealousy of Aphrodite, and she swore to revenge herself on the Aeolian girl.

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