THE ILIAD: summary
I 1-7 Invocation of the Muse. 8-21 Chryses begs the return of his daughter. 22-52 Apollo punishes the Greeks with a plague. 53-129 A Achilles calls meeting; Kalchas tells cause of plague. 130-311 Achilles and Agamemnon argue; Nestor fails to restore peace. 312-317 Purification of camp and sacrifices to Apollo. 318-347 Agamemnon takes Briseis from Achilles. 348-427 Achilles determines to abstain from battle; Thetis approves and promises revenge. 428-487 Chryseis is returned with gifts. 488-533 Zeus gives in to Thetis, promises Trojan victories until Achilles is satisfied. 534-567 Hera, angered at this, argues with Zeus over dinner. 568-611 Saddened by this argument, the gods are restored to good spirits by the antics of Hephaistos.
II 1-40 Zeus deceptively sends Dream to Agamemnon promising victory. 41-100 Before dawn, Agamemnon reveals dream to chieftains, then calls a general assembly. 101-154 As a test, Agamemnon pretends Greeks are to leave Troy; they fail the test and rush to the ships. 155-210 Odysseus, warned by Athene, forces Greeks back to camp. 211-277 The Thersites incident. (comic relief?) 278-393 Odysseus and Nestor address Greeks; Agamemnon fills them with ardor for battle. 394-484 The chieftains dine with Agamemnon; the men dine & sacrifice, chieftains arrange them into ranks. 485-770 The Catalogue of the Greeks. 771-785 Achilles broods by the sea and by his ships. 786-877 The Catalogue of the Trojans.
III 1-37 Paris challenges bravest Greek to combat, flees when Menelaos takes up challenge. 38-110 Chided by Hektor, Paris returns; Menelaos demands an oath in the presence of Priam. 111-244 Armies lay down their arms, sacrifices are prepared; meanwhile Helen from the walls point out Greek heroes to Priam and Trojan elders. 245-301 Summoned, Priam comes to the field and supervises oath: the winner will get Helen and her wealth. 302-382 Paris and Menelaos fight after Priam departs; Aphrodite rescues the wounded Paris, desposits him in bedchamber. 383-448 Aphrodite brings Helen to Paris, forcing her to receive him. 449-461 Menelaos vainly seeks Paris; Agamemnon demands the rewards of the victory according to the oath sworn.
IV 1-49 Hera extorts from zeus promise of Troy’s defeat. 50-104 Athenz persuades Pandaros to break the truce. 104-219 Machaon heals the non-fatal wound of Menelaos. 220-421 Trojans rearm and return to fight; Agamemnon praises the alacrity of some Greeks, chides the slowness of others. 422-544 Battle is joined; Area ands Apollo aid Trojans, Athens aids Greeks; there is bloodshed on both sides.
V 1-94 Diomedes, under the protection of Athens who tricks Area away from the battle, rages against the Trojans. 95-166 He is wounded by Pandaros but fights on. 167-296 He kills Pandaros who was fighting from Aeneas’ chariot. 297-310 He wounds Aeneas who protects the body of his friend, Pandaros. 311-351 He wounds Aphrodite as she tries to rescue the wounded Aeneas. 352-431 Aphrodite, rescued by Iris, is conducted to Olympus in Ares’ chariot, where she is comforted by her mother Dione, to the amusement of other gods. 432-460 Aeneas, deserted by his mother, is saved from Diomedes’ wrath by Apollo who places him on the citadel and then recalls Ares to battle. 461-518 Ares stirs up the Trojan’s faltering spirits; Aeness returns to their aid. 519-710 The Greeks fight on; many are killed on both sides; the Greeks fall back slightly. 711-777 Hera and Athens come from Olympus to aid the Greek. 778-863 The Greecks are stirred up by Hera’s voice; Diomedes, aided by Athens, wounds Ares himself. 864-909 Ares retreats to Olympus and is healed; the goddnessed follow.
VI 1-101 Trojans incline towards flight;Helanos, a Trojan prophet and a brother of Hektor, urges Hektor to call for a public supplication of Athena by the women of Troy. 102-236 Hektor goes to the city. The Episodes of Claukos and Diomedes. 237-311 Hekuba and the women, at Hektor’s urging, supplicate Athens at her temple in Troy. 312-368 Hektor chides Paris for staying at home; leads him back. 369-502 Farewell of Hektor to his wife, Andromache, and his baby son, Astayanax. 503-529 Paris soon follows his brother Hektor back to battle.
VII 1-16 Hektor and Paris press on against the Greeks. 17-90 Hektor challenges the bravest Greek to single combat. 90-122 Agamenon discourages Menelaos from volunteering. 123-205 Prodded by Nestor, nine Greek heroes volunteer; the lot falls to Aias, son of Telamon. 206-312 Hektor ans Aias fight to a draw and at nightfall exchange gifts and withdraw. 313-364 At a meeting, Nestor proposes a truce for burial of the dead and to fortify the ships and camp. At a Trojan meeting, Antenor proposes the surrender of Helen and her wealth for the sake of peace; Paris refuses to give up Helen, but he is willing to give back her wealth. 365-420 Priam orders this word be brought to the Greeks; a truce is declared to bury the dead. 421-464 The burials take place; the Greeks protect their ships with a wall and a ditch; Poseidon is angered at this. 465-482 Nightfall with thunder follows the dinner at the end of the day.
VIII 1-52 At a gathering, Zeus forbids the gods to take sides in the battle, he rides his chariot to Mt. Ida. 52-77 In the morning he watches from Ida,weighs the fates of the two sides; the fates go against the Greeks and he sends thunderbolt portending disaster for them. 78-250 Greeks are driven back to their wall, while Hera vainly entreats the aid of Poseidon; Agamemnon revives their spirits. 251-334 The Greeks rally and counterattack; Teucer wounds many Trojans, is wounded in turn by Hektor. 335-437 The Greeks fall back again;Hera and Athena try to help but are prevented by Zeus who has spotted them at it. 438-484 Zeus berates the two goddesses on Olympus and promises worse disaster on the morrow. 485-565 The fighting ends with the nightfall; the victorious Trojans camp on the battlefield, lighting many fires to prevent an attack or escape by the Greeks.
IX 1-28 Agamemnon proposes flight to the chieftans. 29-78 Diomedes and Nestor dissuade him. 79-113 Dinner is held in Agamemnon’s tent; they discuss what can be done to satisfy Achilles. 114-161 Agamamnon says that, if Achilles renounces publicly his warth, he will return to Achilles Briseis and send gifts as well. 162-184 Phoenix, Ajax of Telemon, Osysseus are sent as envoys. 185-668 The Embassy to the Achilles --Achilles greets the envoys warmly. --He rejects their pleas and the promises of Agamemnon. --He asks Phoenix to stay as his guest for the night. 669-713 Ajax and Odysseus report the failure of the mission; Diomede encourages the afflicted and faltering chieftains.
X 1-193 Agamemnon, sleepless, with Menelaos, wakens Nestor and other chieftans for a night conference. 194-271 Yhey decide to send Diomedes and Odysseus as spies to the Trojan camp. 272-298 A good omen is discovered. 299-381 The spies, crossing noman’s land, come upon Dolon, a Trojan on his way to spy on the Greeks. 382-464 Dolon, frightened, tells all, especially about the ally Rhesus; Dolon is slained. 465-503 The two spies come upon the encampment of Rhesus, slay his men in their sleep and drove off the horses. 504-579 They make good escape back to the Greeck camp.
XI 1-66 Agamemnon, in splendor, leads his troops to battle; Hektor and the Trojan leaders do the likewise. 67-162 The Trojans, frightened by Agamemnon, fall back to the walls of Troy. 163-283 Hektor falls back to the walls of the city; commanded by Zeus he beats back onset of Agamemnon until Agamemnon, wounded, retires. 284-309 Hektor returns to the battle and restores the Trojan spirit. 310-40 Diomedes, Odysseus and Ajax restore Greek spirits; Diomedes wounded by Paris retires. 401-488 Odysseus wounded by Sokus, is rescued by Menelaos and Ajax. 489-596 Machaon and Eyrupylus are wounded by Paris. 597-617 Achilles seeing Machaon on Nestor’s chariot, sends Patroklos to learn what has happened. 618-803 Patroklos recognizes Machaon; learns from Nestor the bad news of battle, is asked by him to try to get Achilles back into battle or to wear Achilles’ armour himself and fight. 804-848 On the way back, Patrolos runs into Eurypylus who has been wounded, brings him to his tent and tends his wound.
XII 1-59 The Greeks withdraw behind their walls and watch the onslaught of the Trojans. 60-107 Advised by Poulydamas, the Trojans dismount from their chariots and advance in five groups. 108-194 Asius attempts an assault on one of the gates from his chariot and is replused with losses to his men. 195-250 An unlucky omen interpreted by Poulydamas does not deter Hektor from continuing the assault. 251-289 The Greeks, especially the two Aiases, defend the camp valiantly. 290-377 Sarpedon and Galukos, Trojan heroes, attack and are repulsed by Ajax and Teucer. 378-399 Epicles, friend of Sarpedon, is wounded by Ajax; Glaukos by Teucer; finally part of the wall is torn out by Sarpedon. 400-471 The Greeks hold off the Lykians, Trojan allies, from breaking in; Hektor breaks down the gate with the boulder and opens the way to the ships of the Greeks for his men.
XIII 1-42 With the wall broken here and there, Trojans kill Greeks; Poseidon in pity and without Zeus’ knowledge aids the Greeks in defending their ships. 42-124 In the form of a human, Poseidon encourages the two Aiases and other chieftans. 125-205 Therefore, the Aiases and others keep Hektor from destroying the ships. 205-329 Idomeneus, driven to arm himself by Poseidon, aids those Greeks on the left flank who need help. 330-362 Fierce battle ensues; Zeus helps the Trojans, Poseidon the Greeks; Idomeneus excels among the Greek heroes. 363-672 He kills Othryoneus, Asius, Alkanthous; then with Meriones , Antilochos, and Menlaos he valiantly attacks Aeneas, Deiphobus, Helenus, and Paris. 673-808 The Aiases and others so press upon Hektor that the Trojans begin to fall back; but Hektor, advised by Poulydamas, makes a counterattack. 809-837 Ajax makes a fresh attack; great fighting continues on both sides.
XIV 1-26 Aroused by the clamor, Nestor leaves his tent where Machaon is recuperating to see what has happened. 27-81 He meets Agamemnon, Odysseus, and Diomedes returning wounded fron the battle; Agamemnon contemplates flight for the Greeks. 82-152 Odysseus disgrees; Diomedes persuades all to return to the fray where they may help their men by their presence; as he goes along, Agamemnon is comforted by Poseidon. 153-351 Hera, to aid the Greeks, prepares to beguile Zeus with her womanly charm, enlisting the innocent help of Aphrodite; Sleep is summoned from Lemnos to cast a spell on Zeus. 352-401 While Zeus sleeps, Poseidon openly aids the Greeks. 402-439 Hektor, wounded by Ajax, is carried off and cared for by his companions. 440-522 The Greeks turn the Trojans back from the ships; Ajax, son of Oileus, excels among the Greeks.
XV 1-11 Zeus awakens to see Poseidon helping the Greeks. 12-77 He commands Hera to call Iris and Apollo from Olympus; he will use them to help the Trojans, at the same time he predicts the ultimate fall of Troy. 78-142 Ares hears from Hera of the death of his son Ascalaphos and he burns for vengence; Athena calms him. 143-219 Apollo and Iris come to Zeus and Poseidon is dissuaded from further battle. 220-280 Apollo heals Hektor, returns him to battle, and restore the Trojans flagging fortunes. 281-389 Hektor attacks the bravest Greeks, kills some, put others to flight; Apollo goes before him with the aegis frightening the Greeks; the wall is torn down and the Trojans have access to the ships. 390-404 Patroklos returns to Achilles from Eurypylus to beg him to aid the Greeks. 405-590 The Greeks fight bitterly by the ships; many fall on both sides. 591-746 The Greeks fall back among the ships; Ajax tries to defend the ships from the fires Hektor is starting to spread among them.
XVI 1-100 Achilles allows Patroklos to wear his armor and drive the Greeks from the ships, warning him to go no further. 101-123 Ajax is unable to fight off the fires. 124-256 Achilles calls Patroklos to arm, lines up his men, addresses them, and prays for Patroklos in private. 257-305 Thinking Patroklos to be Achilles, the Trojans fall back, the ships are freed from seige, the fires are extinguished. 306-418 Patroklos drives the Trojans back over the walls. 419-507 Patroklos kills Sarpedon, a son of Zeus and a Trojan ally. 508-683 A struggle ensues over his body; it is snatched away. 684-711 Patroklos chases Trojans to city, scales the wall, but is repulsed by the god himself. 712-782 He faces up to Hektor, he kills Hektor’s charioteer and makes off with the body. 783-867 He kills more Trojans until, stunned by Apollo, he is wounded by Euphorbus and finished off by Hektor.
XVII 1-60 Menelaos killls Euphorbus as he makes off with Patroklos’ armor. 61-139 Menelaos summons Ajax to help defend Patroklos’ body, which would be captured by the Trojans without his help. 140-261 Hektor yields to Ajax; then wearing Achilles’ captured armor he returns to capture Patroklos’ body, calling his bravest men to the task; the best of the Greeks, called by Menelaos, rush to his aid. 262-425 A bitter fight takes place over the body, Menelaos vs. Hektor, and the followers of each. 426-483 Achilles’ horses, weeping for dead Patroklos, are strengthened by Zeus and return pulling Achilles’ chariot and his charioteer Automedon. 484-596 Hektor, Aeneas, and others attack the chariot to capture the fine horses; the Greeks withstand this attack and continue to defend Patroklos’ body; Athena strengthens Menelaos; Apollo aids Hektor with Zeus’ approval. 597-701 The Greek line falters; Ajax wavers; Menelaos dispatches Antilochos to Achilles with the tragic news of his friend’s death. 702-761 Menelaos and Meriones begin to carry off Patrolaos’s body while others of the Greeks fend off the Trojan’s attack.
XVIII 1-34 Hearing the bad news of Patroklos, Achillles weeps. 35-137 Thetis comes from the sea to console him; she bids him put off his revenge for one day while she has Hepahaistos fashion new armor for him. 138-231 Thetis leaves for Olympus; the battle for Patroklos goes on; the Trojans are on the point of prevailing when Achilles appears in person on the ramparts of the Greek encampment and with a shriek terrifies the Trojans and put them to flight. 232-242 The Greeks grings the body of Patroklos to Achilles’ camp. 243-314 The Trojans hold the tumultuous meeting; Poulydamas urges them to remain in the city and avoid the wrathful revenge of Achilles; Hektor and others disagree with this plan. 315-355 The Trojans spend a vigilant night; the Greeks mourn for Paroklos, care for his body and place it on a bier. 356-427 At Olympus, where Zeus had been chiding Hera for stirring up Achilles, Thetis is warmly received at the house of Hephaistos, the fire god. 428-617 Hephaistos accends to her wishes and fashions new arms for Achilles.
XIX 1-39 Thetis brings Achilles his new armor at dawn, urges him to join battle; she magically embalms the body of Patroklos to preserve it. 40-73 Achilles calls a meeting at which he renounces his warth. 74-153 Agamemnon confesses in turn his error and offers gifts through Odysseus; Achilles, intent on revenge, ignores them. 154-275 But he yields to Odysseus,waits while the troops breakfast, publically accepts the gifts and receives back Briseis, whom Agamemnon solemnly swears he has not touched. 276-339 The gifts are brought into his tent where the women weep for Patroklos; Achilles again weeps and refuses food. 340-424 He is restored to strength by Athena, puts on his new armor, ascends his chariot with automedon; one of his horses predicts the future and he sets out for battle.
XX 1-30 At a meeting on Olympus, Zeus gives the gods permission to aid whom they will, so that th wrath of Achilles may not accomplish the premature downfall of Troy. 31-74 The gods proceed to battle: Hera, Athena, Poseidon, Hermes, Hephaistos, too aid the Greeks; Ares, Apollo, Diana, Leto, Xanthos, Aphrodite, to aid the Trojans; the earth trembles at their arrival. 75-155 Before battle is joined, Apollo urges Aeneas on against Achilles who is pressing toward Hektor; meanwhile, the gods, on the advice of Poseidon, remain on the sidelines for the time being. 156-352 Achilles and Aeneas go to it; Poseidon rescues Aeneas in a cloud because of his particular destiny. 353-418 Hektor, about to attack Achilles, is recalled by Apollo; Achilles kills many Trojans, among them Polydoros, a son of Priam. 419-454 To avenge the death of his brother Polydoros, Hektor attacks Hektor; Apollo snatches him away in a cloud. 455-503 Achilles rages against the Trojans, filling the field with corpses.
XXI 1-33 Achilles drives some Trojans to the city, others into the river Xanthus (called also Skamandros, under the protection of the god Xanthus); he kills many in the water but saves twleve as a funeral offering for Patroklos. 34-135 He kills Lycaon, son of Priam, though he surrenders. 136-210 He kills Asteropaeus with some of his followers. 211-271 Xanthos, the river, choked with bodies, orders him to leave; Achilles refuses and the river tries to drown him. 272-384 Poseidon and Athena aid the struggling Achilles; Xanthos calls upon the river Simoeis for help; Hera sends Hephaistos against Xanthus; he burns up the river and has to be called off by Hera. 385-513 The gods pair off to fight:Ares, Aphorite--Athena; Apollo--Poseidon; Hera--Artemis; Hermes--Leto. 514-543 After this the gods and goddesses return to Olympus except Apollo who makes for Troy; Achilles rages on; Priam orders the closing of the gates. 544-611 Apollo, by a ruse, keeps achilles away from the city as the refugees enter the gates.
XXII 1-89 With each army withdrawn from the field, Hektor awaits Achilles before the gates, while his weeping parents, from the walls, begs him to escape while he can. 90-166 Hektor however holds fast; then, frightened by Achilles’ aspect,flees; Achilles chases him around the city walls three times. 167-247 Zeus pities Hektor’s plight; he weighs the fates and finds it is Hektor’s doomday; Apollo abadons Hektor and Apollo chases him with a false vision of his brother Polydoros. 248-305 The heroes meet; Athena aids Achilles and tricks Hektor. 306-404 Achilles transfixes Hektor with a spear, strips his body, and disgraces the corpse, drags it by chariot to the ships. 405-515 The city bewails the death of Hektor from the walls; Andromache learns the tragic news.
XXIII 1-58 The Myrmidons process around the bier of Patroklos; Achilles provides them a feast, though he himself dines with Agamemnon, setting a date for the funeral. 59-107 That night Patrklos appears to Achilles in a dream, begging burial. 108-225 Next morning the body is burned with much ceremony. 226-256 The following day the ashes are collected in a urn and a mound of earth is raised over it. 257-650 Achilles declares games with prizes in Protroklos’ honor; there is a chariot race: Diomedes, Antilochos, Menelaos, Merione, Eumelos, Nestor. 651-699 Epeus and Euryalos box. 700-739 Ajax and Odysseus wrestle. 740-797 Odysseus, Ajax of Olieus, Antilochos race. 798-825 Diomedes and ajax of Telemon fight with weapons. 826-849 Polypoetes throws the discus. 850-883 Meriones and Teucer contend with bow and arrow. 884-897 Agamemnon and Meriones throw the javelin.
XXIV 1-18 The games over, the Greeks eat and sleep; Achilles after a sleepless night, drags the body of Hektor around the tomb. 19-54 Some of the gods approve, some disapprove of the actions of Achilles going on for so many days; Apollo complains bitterly. 55-186 Therefore: Zeus, through Thetis, command Achilles to desist, to accept a ransom and surrender the body; at his command, Iris tells Priam to offer a ransom and retrieve the body. 187-282 On the 12th night after the death of Hektor, Priam secretly prepares a ransom, loads a chariot and enlists the aid of Idaeus, a herald. 283-330 A libation is offered; favorable omens are received; they set out. 331-467 Hermes guides them through the sleeping Greeks. 468-676 Achilles accepts the ransom, orders the preparation of the body, grants an eleven day truce for burial, feeds Priam and dismisses him. 677-776 Helped by Hermes, Priam returns Hektor’s body to Troy, where the entire population comes out to greet it with lamentation; Andromache, Hecuba, and Helen mourn over the body. 777-804 The burial of Hektor. |