And when Briseis, the concubine Agamemnon later steals from Achilles, gradually learns Greek from Patroclus, "her words were like new leather, still stiff and precise, not yet run together with use". Iphigenia, sacrificed by her father Agamemnon to appease the goddess Artemis, is described as having "a tripping name, the sound of goat hooves on rock, quick, lively, lovely". Miller's prose is more poetic than almost any translation of Homer. Achilles remains a godlike figure to Patroclus: "Then I turned to look at him. The story is told from the perspective of Patroclus who, exiled by his father to live in the court of Peleus, soon falls in love with his host's son, the superhuman Achilles: from childhood, his demi-god status means he is swifter, more beautiful and more skilled than all his peers.Īstonishingly to Patroclus's eyes, Achilles returns his love, and the two boys grow into adulthood and a love affair. Homer sets all this out in the opening line of The Iliad: "Sing, muse, of the wrath of Achilles." Even after death, his ghost still thirsts for blood, and Polyxena, a Trojan princess, has to be sacrificed at his tomb before the Greeks can sail home from Troy.īut in her novel, The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller has found the lover beneath the bloodshed and fury. His revenge on Hector was merciless: not only did he kill the bulwark of Troy, he dishonoured the corpse, dragging Hector's body around the city three times.
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