Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
8 Σεπ 2023 · [Achilles walks away, Patroclus follows him] You've lost a prize, and you've been sitting around like sour milk ever since. You're no better than Agamemnon. [Achilles glares at him] He knows he's an arrogant bastard; he doesn't try to hide it behind some lofty ideals!
The Iliad, Book 16, lines 826-828. After Patroclus pursues the fleeing Trojans up to the gates of their city and is repulsed by Apollo, the god says this to Patroclus. He warns that it is not fate that the city should fall before the spear of Patroclus or Achilles.
Hector fell in the dust and Achilles shouted out in triumph: ‘While you were despoiling Patroclus, no doubt, in your folly, you thought yourself quite safe, Hector, and forgot all about me in my absence.
Quotes. The next day, an Achaean force led by Meriones cuts timber for Patroclus ’ funeral pyre. The men prepare for the funeral, putting on their arms and building Patroclus’ pyre.
15 Απρ 2018 · In Troy: Fall of a City, the king and queen rule the city equally. Their thrones are the same size (unlike those in Sparta) and this attitude is a welcome sight for Helen, who is frequently represented as a caged bird.
For those that don't know (although everyone should) a major, if not the major Greek myth surrounds the Trojan War, during which a collection of Greek kings (or Achaean kings) laid siege to the city of Troy (in present-day Turkey) for a period of ten years.
The poet does not even mention Troy here, and he specifically asks the Muse to begin the story at the time when Agamemnon and Achilles first “broke and clashed”—nine years into the ten-year conflict. Nor does he mention the fall of Troy or the Greek victory, referring only to a vague “end” toward which Zeus’s will moves.