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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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444 THE GREEK SAGAS: GREEK LOCAL LEGENDS<br />

HECTOR, ANDROMACHE, AND ASTYANAX<br />

Hector, brother of Paris, was the champion of the Trojans, brave and honorable,<br />

and as a warrior excelled only by Achilles, by whom he was killed in single combat.<br />

As long as Achilles took no part in the fighting, Hector carried all before<br />

him. When he was killed, the Trojans knew they were doomed. His wife was<br />

Andromache, daughter of Eëtion (an ally of the Trojans killed by Achilles), and<br />

their child was Astyanax. In the Iliad Homer draws unforgettable portraits of<br />

Paris and Helen and of Hector and Andromache, as he juxtaposes their characters<br />

and their relationships in moving scenes of universal power (pp. 457-459).<br />

HELENUS, DEÏPHOBUS, AND TROÏLUS<br />

Priam's son Helenus had the gift of prophecy, for when he was a child serpents<br />

had licked his ears. In the last year of the war the prophet Calchas (pp. 453 and<br />

473) advised the Greeks to capture him, since he alone could tell what must be<br />

done to end the war. He was caught by Odysseus and honorably treated, so that<br />

he alone of Priam's sons survived the war. He eventually married Andromache<br />

and became a ruler in Epirus. As a prophet he appears for the last time in the<br />

Aeneid, where he foretells the course of Aeneas' future wanderings (pp. 646-647).<br />

Of Priam's many other sons, Deïphobus married Helen after the death of<br />

Paris; his ghost spoke with Aeneas in the Underworld; and Troïlus, who was<br />

killed by Achilles, became more significant in later times. 8<br />

CASSANDRA AND POLYXENA<br />

Cassandra and Polyxena are the most important of the daughters of Priam. Cassandra<br />

had been loved by Apollo, who gave her the gift of prophecy. When she<br />

rejected him, he added to the gift the fate that she should never be believed<br />

(p. 235). Thus she foretold the fall of Troy and warned the Trojans against the Trojan<br />

horse all in vain. Her fate in the sack of Troy is described later in this chapter<br />

(pp. 475-477); as we have seen, she died in Mycenae, murdered by Clytemnestra.<br />

Polyxena was sacrificed on the tomb of Achilles as his share of the spoils after<br />

the sack of Troy, as we describe later in this chapter (pp. 471-472).<br />

AENEAS<br />

Of the Trojan leaders outside Priam's imme<strong>dia</strong>te family, the most prominent is<br />

Aeneas, who belonged to another branch of the royal family. Although he was<br />

the son of Anchises and Aphrodite, he was not the equal of Priam in prestige<br />

or of Hector as a warrior. In the Iliad he fights in single combat with Achilles<br />

and is saved from death by Poseidon, who transports him miraculously from<br />

the fight. Poseidon prophesies that Aeneas and his descendants, now that Zeus<br />

has withdrawn his favor from Priam's family, will be the future rulers of Troy.<br />

We consider his later prominence, as depicted by Vergil, in Chapter 26.

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