What Is Aphrodite's Reaction To The Aeneid

Superior Essays
The blood red scent of dawn washed over the previously white sandy beaches, the light that fell on the Achaean camp brought life to the stench of rot and disease that Apollo sent in with arrows. The rays that hit the walls of troy kept clean by the God of light as it cooked away the morning dew. "They are fighting again today, the men. The Achaeans and the Trojans, who will I fight for today? Who can shed the most blood for me? Will Achilles come, or Hector? Will I take away another of King Priams sons?” Ares was propped atop the cities highest wall observing the battlefield below, eyes never fixated, constantly darting from man to man. Beside the hulking god sat a smaller, watching the crimson horizon.
“You’ll take no more of his sons Ares;
…show more content…
Why should I be humiliated again just as Heracles had done to me so many times? Why should I risk my children Deimos and Phobos, for the other Olympians who hate me so much, when I have already lost one son to Heracles? Is saving Aeneas really worth the risk? Does Aphrodite really mean that much to Me? She is the only god to speak so kind to Me. The god of war wrestled with the thoughts in his mind. I will do it, I am the god of War, man-slaughtering and bloodstained I am Ares. I will take the risk and fight for the Trojans, I will lose and accept my humiliation, but I will fight before that time and bring glory to battle, I will make the blood of man run like wine. Ares settled his mind. “Very well brother, I will do what you ask, I will bring bloodlust to the minds of the Trojans, I will save Aphrodite’s son, and help Hector remove the Acheans.” Ares jumped from the tower wall, landing at the rear guard of the Trojan troops. In his Olympian state he was not visible to the Trojans if he didn’t want to be. He didn’t want to reveal himself fully to them. Instead, he took the guise of a man named Acamas. Ares hated the mortal state, he was open to attacks by emotion, as a mortal he had no control over his feeling, the web in his mind that blocked feelings of happiness, compassion and humanity and allowed his feelings of rage to pool was no longer there. He was human, …show more content…
Sons of Priam! How long will you allow your people to be slaughtered by Achaeans? Aeneas has fallen, he who you hold in as high esteem as Hector himself! Help me rescue him from the stress of the fight!” Ares watched as the Trojans lifted their spirits and heeded his words, he saw Hector jump from his chariot, wearing his armour he went through the ranks of his men. Egging them on for battle. Ares watched as the Trojans ran toward the Achaeans, and began to join in himself, creating a dark veil to cover the Trojans troops and hide their numbers. As he ran past the temple of Apollo he saw Aeneas stride from the entrance, the invisible Apollo was behind him somewhere, no doubt the healer of Aeneas 's wounds, Ares had no time to dwindle on Aeneas as the Trojans clashed with the Achaeans, he could hear the bellows of the Achaean king Menelaus as he cut his way towards him. Ares built up his pace as he cleared the path towards Menelaus with his gigantic spear passing Hector at his full

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Supplication is a term that is used for begging or asking someone to do something in return of something for that person 's own benefit. Supplication scenes are the most striking scenes in the poem Iliad. We can see these scenes in some chapters of the book. In the poem, characters perform their supplications by grasping the person 's knee and sometimes by touching the person 's chin or sometimes by just offering them gifts or ransoms. Achilleus is the most significant character in the poem.…

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “You will have to sleep outside, dear Priam… One of the Achaean counselors may come in… In the dead of night, he would tell Agamemnon, to delay releasing the body” (Homer 174).While Priam comes to retrieve his sons body, Achilles had treated Hector’s body with the respect and delivery him properly. Achilles realize his actions show that he has finally seen the heart of his fury and that it’s pointless to be destructive.…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Plot Summary and Personal Response Books 1-3 Summary The first book starts with a conflict between Achilles and Agamemnon, during the Trojan War. The Achaeans had plundered a nearby city and had taken the daughter of a priest of Apollo. The priest came with gold to plead for his daughter back, but Agamemnon refused. The priest called upon Apollo to bring his wrath down upon them, causing Apollo to unleash a plague.…

    • 1750 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As long journey to the location of Hector is finally completed he sees Hector and Achilles body begins to flow with extreme rage as well as a bold confidence. This Trojan will be no match for the praised Greek warrior, for Achilles is like a hound that will not get off the trail until he has his kill. (5) The Trojan sees Achilles coming and adrenaline and fear pulse through his body. He knows why Achilles is here and knows that if Achilles is successful in killing him that his death will not be granted a merciful death.…

    • 1409 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Role Of Honor In The Iliad

    • 1105 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The definition, importance, and paths to achieve honor have all changed across history. From the bloodthirsty, conflict-fueled honor of the Romans to the modern day, Western concept of a solid moral platform from which one acts, honor proves itself diverse in form and difficult to gain. For the Ancient Greeks, especially in battle, honor was firmly affixed to respect and glory; this concept is easily relayed through Homer’s The Iliad. Instead of purely stating the events of the Trojan War, Homer uses its characters as platforms from which he can add his own perspectives regarding the true value of honor.…

    • 1105 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Medea's Rage

    • 1126 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Begin with the clash between Agamemnon – The Greek warlord – and godlike Achilles.” Achilles, Hector, and Agamemnon are all well-known warriors, but, unfortunately, they allow their anger and rage to overcome…

    • 1126 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Homer reports that Achilles is ordered by the divine beings to discharge Hector's body to Priam when the ruler comes to recover it. One can say that this is Achilles final changing in realizing he must be nice and is understanding that the outrage he feels towards Hector is a silly outrage that he felt towards Agamemnon. When Priam comes to recover Hector, Achilles approaches him with admiration. Achilles additionally consents to give Priam enough time to cover Hector lawfully. “The turning-point of the entire epic comes when Achilles lifts Priam up by the hand out of pity for his old age.…

    • 1125 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The destruction and intimidation of Achilles is noted several times in the Iliad, even Iris tells Achilles that " Just go to the trench and let the Trojans see you. One look will be enough. The Trojans will back off out of fear of you" (Homer 247). Achilles had put the fear of the gods in the Trojan soldiers, so much that they would run just at the sight of him. This Sword slinging killing machine goes on a rampage of death and carnage after the news of Patroclus 's death, killing almost everyman in the Trojan army.…

    • 1770 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hector felt that if he hung back from battle, he would look like a coward to the rest of the Trojans. At the same time, Hector believed he was defending his father 's honor if he went to battle, as well as his own. However, before Hector left to fight the battle, he prayed to Zeus and other gods for his son to "become, as I am, foremost among Trojans, brave and strong”(Homer.501-3). Ultimately, this illustrates that the Trojans did care about their families, but still preferred their glory just like the…

    • 1014 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    With Achilles his rage drove him to abuse the body of Hector, yet with Aeneas while he had Turnus at sword point, his rage caused him to momentarily turn his back on the ideal of “generosity over the conquered” causing him to choose his own personal feelings over that of his…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Around the world, artists use nature and the world around them to create beautiful pieces of art like paintings and pictures. These painters mimic the details they see in the world around them, then they manipulate them to make them more beautiful, perfect, and fitting than they ever were. Similarly, Homer used the Trojan war to make The Iliad. Around 800 B.C., Homer wrote The Iliad. The Iliad contains distinct details that show that some outside inspiration was used.…

    • 993 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Thetis visits the gods on Mt. Olympus at their behest, and Zeus proposes, “Perhaps in fear of me he will give back Hektor. Then I will send Iris to Priam of the great heart, with an order to ransom his dear son,... ”(Book 24, line 116-117). Priam is then led by another goddess to Achilles’ camp to retrieve his son's body. While speaking with each other, Priam brings up the point of thinking of how Achilles’ father would feel if the roles were switched, and the two men begin to cry.…

    • 906 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hector voices his sole purpose to protect his people at all costs when speaking with Andromache and explaining that “[his] shame before the Trojans and their wives, /With their long robes trailing, would be too terrible/ If I hung back from the battle like a coward” (VI, 464-466). He cannot stand the view of his people in chains, which is why he fights so arduously against the Greeks. He perseveres throughout the war, although he knows his people are doomed.…

    • 1253 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Trojan War was an epic siege carried out by the Achaean kingdoms against the Trojan city of Troy, spanning through the 12th and 13th century, approximately 1250 BCE. Directed by Wolfgang Petersen, the 2004 film adaptation “Troy” was supposedly inspired by the text of the Homer’s Iliad, a poetic variation of the events, which incorporated both historical and mythological aspects into said poem. With this, the film falls short historically; having excluded all religious notions involving gods and nymphs, and was instead an over-dramatized action movie that altered a number of significant, historic facts. The film seems not too far gone within the beginning sequences.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    In The Iliad by Homer, the fate of the mortals is affected by the god’s interference in the war. Homer does not make it clear whether man or gods are in control of fate. The mortals’ decisions may affect their fate,but on the other hand, the gods change the fate of the war by giving bits of wisdom to the mortals to make decisions and help to protect people who are in danger. Though mortals can make decisions that alter fate, the gods uphold the idea that fate is inevitable in a mortal 's life and even though the immortals realize that each mortal has a specific fate, they still intervene in the battle to help certain people by sending muses and inspirations and protecting mortals from dying. The rest of fate is dependent on human free will…

    • 1424 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays