Page:Hesiod, and Theognis.djvu/113

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
THE SHIELD OF HERCULES.
99
"Shuddering horrors these
Inflicted, and the agony of death
Sudden, that chokes the suffocative voice:
The points were barbed with death and bitter-steeped
With human tears: burnished the length'ning shafts,
And they were feathered from the tawny plume
Of eagles."
—E. 177-183.

The heroic spear and helm complete his equipment, save and except the shield, to which it has been above noted that all the rest is introductory. This would seem to have been a circular disc, with a dragon for centre, and the parts between it and the outer rim divided by layers of cyanus or blue steel into four compartments of enamel, ivory, electrum, and gold. According to Müller,[1] a battle of wild boars and lions forms a narrow band round the middle. The first considerable band which surrounds the centre-piece in the circle consists of four departments, of which two contain warlike, and two peaceable subjects, so that the entire shield contains, as it were, a sanguinary and a tranquil side. The rim of the shield is surrounded by the ocean. An idea of the poem is best gathered from some of the details of the several parts. Perched in the centre on the dragon's head—

"Stern Strife in air
Hung hovering, and arrayed the war of men;
Haggard; whose aspect from all mortals reft
All mind and soul; whoe'er in brunt of arms
Should match their strength, and face the son of Zeus,
Below this earth their spirits to the abyss

  1. Hist. Gr. Lit., i. 132.