Table of Contents
- 1 What happens when Priam goes to visit Achilles?
- 2 What is the main reason Priam has come to Achilles camp?
- 3 How does Priam react to Hector’s death?
- 4 Who kills Priam and what happens to his body?
- 5 How did King Priam react his son Hector was brutally killed by Achilles?
- 6 What happens in Priam’s journey to Achilles camp?
- 7 Why does Priam not want to sacrifice his son?
What happens when Priam goes to visit Achilles?
When the chariot arrives at Achilles’ tent, Hermes reveals himself and then leaves Priam alone with Achilles. Priam tearfully supplicates Achilles, begging for Hector’s body. He asks Achilles to think of his own father, Peleus, and the love between them. He accepts the ransom and agrees to give the corpse back.
What is the main reason Priam has come to Achilles camp?
The death of Hector, which signified the end of Troy’s hopes, also broke the spirit of the king. Priam’s paternal love impelled him to brave the savage anger of Achilles and to ransom the corpse of Hector; Achilles, respecting the old man’s feelings and foreseeing his own father’s sorrows, returned the corpse.
How does Priam move safely through the Achaean camp to Achilles?
How does Priam move safely through the Archaean camp to Achilles? He uses a disguised Hermes as his guide.
Why does Priam go to visit Achilles after he has killed Hector?
The gods argue back and forth, but eventually Zeus, the king of the gods, sends Achilles’ mother, Thetis, to request that Achilles return the body of Hector to the dead man’s father for a ransom of gold. Achilles agrees in order to show respect for the gods. The god Hermes escorts Priam to Achilles’ tent undisturbed.
How does Priam react to Hector’s death?
After Achilles kills Hector and begins dragging Hector’s body around Troy behind his chariot, Priam “gave a pitiful groan” (22.408; Ian Johnston’s translation), expressed “frantic grief” (22.413; Ian Johnston’s translation), and began rolling about in the dirt and begging people to leave him alone in his grief.
Who kills Priam and what happens to his body?
Priam rebukes Neoptolemus, throwing a spear at him, harmlessly hitting his shield. Neoptolemus then drags Priam to the altar and there kills him too. Priam’s death is alternatively depicted in some Greek vases. In this version, Neoptolemus clubs Priam to death with the corpse of the latter’s baby grandson, Astyanax.
Why was it difficult for King Priam to ransom the body of Hector?
It was dangerous for King Priam to claim the body of his son Hector because he had to go into the Greek camp all by himself. Achilles had been in such a rage over the death of his friend Patroclus that he drove the entire Trojan army off the field and then abused Hector’s body after killing him.
Why was Priam killed?
Following the fall of Troy, Priam was killed by Achilles’ son, Neoptolemus, as he was seeking refuge on the altar of Zeus.
How did King Priam react his son Hector was brutally killed by Achilles?
What happens in Priam’s journey to Achilles camp?
Priam’s journey to Achilles’ camp takes on a surreal, dream-like quality as Priam and his herald leave. Darkness descends while they water the horses at a river, and the scene seems to suggest a journey to the underworld; in fact, Zeus sends Hermes to conduct Priam to Achilles’ camp.
Why did Priam Kiss achilles’hands in the Odyssey?
Kissing Achilles’ hands, Priam lays aside his kingly role and pleads with Achilles to remember his own father, who is also old. Priam says that his sons are dead and the only son who could help him (that is, Hektor) now lies dead in Achilles’ camp. Priam adds that he has kissed the hands of the man who killed his children.
Why did Achilles give Hector’s body to Priam?
Achilles – albeit at the behest of the gods – eventually gives Hector’s body back to his father, Priam. Betis was duly executed and Alexander moved on to continue his conquest of the Persian empire.
Why does Priam not want to sacrifice his son?
Priam knows that Troy’s destruction is imminent, and as a father, he does not want to sacrifice his son for a lost cause. Watching Achilles abuse Hektor’s body, Priam bemoans the loss of so many sons whom Achilles has cut down, but of all the sons whom he has lost, he mourns most for Hektor.