[The Book of the Epic by Helene A. Guerber]@TWC D-Link bookThe Book of the Epic INTRODUCTION 52/305
The hero then described his interview with the ghost of Agamemnon,--slain by his wife and her paramour on his return from Troy,--who predicted his safe return home, and begged for tidings of his son Orestes, of whom Ulysses knew nought.
Ulysses next beheld Achilles, who, although ruler of the dead, bitterly declared he would rather be the meanest laborer on earth than monarch among shades! "Talk not of ruling in this dolorous gloom, Nor think vain words (he cried) can ease my doom. Rather I'd choose laboriously to bear A weight of woes and breathe the vital air, A slave to some poor hind that toils for bread, Than reign the sceptered monarch of the dead." To comfort him, Ulysses described how bravely his son had fought at the taking of Troy, where he had been one of the men in the wooden horse.
The only shade which refused to approach Ulysses was that of Ajax, who still resented his having won the armor of Achilles.
Besides these shades, Ulysses beheld the judges of Hades and the famous culprits of Tartarus.
But, terrified by the "innumerable nation of the dead" crowding around him, he finally fled in haste to his vessel, and was soon wafted back to Circe's shore. _Book XII._ There Ulysses buried his dead companion and, after describing his visit to Hades, begged his hostess' permission to depart.
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