Good morning and welcome to LLT121 Classical Mythology. I fought the temptation, at the beginning of this class, of saying, “Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends. I’m so glad you could attend, because this story that we’re about to go into today has been told and retold for about 3200 years.” I ask you to keep in mind that the events of the Iliad are tied to the Trojan War, which is now known for a fact to have taken place around 1200 BC. The tales of the Trojan War were passed on orally by word of mouth at a time during which the ancient Greeks more or less had forgotten how to write. It’s not like, “Gee, what is that thing you do with a pencil again?” Keep in mind that, in ancient Greece around 1200 BC, very few people to start with were literate. Somehow, between 1200 BC and 110 BC in the ancient Greek world, there was the cataclysmic downfall of what we now think of as the Mycenaean era of ancient Greece. The few literate people who live either died without teaching anybody how to read and write or basically forgot.
These stories of the Iliad and the Odyssey were primarily spread about by word of mouth. A poet, a bard, if you will, who was invited to a gathering would sit down with his eyes closed and off the top of his head spout out the story about the wrath of Achilles. It is about how Achilles got mad. If you’ve ever been in one of these situations, we have parents here in the audience today. Tell me a story mommy; tell me a story grandpa. I hope nobody here is anybody’s grandfather. You’re too young for that sort of thing. You tend to embellish stories, or you tend to change the details of the story to reflect what your audience is looking for. If, for example, you are giving a speech to a group of nuns, you are not going to work in all sorts of interesting details about World War II or something like that. If you are speaking to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, you are not going to talk about how everybody ought to get in touch with their own feelings, because they don’t care. They’re not going to listen to you. When you are paid to do this, paid to tell the story of what happened when Achilles got mad, you had better work in the details that people like, or you’ll go hungry. That’s going to explain a lot of the really bizarre details.
The other thing is that, no matter how many times you tell this story, you can change the details as much as you want, but the ending always has to come out the same. I offer you as an example the movie, Gettysburg. It’s a fine movie about a battle that took place in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania in 1863. My wife and I own a copy of the movie. We watched it all the time before we went to Gettysburg. The most horrifying thing is, on the third days of Gettysburg. The Confederate Army indulged in something known as a picket charge where 15,000 Confederate soldiers walked a mile towards the Union lines, then ran for the Union defenses and got cut into little bits by cannons, rifle fire and all of that. We watch it over and over again and think about the brave Confederates and the brave Union soldiers. Even I, who am not a Confederate, start to wishing, just once, I’d like to see pickets division break through the Union lines and chase the Union Army all the way to Washington DC, because my heart pours out for them. Just once, I’d like to see the Confederates win the Civil War, not that I think they should have, but you kind of feel sorry for them after a while.
We’re in the same bind here with the Iliad. Homer isn’t the only guy who ever told this story, but he did the best job. When the ancient Greeks remembered how to write about 750 BC, the first thing they did was they set down Homer’s version of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Supposedly, the ancient Greeks themselves said they learned how to read and write in order to write down Homer’s poetry. That’s how seriously they took it. The Iliad starts out as a war story. What is it good for? Absolutely nothing, we know that, now. We believe that now, but back in 1200 BC, the poets who are telling you the story of the Odyssey and the Iliad have to play it to their audiences. This is a very militaristic society. So we’re going to have lots of gory details about severed eyeballs rolling in the dust and stuff like that in the Iliad. We’re going to have hundreds of innocent people killed in various disgusting ways. We’re also going to have tenderness, love and a big huge dose of arti manthano at the end. because it is so much more than a tragedy.
Well, I’m babbling too much. You should all go read the Iliad. God help me, the first time I ever had to teach the Iliad, it was painful because it was all about people getting killed and boasting about it, too. “Ha, ha. I killed Phil the Great. Phil, you will go down to your gibbering grave boasting of the fact that you were killed by Hughes the Magnificent.” There is only so many pages of this you can read. I hope to convince you that there’s more good stuff to it. The Iliad is the award winning story of a couple weeks of the Trojan War. Assume that the Greeks have been besieging Troy for nine years with fair-to-middling results, but nothing really getting accomplished. In between fighting for the city of Troy, the ancient Greeks go off on raids. They sack cities, just to stay in practice. They win lots of aritae. “I am the sacker of cities.” They go off to one city whose name I don’t remember, but they carry off a young woman by the name of Chryseis. You get aritae points for carrying off women. Then they run back to the camp. Chryseis becomes the property of Achilles. The problem is, a plague descends upon the Greek camp. People are just dropping like flies. Nobody knows what the problem is.
Here’s where the Iliad begins. Book one, verse one “Sing, oh Muse the wrath of Achilles…” I don’t remember the other part off the top of my head. Remember when I told you that legend, by its very nature, contains a kernel of historical fact? We’ve got this big camp full of Greeks camped out in front of the city of Troy. They’ve been there for nine years. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to tell you why the people are dying. Cholera, bad sanitation. Up until the 19th century, armies had little or no notion of sanitation. They, shall we say, deposited their waste products all in one centralized area. They did it in the streams and stuff like that. I could have told them cholera. Try observing a little bit more sanitary practices and the Greeks will not die like flies. Thank you very much Achilles. No, Apollo is shooting down all the Greeks. Apollo is mad. Why is Apollo mad this time? It turns out that Chryseis is the daughter of Chryses a local priest of Apollo. Chryses, who is not happy to have had his daughter carried away, says, “Oh great Apollo, if ever I have done a sacrifice that made you happy, smite these darned Greeks who stole my attractive young daughter from me.” Are you with me so far? Apollo comes through. Well, when this information becomes known, the Greeks call a meeting under the leadership of Agamemnon , but Agamemnon is not the king of all the Greeks in the way that I am the king of all people in this room. He is just the first among equals. They can argue with Agamemnon and they do.
Did I say Chryseis was Achilles’s property? I lied. She’s Agamemnon ’s property.” I knew there was a problem here. Let’s erase this. The Greeks are all meeting in council. Apollo is mad because we have taken Chryseis. Well, what’s the logical answer to do, Carrie? Think about it. We’ve taken this woman away from a priest of Apollo. What’s the best thing to do? Give her back. You don’t want to do that, really, because that implies something you did was wrong. You will have to give back your aritae points. Moreover, that’s Agamemnon ’s babe. If Agamemnon gives back his babe, people will say, “What a woosy that Agamemnon is.” He will lose all his aritae points and he will be deprived of his kleos. Yeah, he did kill his daughter, but then he wimped out and gave that girl back. You can’t have that.
On the other hand the Greeks are dropping like flies. Finally, Achilles says to him, “Darn it, Agamemnon , give that girl back.” “Easy for you to say, Achilles. I don’t see them wanting your girl.” It happens that Achilles has a slave woman named Briseis that he loves a whole deal. He sleeps with her sometimes as if she was his wife. She’s property. He stole her fair and square. No, he has a close friend by the name of Patroclus. We’ll get to him in a second. They are very close friends and Achilles loves Patroclus and Patroclus loves Achilles. So finally Agamemnon says, “Oh all right. I’ll give Chryseis back. Odysseus, take her back, but I’m going to take your girl Achilles.” He grabs Achilles’s woman and drags her off. Now, Agamemnon has covered up for his loss of aritae. Yeah, he gave the girl back. but to prove what a macho, burly stud he is, he took Achilles’s.
At this point Achilles is of two minds. One of them is to pull out his sword and chop Agamemnon in half. What would Jean Claude van Damme do in such a situation? He would splatter Agamemnon all over the walls. He would deck the walls with splats of Agamemnon . Achilles doesn’t. I know what you’re going to say, Scot. You’re going to say he did it because the story dictated it. You’re right. Agamemnon be killed by Achilles like within the first 200 lines of the Iliad? We got no story, then do we? On the other hand, it’s completely off character for Sylvester Stallone, John Wayne, or Achilles to say, “You’ve got a point. What you did was very reasonable. I don’t feel very good about the fact that you took my slave woman away from me, but I guess I’m just going to have to deal with that.” No, I don’t think that’s going to happen, either. So Homer writes into his award winning poem, the Iliad, as seen where Athena comes down in the disguise of a human being and talks sense into Achilles’s head. She says, “Achilles, don’t kill him. People will be mad at you. Why don’t you just take your troops, the Myrmidons, the ant men, go sit by your swift black ship and pout for a real long time?” So this is what Achilles does.
He says, “You know, I really ought to chop you in half, but I’m not going to. I’m going to take my men and I’m going to take Patroclus, my close intimate friend, and we will sit by the side of my swift, black ships, hanging around while you guys get your tails kicked.” You see Achilles has two fates. I might as well tell you this. We know how it’s going to end. I can tell you this. One fate has him dying young in the Trojan War, winning lots of aritae and kleos and being the subject of a poem so famous that it’s still tormenting students 3200 years after Achilles’s death. Option number two is he dies really old, really happy, and really rich after a long and fulfilling life with no aritae or kleos. It’s not much of a choice to you or to me. But, at any rate, what happens is Achilles, well, option number two is looking a lot better. “Patroclus, let’s go pout.” Then, in order to make the action even more interesting than it already is, Achilles’s mom, Thetis, the influential sea nymph who was destined to bare a son greater than his father and did, goes up to Zeus in her capacity as a goddess. Here’s another peculiar trait of reading Homer. The attention to character development, Achilles’s mom, like anybody’s mom would do, runs up to Zeus and says, “My child has been disrespected. These bullies are being mean to my boy. Do something about it Zeus. Zeus, I want you to fix it so that the Greeks get their you know what's kicked in over and over again so they learn that they cannot win the war without my son Achilles.” Zeus says, “Okay, Thetis you got it.”
The Greeks proceed to get their butts kicked over and over again. If I recall correctly from our last time, we put the Greeks over on this side. We put the Trojans over on this side. Does anybody want to tell me what goddesses you can expect to be on the Greek side? Can anybody tell me one? Athena, why Athena, Farrah Lynn? One more deity you can expect to see on the Greek side? No. Aphrodite is going to be over here. Hera is going to be on the Greek side. Poseidon, that adventurous god, is going to be on the Greek side. Ares is going to be on the Trojan side, for no other reason than Homer likes to balance it out. I mean, this is the kind of god Ares is. If this were a really manly heroic war epic, the god of war, don’t you think, would be a manly heroic guy who kicks a lot of butt in battle. Doesn’t that make sense? You’re not going to send Peewee Herman off to play Ares, god of war, in your war movie. You’re not gong to send Seinfeld after the Germans with a rocket launcher. You’d send him out there with some really bad jokes. I don’t like him.
Apollo is on the Trojan side for pretty much the same reason, to balance out. Zeus. Whose side is Zeus on? Zeus is on Zeus’s side. Interestingly enough, I like to think that Homer has a special feeling in his heart for Zeus, because whose pulling all the strings in the story? Homer is, in much the same way Zeus pulls all the strings in the real world. Let’s say that I am going to tell my wife about my day at school. I had a really great class. I was really coherent. It was fascinating. Everybody just loved it. They even stood up and applauded me at the end. See what I put up with? I could make that up, if I wanted to. I have the power to do that. Or I could say, “They threw things at me, but we had a pretty good class anyway.” I could say anything I want and it could be accepted as the truth as long as I make it believable enough. It is the same thing with Homer, same thing with Zeus. Zeus can’t change the plot line of the story, either. Homer knows how he feels.
So the battle goes on for about four books. People basically just get killed right and left for about four books. There’s one touching scene in Book Three in which Helen is sitting out on the walls of Troy, watching the manly Greeks line up to invade the city and get their butts kicked and stuff. Priam the old king of Troy, Hector’s daddy, comes walking up and says, “Now what are you looking at?” Helen says, “Oh, jeez. You probably hate me, don’t you, King Priam. Here I am a mere female and I caused all this horrible war and strife.” Good god, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing. Priam could have said, “Yeah, that’s for damn sure,” and punted her off of the wall. The Greeks took her back and they go home. End of war. But no. I mean, we’ve been in this war for nine years now. We can’t hardly do that. We’ve been at it so long. It’s like a really good argument where you know you are wrong. You could just admit you’re wrong and go on with your life, but you’ve been maintaining you were right for so long you have to. Have you ever been in that position? It is called marriage. I’m kidding, sweetie. What Priam does is says, “Girl, you are too hard on yourself. The reason why you did this is really because Zeus had it in his heart of hearts to create war between our people. Why don’t you sit down, make yourself comfortable and point out to me from the wall just who are these great Greek heroes? Which one of these is Agamemnon ? Which one of these is Achilles? Just make yourself comfortable and don’t be so hard on yourself, child.”
Whoa, Priam’s being nice to Helen. It gets better. Paris and Menelaus offer to fight each other in a one on one duel in Book Three. Menelaus is Helen’s awfully wedded husband. Paris stole her. I know. Why are all these Greeks and Trojans fighting and killing each other? Why don’t we just have a one on one fight between Paris and Menelaus? Does anybody want to answer that question? There’s a couple of good answers. That would be too easy of a thing to do. It would make too much sense. Very good, then there is no aritae for everybody else. We’d have no story. It would end in Book Three. What happens? Aphrodite seizes Paris, because she likes him, remember and transports him back to the city of Troy before Menelaus can kill him. He saunters in and says, “Aphrodite has put me back here, dad. Hi Helen. Hi dad. Aphrodite put me back here.” Hector, his brother, prince of Troy, says, “God, Paris. I wished to hell Menelaus had killed you, you jerk. We wouldn’t have had any war if it weren’t for you.” So we have big brother Hector getting on little brother Paris. Paris says, “Hey, Helen, baby. I’ve got the hots. Let’s go perform in flagrante delicto.” Helen goes, “No way. God, haven’t you messed up enough lives today as it is?” She’s not interested but Aphrodite grabs her and makes her go. Well, ponder that in your heart of hearts.
In Book Five, we have more fighting still. We have gods and goddesses coming down. Diomedes wounds Aphrodite while Aphrodite is snatching her son Aeneas out of battle. Aphrodite kind of flounces back to her abode on Mount Ida. Ares also gets wounded by Diomedes. The war god. You would think that a good war god would be like John Wayne. Well, this is what happens. Ares runs up to Mount Olympus, whining to Zeus. “Dad, I got hurt.” Zeus says, “You know what happened last time you pulled this. We nailed you in the barrel for seven years and wouldn’t let you out. Stop whining now Ares.” Why is Homer making the mighty god of war look like that? Well, yeah, because he can, but it’s the secret anti-war agenda. Wait until you hear Zeus deliver the world’s worst come on line. I mean you think that I don’t know, for example, that you don’t make fun of me outside of this classroom. You think that I don’t know you make fun of my unique hairstyle, my vocal mannerisms and my drawings. You do. I know that you do and it’s an important part of your college experience that you do make fun of your professors and have evil thoughts about them because I did the same thing. We’d sit around and drink and bitch about our professors. It’s really great. It’s important part of life.
Later on you’ll get a job and then you can complain about your bosses. You’ll get married and you can complain about your spouse. When you were a little kid you complained about your mom and dad. When you see mom or dad do something really stupid that makes it all the better, doesn’t it? Somehow it makes you feel that life is a little bit more worth living that particular day that you see me pour coffee. Or professor so and so has gone into battle with the barn door open. He may be a mean, ornery old poop, and he may give you an F that will keep you from graduating, but every time you think about this, you close your eyes and see him bouncing around on camera with his barn door open and life isn’t so bad. Am I right or am I wrong? You’re right. You mean to say you make fun of me behind my back? It’s the same thing with Ares obviously.
This war god who is off slaughtering people. That’d be great. It’s like John Wayne. Did you ever see Saturday Night Live with John Wayne, that sort of thing? The Greeks continue to get their you know what’s kicked in for, oh, let’s say another four more books. Then Agamemnon finally gets a clue. “I was wrong. I really shouldn’t have made Achilles angry. I’m starting to realize that now.” This is Book Nine. So in Book Nine, Agamemnon decides, “Well, I’m going to make a big deal of this. I am going to appoint a special embassy, a panel of three people, to go off to meet Achilles by the side of his swift black ships and say to him, ‘Agamemnon realizes he messed up and he is willing to make up to you in a major way. He realizes he was wrong and we love you, man.’” The three he chooses, that Agamemnon chooses, are a fellow by the name of Phoenix, who is an old guy who is Achilles’s tutor when he was a young man, Ajax the Greater, the big hulking guy who is better with sword than he is with words, and that lying stealing, fornicating sack of pooh pooh known as Odysseus are the others chosen.
The three guys journey to the Achilles camp by the side of his swift black ships, where he sits there with Patroclus. Phoenix speaks first. Phoenix says, “Achilles I carried you around when you were a baby. I gave you your first glass of wine to drink. You puked up your first glass of wine on my shoulder. Let me tell you what I think,” and so on. That’s a pretty strong argument. “I knew you when you were a little kid. Don’t pull the high and might act with me.” Do you parents ever pull this? Achilles goes, “Well, I’m really sorry, Phoenix, but I can’t. I have been dissed. Death before dishonor, you know. I can’t go back.” Odysseus makes his case. Odysseus says, “Agamemnon realizes he was wrong. Agamemnon has even offered to make up to you, Achilles. Agamemnon will let you marry his surviving daughter, Electra. He will offer you all sorts of bootie, riches, prizes and he will make a big announcement in the middle of the Greek camp saying, ‘I, Agamemnon was wrong.’” Homer doesn’t say this, but he says everything but Agamemnon will personally crawl on all fours and kiss your butt right in the middle of the Greek camp. Odysseus is very persuasive. Homer indulges himself in a beautiful simile, describing the affect of Odysseus’ words and arguments. Homer tells us that Odysseus’ arguments and words were like snow falling on a tree. Each snowflake individually beautiful, light floats on the wind beautifully to its resting-place.
But when you get enough of them piled together, they will just make the branches snap off a tree with their weight and force. It is a beautiful simile, but Achilles isn’t buying it. Ajax the Greater, this is really sad. You try to conjure up these old football movies. You know it’s the fourth quarter. There is like 23 seconds left. The Greek team is on their own fifteen-yard line. It’s fourth and about a mile. The star quarterback is sitting on the sidelines. He’s mad. The grizzled old offensive lineman comes back on their last time out. “Gee, Achilles come on back. The team needs you, man. Don’t let the team down. Remember that time that I blocked for you?” You know I’m making fun of it, but it can be very moving. The simple, goodhearted guy who puts his butt and other parts of his anatomy out on the line all the time. He says, “Come on back, man, we need you.” Achilles is about to cry, but he can’t go back. Here’s what he says. “I have two fates. My mom even told me, the influential sea goddess Thetis. She told me that I could either die young, make a really ugly corpse, but win lots of glory and honor in the Trojan War. Or I could hold off of the Trojan War, not go and fight, not be there at the end and live just about forever. I could live a long, happy life and die with no aritae or kleos, whatsoever. Option number two is still looking really good to me right now. So thanks, but no thanks.” He sends these folks off packing by and by.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, back at the Greek camp, Homer treats us to two, three, four more books of people getting killed, severed heads with their teeth still chattering, yelling, “Help me, help me!” Or Kristen the brave, slaying Mona and then jumping up and down on her corpse saying, “Woo hoo, woo hoo, I killed you.” Or J.R. prancing around in the stolen armor of Mitch, saying, “I am hot stuff. I killed Mitch.” It’s not very savory stuff. Every once in a while, you’ve got to throw in some humor, so here’s what happens. Homer decides that Nestor is tired of talking and he wants to go fight. Nestor is about 300 years old. Nestor gets all dressed up and he gets into his chariot. On guard and he dashes off to the Greek lines. You’re already laughing. He hits a bump or something, falls out of the chariot, and he’s lying there in the battle, where men win glory. He’s going, “I’ve fallen down and I can’t get up.” At first, the only person who hears him is Odysseus, that lying sack of poop. He goes, “Did I hear something?” He’s not going to help Nestor. Finally, Diomedes saves him.
Then in Book 13 all the other gods and goddesses are kind of mad. Zeus has forbidden them to get involved in the battle ever since Aphrodite and that whining little snot Ares got wounded in battle. Zeus has said to stay out. Of course, Poseidon disguises himself and he’s in there fighting away. I’m sure Ares is knocking around, too, in disguise. Hera is mad. Hera looks around. Her brother, Poseidon, bustling around in the battle where men win glory and her heart was glad. Then Hera looked at Zeus of the aegis, and, in her eyes he was hateful. So this council seemed best to the lady, Ox-Eyed Hera. I mean big, huge wide-eyes, like a cow, they were considered very beautiful. Hera was very honored to be called Ox Eyes. She decided to array herself in loveliness and go appear on Mount Ida before Zeus of the aegis and maybe the heart within him would be melted and he would lie with her and take his mind from the battle for a while. This is really funny. Here’s what Hera does. Hera goes and visits Aphrodite and gets the girdle of ultimate desire, handy makeup tips, beautiful perfume. It’s like that famous Pat Bennetar video; love is a battlefield where all the women are dressed up in their war-like beauty. We are young, heartache to heartache. Love is a battlefield.
Hera can’t fight with Zeus on her own terms. So what she’s going to do is she’s going to use sex as a weapon, because that’s the only weapon she has. Aphrodite gets her all dolled up, and Hera comes flouncing by Zeus. Zeus says, “Whoa, hey, Hera, baby what are you up to?” She says, “Oh, I’m going down to visit the Sintians. There’s this good sacrifice going on in East Africa. Zeus with lust in his heart says, “My lady, there will be a time when you can go there as well, but now, never before has love so conquered my heart, melted the heart within me.” There are women in this room who have probably heard that line or variance of that line. “You’re melting my heart. You’re breaking me to your submission.” Okay, that is not bad. Not good, either. “Never before has anybody broken my heart to submission. Not even the time that Leto bore me Apollo and Artemis, not even that time when Semele in Thebes bore me Dionysus, not even that time when Alcmena bore me Hercules, nor sweet stepping Danaë, who bore me Perseus back in Argos. Not even you, yourself, not so much as I love you now, honey. The sweet desire has taken hold of me.” It’s the worst pickup line of all of ancient Greek antiquity. Underscoring it is the fact that Zeus, supreme god of the ancient Greeks, is using this pickup line on who? His wife. Why? Because she wants him, too. Boy does he look like a dork or what? Hera kind of says, “Come here, big boy.” She goes, “Oh, what happens if other gods and goddesses or humans see us?” Zeus goes, “Hey, baby, don’t worry. I will draw a wonderful golden cloud about us so thick that even Helios will not be able to see through it, although, as the sun god, his vision is by far the strongest.”
So saying, he drew a golden, wonderful cloud about them. Beneath the cloud, the earth broke out into dewey fresh crocus and hyacinth. Now, this is Homer’s equivalent of the train running into the tunnel and the fireworks going off and the star spangled banner playing. You know what’s going on, right? You don’t. Okay it’s a synonym for sex. I draw your attention to the hieros gamos aspect, the sacred marriage aspect of this thing. Remember that Zeus is a successor of Cronus, who was a successor of the sky god Uranus. Hera is a successor of the goddess, Rhea, who is a successor of the goddess, Gaia. Remember the primary purpose of this hieros gamos thing, this sacred marriage between sky god and earth goddess is to produce rain, which produces vegetation.
Here we have Zeus and Hera for completely bizarre anthropomorphic reasons performing the love deed inside a golden, wonderful cloud from which dew descends. The grass breaks out and dewey Greek hyacinth and clover and stuff like that. Folks, that is the hieros gamos come back. It’s wonderful. As we’re all still chuckling at that, Nestor gets an idea. Jeremy’s eyes close as I say, “Nestor gets an idea because Nestor is incapable of having a simple, easy to explain idea.” Nestor goes over to the camp of Achilles. He says, “Achilles do you want to go fight?” Achilles says, “no.” Okay, then Nestor goes to work on Patroclus. Patroclus is kind of the Gilligan figure. It’s kind of like the Number Two, kind of like the Scottie Pippin figure. It’s not easy to be Michael Jordan’s buddy. It’s not easy to be the skipper’s little buddy. You want to break out and win a name for yourself as a person. So Nestor uses all the weapons in his arsenal. He talks forever and ever. He tells stories about his childhood. He says, “Patroclus, why don’t you ask Achilles if you can borrow his armor and go scare the crap out of the Trojans?” Nestor talks and talks until Patroclus finally probably says, “shut up. I will do it.” Patroclus goes to Achilles. He says, “Achilles, would you consider, if you really love me, you will let me wear your armor, and go into battle and win some glory for myself?”
Achilles doesn’t think it’s a good idea. After all, if you put me in a Kansas City Chiefs uniform with the number 35 on it. You can stuff it with pads until I assume the proportions of Marcus Allen. But, that first run into the Oakland Raiders defensive line is going to make sure that I am not Marcus Allen. You can put me in a Los Angeles Laker jersey on it with the number 34 on it, but when old meat truck Patrick Ewing comes charging into the lane, I’m by and by going to look like this, if you see what I mean. Achilles tries to explain to him. This isn’t really a good idea. Finally, he says, “Okay Patroclus, I love you, man. You need some props of your own. You need some credit. You need to do this great thing. Fine, if it means so much to you, fine. Just put on my armor and go scare the heck out of those Trojans.”
It is at this point at which we’re going to have to leave off. I ask you to just contemplate the idea of Patroclus rushing the city of Troy dressed in Achilles’s armor going “I’m Achilles, dammit.” I want to know what does it read on Patroclus’s death certificate. Well, that’s spelled out in big red letters of every death certificate. See you next time.
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