Troilus and Cressida — Act 1, Scene 1: Troy. Before Priam's palace.

Troilus, armed but unwilling to fight, stays near Priam’s palace with Pandarus and complains that his real battle is his love for Cressida. He compares himself unfavorably to the Greeks and says he feels too weak and unready for war. Pandarus tries to speak well of Cressida and teases Troilus about waiting, while Troilus grows frustrated that Pandarus’s comments only intensify his pain. After Pandarus leaves, an alarm sounds from the battlefield. Troilus dismisses the fighting as not worth his sword, then talks of how he can reach Cressida only through Pandarus. Aeneas arrives with news that Paris has returned wounded, and Troilus and Aeneas head off together toward the field.