In the Greek camp, Agamemnon opens the council by asking why the princes look dispirited after so long a siege, and he argues that great enterprises are always tested by setbacks. Nestor agrees, comparing brave men to ships that prove themselves in storms. Ulysses then gives a long speech about order and rank, saying the Greeks’ failure comes from broken discipline and Achilles’s pride. He explains that Achilles mocks the army with Patroclus and that Ajax has also become vain and unruly. Aeneas arrives from Troy and delivers Hector’s challenge to fight any Greek lover brave enough to answer. After he leaves, Ulysses and Nestor decide to answer the challenge by arranging for Ajax, not Achilles, to meet Hector.
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