The Iliad – Summary Book XXIV (24) Achilles cannot sleep. He continues to drag Hector’s body around the camp. Apollo protects it from disfigurement. The gods do not like how Achilles is treating Hector and denying him a proper funeral. Zeus sends Thetis to tell Achilles to stop mistreating Hector and to accept a ransom. Zeus then sends Iris to Priam to tell him to go to Achilles with a ransom for Hector. He must go on his own, with only an old herald to guide the mules. Hecabe tries to stop Priam from going but fails. Iris comes to Priam. Priam sets off with the ransom and an omen from Zeus to reassure him. Zeus sends Hermes, in disguise as a Myrmidon prince, to escort Priam safely to Achilles’ hut. Priam appeals to Achilles for the return of Hector’s body. He reminds Achilles of his own father, Peleus. Achilles is moved by these memories of home and his father and agrees to accept Priam’s ransom. The two men weep together. Priam weeps for his son Hector, while Achilles weeps for Patroclus. Priam supplicates Achilles. Achilles then asks Priam to share a meal with him, even though they are so consumed with grief. He tells Priam the story of Niobe. The story of Niobe: Niobe, a daughter of Tantalus, was the mother of twelve children. She had six sons and six daughters. One day, Niobe compared herself as an equal to the goddess, Leto. She had just committed the sin of ‘hubris’. Leto had been a bride of Zeus and had given birth to the twins Apollo and Artemis. When Leto heard that Niobe had claimed to be her equal, if not her superior as she had more children, Leto was enraged. She sent Apollo and Artemis to punish her. Apollo killed her six sons and Artemis killed her six daughters. Apollo and Artemis kill Niobe’s children. For nine days Niobe’s children lay unburied as Zeus had turned the people into stone. On the tenth day the gods felt sorry for them and they were buried. Niobe was so exhausted from all her tears that she decided she must have some food. Afterward, she herself turned to stone and is now among the rugged rocks in the hills of Sipylus. There, she still weeps for her loss. The rock that is said to be Niobe. Achilles gives Priam a bed to sleep in for the night. Before Priam sleeps he asks for a truce from battle so that he can give his son, Hector, proper funeral rites. Achilles grants this and gives Priam twelve days. During the night Hermes comes back to Priam and secretly escorts him back to Troy in case any of the other Greek leaders were to find him in their camp. All the people of Troy come out to mourn Hector’s body. Andromache, Hecabe and Helen all give their reasons for regretting Hector’s death and lead the lamentations. Wood is collected for Hector’s funeral pyre. He is cremated and buried and a grave-mound set up. A funeral feast is held in Priam’s palace. Hector is laid out on his funeral pyre.