Palamedes, wisest of the Greeks, came to a bad end. He was executed for treason during the Trojan War. He’s famous for mourning truth, which he said died before he did.
During the first nine years of the Trojan War, the Greeks raided Troy’s allies, hoping to cut off supplies. Achilles and Ajax came back to camp with loot and captives. Odysseus returned from Thrace empty handed. Palamedes, suspecting a lack of initiative and possibly a lack of courage, let Odysseus hear about it.
Odysseus, at least in the early legends, was the kind of man who always got even.
Odysseus convinced Agamemnon, the supreme commander, that the gods had warned that the Greeks must move their camp for just one night. The army moved out, and that night Odysseus buried some gold at Palamedes’s campsite. Odysseus forced a Phrygian prisoner to forge a letter, allegedly from King Priam of Troy, saying that the money was the agreed price for betraying the Greeks. When the prisoner finished the letter, Odysseus killed him on the spot.
The next day, the army moved back to its original campsite. Somebody found the body and then found the letter.
When Palamedes protested his innocence, Odysseus helpfully suggested that the Greeks search his campsite.
The ancient Greeks constantly worked on their legends and myths. This one was older than Homer, who saw Odysseus in better light.
One of the traditional readings of the tale is that wise people don’t last long in places where truth isn’t valued. It’s a lesson Socrates might have appreciated.
But I like the aftermath, which suggests a problem with abandoning truth.
Palamedes’s father, Nauplius, heard of his son’s murder and sailed to Troy to demand justice. He appealed to Agamemnon, the army commander, who turned the old man away.
Nauplius could do nothing against the powerful block that had gained control of Greece. But on the way back home, he stopped at the palaces of almost all the murderers. He told the wife of each murderer that her husband was bringing a captured princess home as his new queen.
Clytemnestra, Agamemnon’s wife, was one of several women who took the story badly.
• Source: Robert Graves, The Greek Myths: 2; Penguin Books, 1968, pp. 299-300.