[26]
So when the Greeks were standing in for Tenedos, Tenes saw them and tried to
keep them off by throwing stones, but was killed by Achilles with a sword-cut in the
breast, though Thetis had forewarned Achilles not to kill
Tenes, because he himself would die by the hand of Apollo if he slew
Tenes.1
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1 Compare Plut. Quaest. Graec. 28. Plutarch mentions the warning given by Thetis to Achilles not to kill Tenes, and says that the goddess specially charged one of Achilles's servants to remind her son of the warning. But in scouring the island Achilles fell in with the beautiful sister of Tenes and made love to her; Tenes defended his sister against her seducer, and in the brawl was slain by Achilles. When the slayer discovered whom he had slain, he killed the servant who ought to have warned him in time, and he buried Tenes on the spot where the sanctuary was afterwards dedicated to his worship. This version of the story clearly differs from the one followed by Apollodorus.
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