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The Iliad by Homer 1899 |
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| The
Iliad by Homer
1899
About the
Author:
Homer
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ARGUMENT - THE BATTLE AT
THE GRECIAN WALL
The Greeks having
retired into their
intrenchments, Hector
attempts to
force them; but it
proving impossible to
pass the ditch,
Polydamas advises
to quit their chariots,
and manage the attack on
foot. The Trojans follow
his counsel; and having
divided their army into
five bodies of foot,
begin
the assault. But upon
the signal of an eagle
with a serpent in his
talons,
which appeared on the
left hand of the
Trojans, Polydamas
endeavours to
withdraw them again.
This Hector opposes, and
continues the attack; in
which, after many
actions, Sarpedon makes
the first breach in the
wall.
Hector also, casting a
stone of vast size,
forces open one of the
gates,
and enters at the head
of his troops, who
victoriously pursue the
Grecians
even to their ships.
While thus
the hero's
pious cares
attend
The cure and
safety of
his wounded
friend,
Trojans and
Greeks with
clashing
shields
engage,
And mutual
deaths are
dealt with
mutual rage.
Nor long the
trench or
lofty walls
oppose;
With gods
averse the
ill-fated
works arose;
Their powers
neglected,
and no
victim
slain,
The walls
were raised,
the trenches
sunk in
vain.
Without the
gods, how
short a
period
stands
The proudest
monument of
mortal
hands!
This stood
while Hector
and Achilles
raged.
While sacred
Troy the
warring
hosts
engaged;
But when her
sons were
slain, her
city burn'd,
And what
survived of
Greece to
Greece
return'd;
Then Neptune
and Apollo
shook the
shore,
Then Ida's
summits
pour'd their
watery
store;
Rhesus and
Rhodius then
unite their
rills,
Caresus
roaring down
the stony
hills,
Æsepus,
Granicus,
with mingled
force,
And Xanthus
foaming from
his fruitful
source;
And gulfy
Simois,
rolling to
the main(224)
Helmets, and
shields, and
godlike
heroes
slain:
These,
turn'd by
Phoebus from
their wonted
ways,
Deluged the
rampire nine
continual
days;
The weight
of waters
saps the
yielding
wall,
And to the
sea the
floating
bulwarks
fall.
Incessant
cataracts
the
Thunderer
pours,
And half the
skies
descend in
sluicy
showers.
The god of
ocean,
marching
stern
before,
With his
huge trident
wounds the
trembling
shore,
Vast stones
and piles
from their
foundation
heaves,
And whelms
the smoky
ruin in the
waves.
Now smooth'd
with sand,
and levell'd
by the
flood,
No fragment
tells where
once the
wonder
stood;
In their old
bounds the
rivers roll
again,
Shine 'twixt
the hills,
or wander
o'er the
plain.(225)
But this the
gods in
later times
perform;
As yet the
bulwark
stood, and
braved the
storm;
The strokes
yet echoed
of
contending
powers;
War
thunder'd at
the gates,
and blood
distain'd
the towers.
Smote by the
arm of Jove
with dire
dismay,
Close by
their hollow
ships the
Grecians
lay:
Hector's
approach in
every wind
they hear,
And Hector's
fury every
moment fear.
He, like a
whirlwind,
toss'd the
scattering
throng,
Mingled the
troops, and
drove the
field along.
So 'midst
the dogs and
hunters'
daring
bands,
Fierce of
his might, a
boar or lion
stands;
Arm'd foes
around a
dreadful
circle form,
And hissing
javelins
rain an iron
storm:
His powers
untamed,
their bold
assault
defy,
And where he
turns the
rout
disperse or
die:
He foams, he
glares, he
bounds
against them
all,
And if he
falls, his
courage
makes him
fall.
With equal
rage
encompass'd
Hector
glows;
Exhorts his
armies, and
the trenches
shows.
The panting
steeds
impatient
fury
breathe,
And snort
and tremble
at the gulf
beneath;
Just at the
brink they
neigh, and
paw the
ground,
And the turf
trembles,
and the
skies
resound.
Eager they
view'd the
prospect
dark and
deep,
Vast was the
leap, and
headlong
hung the
steep;
The bottom
bare, (a
formidable
show!)
And bristled
thick with
sharpen'd
stakes
below.
The foot
alone this
strong
defence
could force,
And try the
pass
impervious
to the
horse.
This saw
Polydamas;
who, wisely
brave,
Restrain'd
great
Hector, and
this counsel
gave:
"O thou,
bold leader
of the
Trojan
bands!
And you,
confederate
chiefs from
foreign
lands!
What
entrance
here can
cumbrous
chariots
find,
The stakes
beneath, the
Grecian
walls
behind?
No pass
through
those,
without a
thousand
wounds,
No space for
combat in
yon narrow
bounds.
Proud of the
favours
mighty Jove
has shown,
On certain
dangers we
too rashly
run:
If 'tis will
our haughty
foes to
tame,
Oh may this
instant end
the Grecian
name!
Here, far
from Argos,
let their
heroes fall,
And one
great day
destroy and
bury all!
But should
they turn,
and here
oppress our
train,
What hopes,
what methods
of retreat
remain?
Wedged in
the trench,
by our own
troops
confused,
In one
promiscuous
carnage
crush'd and
bruised,
All Troy
must perish,
if their
arms
prevail,
Nor shall a
Trojan live
to tell the
tale.
Hear then,
ye warriors!
and obey
with speed;
Back from
the trenches
let your
steeds be
led;
Then all
alighting,
wedged in
firm array,
Proceed on
foot, and
Hector lead
the way.
So Greece
shall stoop
before our
conquering
power,
And this (if
Jove
consent) her
fatal hour."
This counsel
pleased: the
godlike
Hector
sprung
Swift from
his seat;
his clanging
armour rung.
The chief's
example
follow'd by
his train,
Each quits
his car, and
issues on
the plain,
By orders
strict the
charioteers
enjoin'd
Compel the
coursers to
their ranks
behind.
The forces
part in five
distinguish'd
bands,
And all obey
their
several
chiefs'
commands.
The best and
bravest in
the first
conspire,
Pant for the
fight, and
threat the
fleet with
fire:
Great Hector
glorious in
the van of
these,
Polydamas,
and brave
Cebriones.
Before the
next the
graceful
Paris
shines,
And bold
Alcathous,
and Agenor
joins.
The sons of
Priam with
the third
appear,
Deiphobus,
and Helenas
the seer;
In arms with
these the
mighty Asius
stood,
Who drew
from
Hyrtacus his
noble blood,
And whom
Arisba's
yellow
coursers
bore,
The coursers
fed on
Selle's
winding
shore.
Antenor's
sons the
fourth
battalion
guide,
And great
Æneas, born
on fountful
Ide.
Divine
Sarpedon the
last band
obey'd,
Whom Glaucus
and
Asteropaeus
aid.
Next him,
the bravest,
at their
army's head,
But he more
brave than
all the
hosts he
led.
Now with
compacted
shields in
close array,
The moving
legions
speed their
headlong
way:
Already in
their hopes
they fire
the fleet,
And see the
Grecians
gasping at
their feet.
While every
Trojan thus,
and every
aid,
The advice
of wise
Polydamas
obey'd,
Asius alone,
confiding in
his car,
His vaunted
coursers
urged to
meet the
war.
Unhappy
hero! and
advised in
vain;
Those wheels
returning
ne'er shall
mark the
plain;
No more
those
coursers
with
triumphant
joy
Restore
their master
to the gates
of Troy!
Black death
attends
behind the
Grecian
wall,
And great
Idomeneus
shall boast
thy fall!
Fierce to
the left he
drives,
where from
the plain
The flying
Grecians
strove their
ships to
gain;
Swift
through the
wall their
horse and
chariots
pass'd,
The gates
half-open'd
to receive
the last.
Thither,
exulting in
his force,
he flies:
His
following
host with
clamours
rend the
skies:
To plunge
the Grecians
headlong in
the main,
Such their
proud hopes;
but all
their hopes
were vain!
To guard the
gates, two
mighty
chiefs
attend,
Who from the
Lapiths'
warlike race
descend;
This
Polypoetes,
great
Perithous'
heir,
And that
Leonteus,
like the god
of war.
As two tall
oaks, before
the wall
they rise;
Their roots
in earth,
their heads
amidst the
skies:
Whose
spreading
arms with
leafy
honours
crown'd,
Forbid the
tempest, and
protect the
ground;
High on the
hills
appears
their
stately
form,
And their
deep roots
for ever
brave the
storm.
So graceful
these, and
so the shock
they stand
Of raging
Asius, and
his furious
band.
Orestes,
Acamas, in
front
appear,
And OEnomaus
and Thoon
close the
rear:
In vain
their
clamours
shake the
ambient
fields,
In vain
around them
beat their
hollow
shields;
The fearless
brothers on
the Grecians
call,
To guard
their
navies, and
defend the
wall.
Even when
they saw
Troy's sable
troops
impend,
And Greece
tumultuous
from her
towers
descend,
Forth from
the portals
rush'd the
intrepid
pair,
Opposed
their
breasts, and
stood
themselves
the war.
So two wild
boars spring
furious from
their den,
Roused with
the cries of
dogs and
voice of
men;
On every
side the
crackling
trees they
tear,
And root the
shrubs, and
lay the
forest bare;
They gnash
their tusks,
with fire
their
eye-balls
roll,
Till some
wide wound
lets out
their mighty
soul.
Around their
heads the
whistling
javelins
sung,
With
sounding
strokes
their brazen
targets
rung;
Fierce was
the fight,
while yet
the Grecian
powers
Maintain'd
the walls,
and mann'd
the lofty
towers:
To save
their fleet
their last
efforts they
try,
And stones
and darts in
mingled
tempests
fly.
As when
sharp Boreas
blows
abroad, and
brings
The dreary
winter on
his frozen
wings;
Beneath the
low-hung
clouds the
sheets of
snow
Descend, and
whiten all
the fields
below:
So fast the
darts on
either army
pour,
So down the
rampires
rolls the
rocky
shower:
Heavy, and
thick,
resound the
batter'd
shields,
And the deaf
echo rattles
round the
fields.
With shame
repulsed,
with grief
and fury
driven,
The frantic
Asius thus
accuses
Heaven:
"In powers
immortal who
shall now
believe?
Can those
too flatter,
and can Jove
deceive?
What man
could doubt
but Troy's
victorious
power
Should
humble
Greece, and
this her
fatal hour?
But like
when wasps
from hollow
crannies
drive,
To guard the
entrance of
their common
hive,
Darkening
the rock,
while with
unwearied
wings
They strike
the
assailants,
and infix
their
stings;
A race
determined,
that to
death
contend:
So fierce
these Greeks
their last
retreats
defend.
Gods! shall
two warriors
only guard
their gates,
Repel an
army, and
defraud the
fates?"
These empty
accents
mingled with
the wind,
Nor moved
great Jove's
unalterable
mind;
To godlike
Hector and
his
matchless
might
Was owed the
glory of the
destined
fight.
Like deeds
of arms
through all
the forts
were tried,
And all the
gates
sustain'd an
equal tide;
Through the
long walls
the stony
showers were
heard,
The blaze of
flames, the
flash of
arms
appear'd.
The spirit
of a god my
breast
inspire,
To raise
each act to
life, and
sing with
fire!
While Greece
unconquer'd
kept alive
the war,
Secure of
death,
confiding in
despair;
And all her
guardian
gods, in
deep dismay,
With
unassisting
arms
deplored the
day.
Even yet the
dauntless
Lapithae
maintain
The dreadful
pass, and
round them
heap the
slain.
First
Damasus, by
Polypoetes'
steel,
Pierced
through his
helmet's
brazen
visor, fell;
The weapon
drank the
mingled
brains and
gore!
The warrior
sinks,
tremendous
now no more!
Next Ormenus
and Pylon
yield their
breath:
Nor less
Leonteus
strews the
field with
death;
First
through the
belt
Hippomachus
he gored,
Then sudden
waved his
unresisted
sword:
Antiphates,
as through
the ranks he
broke,
The falchion
struck, and
fate pursued
the stroke:
Iamenus,
Orestes,
Menon, bled;
And round
him rose a
monument of
dead.
Meantime,
the bravest
of the
Trojan crew,
Bold Hector
and
Polydamas,
pursue;
Fierce with
impatience
on the works
to fall,
And wrap in
rolling
flames the
fleet and
wall.
These on the
farther bank
now stood
and gazed,
By Heaven
alarm'd, by
prodigies
amazed:
A signal
omen stopp'd
the passing
host,
Their
martial fury
in their
wonder lost.
Jove's bird
on sounding
pinions beat
the skies;
A bleeding
serpent of
enormous
size,
His talons
truss'd;
alive, and
curling
round,
He stung the
bird, whose
throat
received the
wound:
Mad with the
smart, he
drops the
fatal prey,
In airy
circles
wings his
painful way,
Floats on
the winds,
and rends
the heaven
with cries:
Amidst the
host the
fallen
serpent
lies.
They, pale
with terror,
mark its
spires
unroll'd,
And Jove's
portent with
beating
hearts
behold.
Then first
Polydamas
the silence
broke,
Long weigh'd
the signal,
and to
Hector
spoke:
"How oft, my
brother, thy
reproach I
bear,
For words
well meant,
and
sentiments
sincere?
True to
those
counsels
which I
judge the
best,
I tell the
faithful
dictates of
my breast.
To speak his
thoughts is
every
freeman's
right,
In peace, in
war, in
council, and
in fight;
And all I
move,
deferring to
thy sway,
But tends to
raise that
power which
I obey.
Then hear my
words, nor
may my words
be vain!
Seek not
this day the
Grecian
ships to
gain;
For sure, to
warn us,
Jove his
omen sent,
And thus my
mind
explains its
clear event:
The victor
eagle, whose
sinister
flight
Retards our
host, and
fills our
hearts with
fright,
Dismiss'd
his conquest
in the
middle
skies,
Allow'd to
seize, but
not possess
the prize;
Thus, though
we gird with
fires the
Grecian
fleet,
Though these
proud
bulwalks
tumble at
our feet,
Toils
unforeseen,
and fiercer,
are decreed;
More woes
shall
follow, and
more heroes
bleed.
So bodes my
soul, and
bids me thus
advise;
For thus a
skilful seer
would read
the skies."
To him then
Hector with
disdain
return'd:
(Fierce as
he spoke,
his eyes
with fury
burn'd:)
"Are these
the faithful
counsels of
thy tongue?
Thy will is
partial, not
thy reason
wrong:
Or if the
purpose of
thy heart
thou vent,
Sure heaven
resumes the
little sense
it lent.
What coward
counsels
would thy
madness move
Against the
word, the
will
reveal'd of
Jove?
The leading
sign, the
irrevocable
nod,
And happy
thunders of
the
favouring
god,
These shall
I slight,
and guide my
wavering
mind
By wandering
birds that
flit with
every wind?
Ye vagrants
of the sky!
your wings
extend,
Or where the
suns arise,
or where
descend;
To right, to
left,
unheeded
take your
way,
While I the
dictates of
high heaven
obey.
Without a
sign his
sword the
brave man
draws,
And asks no
omen but his
country's
cause.
But why
should'st
thou suspect
the war's
success?
None fears
it more, as
none
promotes it
less:
Though all
our chiefs
amidst yon
ships
expire,
Trust thy
own
cowardice to
escape their
fire.
Troy and her
sons may
find a
general
grave,
But thou
canst live,
for thou
canst be a
slave.
Yet should
the fears
that wary
mind
suggests
Spread their
cold poison
through our
soldiers'
breasts,
My javelin
can revenge
so base a
part,
And free the
soul that
quivers in
thy heart."
Furious he
spoke, and,
rushing to
the wall,
Calls on his
host; his
host obey
the call;
With ardour
follow where
their leader
flies:
Redoubling
clamours
thunder in
the skies.
Jove
breathes a
whirlwind
from the
hills of
Ide,
And drifts
of dust the
clouded navy
hide;
He fills the
Greeks with
terror and
dismay,
And gives
great Hector
the
predestined
day.
Strong in
themselves,
but stronger
in his aid,
Close to the
works their
rigid siege
they laid.
In vain the
mounds and
massy beams
defend,
While these
they
undermine,
and those
they rend;
Upheaved the
piles that
prop the
solid wall;
And heaps on
heaps the
smoky ruins
fall.
Greece on
her ramparts
stands the
fierce
alarms;
The crowded
bulwarks
blaze with
waving arms,
Shield
touching
shield, a
long
refulgent
row;
Whence
hissing
darts,
incessant,
rain below.
The bold
Ajaces fly
from tower
to tower,
And rouse,
with flame
divine, the
Grecian
power.
The generous
impulse
every Greek
obeys;
Threats urge
the fearful;
and the
valiant,
praise.
"Fellows in
arms! whose
deeds are
known to
fame,
And you,
whose ardour
hopes an
equal name!
Since not
alike endued
with force
or art;
Behold a day
when each
may act his
part!
A day to
fire the
brave, and
warm the
cold,
To gain new
glories, or
augment the
old.
Urge those
who stand,
and those
who faint,
excite;
Drown
Hector's
vaunts in
loud exhorts
of fight;
Conquest,
not safety,
fill the
thoughts of
all;
Seek not
your fleet,
but sally
from the
wall;
So Jove once
more may
drive their
routed
train,
And Troy lie
trembling in
her walls
again."
Their ardour
kindles all
the Grecian
powers;
And now the
stones
descend in
heavier
showers.
As when high
Jove his
sharp
artillery
forms,
And opes his
cloudy
magazine of
storms;
In winter's
bleak un
comfortable
reign,
A snowy
inundation
hides the
plain;
He stills
the winds,
and bids the
skies to
sleep;
Then pours
the silent
tempest
thick and
deep;
And first
the
mountain-tops
are cover'd
o'er,
Then the
green
fields, and
then the
sandy shore;
Bent with
the weight,
the nodding
woods are
seen,
And one
bright waste
hides all
the works of
men:
The circling
seas, alone
absorbing
all,
Drink the
dissolving
fleeces as
they fall:
So from each
side
increased
the stony
rain,
And the
white ruin
rises o'er
the plain.
Thus godlike
Hector and
his troops
contend
To force the
ramparts,
and the
gates to
rend:
Nor Troy
could
conquer, nor
the Greeks
would yield,
Till great
Sarpedon
tower'd amid
the field;
For mighty
Jove
inspired
with martial
flame
His
matchless
son, and
urged him on
to fame.
In arms he
shines,
conspicuous
from afar,
And bears
aloft his
ample shield
in air;
Within whose
orb the
thick
bull-hides
were roll'd,
Ponderous
with brass,
and bound
with ductile
gold:
And while
two pointed
javelins arm
his hands,
Majestic
moves along,
and leads
his Lycian
bands.
So press'd
with hunger,
from the
mountain's
brow
Descends a
lion on the
flocks
below;
So stalks
the lordly
savage o'er
the plain,
In sullen
majesty, and
stern
disdain:
In vain loud
mastiffs bay
him from
afar,
And
shepherds
gall him
with an iron
war;
Regardless,
furious, he
pursues his
way;
He foams, he
roars, he
rends the
panting
prey.
Resolved
alike,
divine
Sarpedon
glows
With
generous
rage that
drives him
on the foes.
He views the
towers, and
meditates
their fall,
To sure
destruction
dooms the
aspiring
wall;
Then casting
on his
friend an
ardent look,
Fired with
the thirst
of glory,
thus he
spoke:
"Why boast
we, Glaucus!
our extended
reign,(226)
Where
Xanthus'
streams
enrich the
Lycian
plain,
Our numerous
herds that
range the
fruitful
field,
And hills
where vines
their purple
harvest
yield,
Our foaming
bowls with
purer nectar
crown'd,
Our feasts
enhanced
with music's
sprightly
sound?
Why on those
shores are
we with joy
survey'd,
Admired as
heroes, and
as gods
obey'd,
Unless great
acts
superior
merit prove,
And
vindicate
the
bounteous
powers
above?
'Tis ours,
the dignity
they give to
grace;
The first in
valour, as
the first in
place;
That when
with
wondering
eyes our
martial
bands
Behold our
deeds
transcending
our
commands,
Such, they
may cry,
deserve the
sovereign
state,
Whom those
that envy
dare not
imitate!
Could all
our care
elude the
gloomy
grave,
Which claims
no less the
fearful and
the brave,
For lust of
fame I
should not
vainly dare
In fighting
fields, nor
urge thy
soul to war.
But since,
alas!
ignoble age
must come,
Disease, and
death's
inexorable
doom
The life,
which others
pay, let us
bestow,
And give to
fame what we
to nature
owe;
Brave though
we fall, and
honour'd if
we live,
Or let us
glory gain,
or glory
give!"
He said; his
words the
listening
chief
inspire
With equal
warmth, and
rouse the
warrior's
fire;
The troops
pursue their
leaders with
delight,
Rush to the
foe, and
claim the
promised
fight.
Menestheus
from on high
the storm
beheld
Threatening
the fort,
and
blackening
in the
field:
Around the
walls he
gazed, to
view from
far
What aid
appear'd to
avert the
approaching
war,
And saw
where Teucer
with the
Ajaces
stood,
Of fight
insatiate,
prodigal of
blood.
In vain he
calls; the
din of helms
and shields
Rings to the
skies, and
echoes
through the
fields,
The brazen
hinges fly,
the walls
resound,
Heaven
trembles,
roar the
mountains,
thunders all
the ground
Then thus to
Thoos:
"Hence with
speed (he
said),
And urge the
bold Ajaces
to our aid;
Their
strength,
united, best
may help to
bear
The bloody
labours of
the doubtful
war:
Hither the
Lycian
princes bend
their
course,
The best and
bravest of
the hostile
force.
But if too
fiercely
there the
foes
contend,
Let Telamon,
at least,
our towers
defend,
And Teucer
haste with
his unerring
bow
To share the
danger, and
repel the
foe."
Swift, at
the word,
the herald
speeds along
The lofty
ramparts,
through the
martial
throng,
And finds
the heroes
bathed in
sweat and
gore,
Opposed in
combat on
the dusty
shore.
"Ye valiant
leaders of
our warlike
bands!
Your aid
(said Thoos)
Peteus' son
demands;
Your
strength,
united, best
may help to
bear
The bloody
labours of
the doubtful
war:
Thither the
Lycian
princes bend
their
course,
The best and
bravest of
the hostile
force.
But if too
fiercely,
here, the
foes
contend,
At least,
let Telamon
those towers
defend,
And Teucer
haste with
his unerring
bow
To share the
danger, and
repel the
foe."
Straight to
the fort
great Ajax
turn'd his
care,
And thus
bespoke his
brothers of
the war:
"Now,
valiant
Lycomede!
exert your
might,
And, brave
Oileus,
prove your
force in
fight;
To you I
trust the
fortune of
the field,
Till by this
arm the foe
shall be
repell'd:
That done,
expect me to
complete the
day
Then with
his
sevenfold
shield he
strode away.
With equal
steps bold
Teucer
press'd the
shore,
Whose fatal
bow the
strong
Pandion
bore.
High on the
walls
appear'd the
Lycian
powers,
Like some
black
tempest
gathering
round the
towers:
The Greeks,
oppress'd,
their utmost
force unite,
Prepared to
labour in
the unequal
fight:
The war
renews,
mix'd shouts
and groans
arise;
Tumultuous
clamour
mounts, and
thickens in
the skies.
Fierce Ajax
first the
advancing
host
invades,
And sends
the brave
Epicles to
the shades,
Sarpedon's
friend.
Across the
warrior's
way,
Rent from
the walls, a
rocky
fragment
lay;
In modern
ages not the
strongest
swain
Could heave
the unwieldy
burden from
the plain:
He poised,
and swung it
round; then
toss'd on
high,
It flew with
force, and
labour'd up
the sky;
Full on the
Lycian's
helmet
thundering
down,
The
ponderous
ruin crush'd
his batter'd
crown.
As skilful
divers from
some airy
steep
Headlong
descend, and
shoot into
the deep,
So falls
Epicles;
then in
groans
expires,
And
murmuring to
the shades
the soul
retires.
While to the
ramparts
daring
Glaucus
drew,
From
Teucer's
hand a
winged arrow
flew;
The bearded
shaft the
destined
passage
found,
And on his
naked arm
inflicts a
wound.
The chief,
who fear'd
some foe's
insulting
boast
Might stop
the progress
of his
warlike
host,
Conceal'd
the wound,
and, leaping
from his
height
Retired
reluctant
from the
unfinish'd
fight.
Divine
Sarpedon
with regret
beheld
Disabled
Glaucus
slowly quit
the field;
His beating
breast with
generous
ardour
glows,
He springs
to fight,
and flies
upon the
foes.
Alcmaon
first was
doom'd his
force to
feel;
Deep in his
breast he
plunged the
pointed
steel;
Then from
the yawning
wound with
fury tore
The spear,
pursued by
gushing
streams of
gore:
Down sinks
the warrior
with a
thundering
sound,
His brazen
armour rings
against the
ground.
Swift to the
battlement
the victor
flies,
Tugs with
full force,
and every
nerve
applies:
It shakes;
the
ponderous
stones
disjointed
yield;
The rolling
ruins smoke
along the
field.
A mighty
breach
appears; the
walls lie
bare;
And, like a
deluge,
rushes in
the war.
At once bold
Teucer draws
the twanging
bow,
And Ajax
sends his
javelin at
the foe;
Fix'd in his
belt the
feather'd
weapon
stood,
And through
his buckler
drove the
trembling
wood;
But Jove was
present in
the dire
debate,
To shield
his
offspring,
and avert
his fate.
The prince
gave back,
not
meditating
flight,
But urging
vengeance,
and severer
fight;
Then raised
with hope,
and fired
with glory's
charms,
His fainting
squadrons to
new fury
warms.
"O where, ye
Lycians, is
the strength
you boast?
Your former
fame and
ancient
virtue lost!
The breach
lies open,
but your
chief in
vain
Attempts
alone the
guarded pass
to gain:
Unite, and
soon that
hostile
fleet shall
fall:
The force of
powerful
union
conquers
all."
This just
rebuke
inflamed the
Lycian crew;
They join,
they
thicken, and
the assault
renew:
Unmoved the
embodied
Greeks their
fury dare,
And fix'd
support the
weight of
all the war;
Nor could
the Greeks
repel the
Lycian
powers,
Nor the bold
Lycians
force the
Grecian
towers.
As on the
confines of
adjoining
grounds,
Two stubborn
swains with
blows
dispute
their
bounds;
They tug,
they sweat;
but neither
gain, nor
yield,
One foot,
one inch, of
the
contended
field;
Thus
obstinate to
death, they
fight, they
fall;
Nor these
can keep,
nor those
can win the
wall.
Their manly
breasts are
pierced with
many a
wound,
Loud strokes
are heard,
and rattling
arms
resound;
The copious
slaughter
covers all
the shore,
And the high
ramparts
drip with
human gore.
As when two
scales are
charged with
doubtful
loads,
From side to
side the
trembling
balance
nods,
(While some
laborious
matron, just
and poor,
With nice
exactness
weighs her
woolly
store,)
Till poised
aloft, the
resting beam
suspends
Each equal
weight; nor
this, nor
that,
descends:(227)
So stood the
war, till
Hector's
matchless
might,
With fates
prevailing,
turn'd the
scale of
fight.
Fierce as a
whirlwind up
the walls he
flies,
And fires
his host
with loud
repeated
cries.
"Advance, ye
Trojans!
lend your
valiant
hands,
Haste to the
fleet, and
toss the
blazing
brands!"
They hear,
they run;
and,
gathering at
his call,
Raise
scaling
engines, and
ascend the
wall:
Around the
works a wood
of
glittering
spears
Shoots up,
and all the
rising host
appears.
A ponderous
stone bold
Hector
heaved to
throw,
Pointed
above, and
rough and
gross below:
Not two
strong men
the enormous
weight could
raise,
Such men as
live in
these
degenerate
days:
Yet this, as
easy as a
swain could
bear
The snowy
fleece, he
toss'd, and
shook in
air;
For Jove
upheld, and
lighten'd of
its load
The unwieldy
rock, the
labour of a
god.
Thus arm'd,
before the
folded gates
he came,
Of massy
substance,
and
stupendous
frame;
With iron
bars and
brazen
hinges
strong,
On lofty
beams of
solid timber
hung:
Then
thundering
through the
planks with
forceful
sway,
Drives the
sharp rock;
the solid
beams give
way,
The folds
are
shatter'd;
from the
crackling
door
Leap the
resounding
bars, the
flying
hinges roar.
Now rushing
in, the
furious
chief
appears,
Gloomy as
night! and
shakes two
shining
spears:(228)
A dreadful
gleam from
his bright
armour came,
And from his
eye-balls
flash'd the
living
flame.
He moves a
god,
resistless
in his
course,
And seems a
match for
more than
mortal
force.
Then pouring
after,
through the
gaping
space,
A tide of
Trojans
flows, and
fills the
place;
The Greeks
behold, they
tremble, and
they fly;
The shore is
heap'd with
death, and
tumult rends
the sky. |
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