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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 OF
THE GODS, AND THE ACTS
OF ACHILLES
Jupiter, upon Achilles'
return to the battle,
calls a council of the
gods,
and permits them to
assist either party. The
terrors of the combat
described, when the
deities are engaged.
Apollo encourages Æneas
to meet
Achilles. After a long
conversation, these two
heroes encounter; but
Æneas
is preserved by the
assistance of Neptune.
Achilles falls upon the
rest of
the Trojans, and is upon
the point of killing
Hector, but Apollo
conveys
him away in a cloud.
Achilles pursues the
Trojans with a great
slaughter.
The same day continues.
The scene is in the
field before Troy.
Thus round
Pelides
breathing
war and
blood
Greece,
sheathed in
arms, beside
her vessels
stood;
While near
impending
from a
neighbouring
height,
Troy's black
battalions
wait the
shock of
fight.
Then Jove to
Themis gives
command, to
call
The gods to
council in
the starry
hall:
Swift o'er
Olympus'
hundred
hills she
flies,
And summons
all the
senate of
the skies.
These
shining on,
in long
procession
come
To Jove's
eternal
adamantine
dome.
Not one was
absent, not
a rural
power
That haunts
the verdant
gloom, or
rosy bower;
Each
fair-hair'd
dryad of the
shady wood,
Each azure
sister of
the silver
flood;
All but old
Ocean, hoary
sire! who
keeps
His ancient
seat beneath
the sacred
deeps.
On marble
thrones,
with lucid
columns
crown'd,
(The work of
Vulcan,) sat
the powers
around.
Even he
whose
trident
sways the
watery reign
Heard the
loud
summons, and
forsook the
main,
Assumed his
throne amid
the bright
abodes,
And
question'd
thus the
sire of men
and gods:
"What moves
the god who
heaven and
earth
commands,
And grasps
the thunder
in his awful
hands,
Thus to
convene the
whole
ethereal
state?
Is Greece
and Troy the
subject in
debate?
Already met,
the louring
hosts
appear,
And death
stands
ardent on
the edge of
war."
"'Tis true
(the
cloud-compelling
power
replies)
This day we
call the
council of
the skies
In care of
human race;
even Jove's
own eye
Sees with
regret
unhappy
mortals die.
Far on
Olympus' top
in secret
state
Ourself will
sit, and see
the hand of
fate
Work out our
will.
Celestial
powers!
descend,
And as your
minds
direct, your
succour lend
To either
host. Troy
soon must
lie
o'erthrown,
If
uncontroll'd
Achilles
fights
alone:
Their troops
but lately
durst not
meet his
eyes;
What can
they now, if
in his rage
he rise?
Assist them,
gods! or
Ilion's
sacred wall
May fall
this day,
though fate
forbids the
fall."
He said, and
fired their
heavenly
breasts with
rage.
On adverse
parts the
warring gods
engage:
Heaven's
awful queen;
and he whose
azure round
Girds the
vast globe;
the maid in
arms
renown'd;
Hermes, of
profitable
arts the
sire;
And Vulcan,
the black
sovereign of
the fire:
These to the
fleet repair
with instant
flight;
The vessels
tremble as
the gods
alight.
In aid of
Troy,
Latona,
Phoebus
came,
Mars
fiery-helm'd,
the
laughter-loving
dame,
Xanthus,
whose
streams in
golden
currents
flow,
And the
chaste
huntress of
the silver
bow.
Ere yet the
gods their
various aid
employ,
Each Argive
bosom
swell'd with
manly joy,
While great
Achilles
(terror of
the plain),
Long lost to
battle,
shone in
arms again.
Dreadful he
stood in
front of all
his host;
Pale Troy
beheld, and
seem'd
already
lost;
Her bravest
heroes pant
with inward
fear,
And
trembling
see another
god of war.
But when the
powers
descending
swell'd the
fight,
Then tumult
rose: fierce
rage and
pale
affright
Varied each
face: then
Discord
sounds
alarms,
Earth
echoes, and
the nations
rush to
arms.
Now through
the
trembling
shores
Minerva
calls,
And now she
thunders
from the
Grecian
walls.
Mars
hovering
o'er his
Troy, his
terror
shrouds
In gloomy
tempests,
and a night
of clouds:
Now through
each Trojan
heart he
fury pours
With voice
divine, from
Ilion's
topmost
towers:
Now shouts
to Simois,
from her
beauteous
hill;
The mountain
shook, the
rapid stream
stood still.
Above, the
sire of gods
his thunder
rolls,
And peals on
peals
redoubled
rend the
poles.
Beneath,
stern
Neptune
shakes the
solid
ground;
The forests
wave, the
mountains
nod around;
Through all
their
summits
tremble
Ida's woods,
And from
their
sources boil
her hundred
floods.
Troy's
turrets
totter on
the rocking
plain,
And the
toss'd
navies beat
the heaving
main.
Deep in the
dismal
regions of
the dead,(260)
The infernal
monarch
rear'd his
horrid head,
Leap'd from
his throne,
lest
Neptune's
arm should
lay
His dark
dominions
open to the
day,
And pour in
light on
Pluto's
drear
abodes,
Abhorr'd by
men, and
dreadful
even to
gods.(261)
Such war the
immortals
wage; such
horrors rend
The world's
vast
concave,
when the
gods contend
First
silver-shafted
Phoebus took
the plain
Against blue
Neptune,
monarch of
the main.
The god of
arms his
giant bulk
display'd,
Opposed to
Pallas,
war's
triumphant
maid.
Against
Latona
march'd the
son of May.
The quiver'd
Dian, sister
of the day,
(Her golden
arrows
sounding at
her side,)
Saturnia,
majesty of
heaven,
defied.
With fiery
Vulcan last
in battle
stands
The sacred
flood that
rolls on
golden
sands;
Xanthus his
name with
those of
heavenly
birth,
But called
Scamander by
the sons of
earth.
While thus
the gods in
various
league
engage,
Achilles
glow'd with
more than
mortal rage:
Hector he
sought; in
search of
Hector
turn'd
His eyes
around, for
Hector only
burn'd;
And burst
like
lightning
through the
ranks, and
vow'd
To glut the
god of
battles with
his blood.
Æneas was
the first
who dared to
stay;
Apollo
wedged him
in the
warrior's
way,
But swell'd
his bosom
with
undaunted
might,
Half-forced
and
half-persuaded
to the
fight.
Like young
Lycaon, of
the royal
line,
In voice and
aspect,
seem'd the
power
divine;
And bade the
chief
reflect, how
late with
scorn
In distant
threats he
braved the
goddess-born.
Then thus
the hero of
Anchises'
strain:
"To meet
Pelides you
persuade in
vain:
Already have
I met, nor
void of fear
Observed the
fury of his
flying
spear;
From Ida's
woods he
chased us to
the field,
Our force he
scattered,
and our
herds he
kill'd;
Lyrnessus,
Pedasus in
ashes lay;
But (Jove
assisting) I
survived the
day:
Else had I
sunk
oppress'd in
fatal fight
By fierce
Achilles and
Minerva's
might.
Where'er he
moved, the
goddess
shone
before,
And bathed
his brazen
lance in
hostile
gore.
What mortal
man Achilles
can sustain?
The
immortals
guard him
through the
dreadful
plain,
And suffer
not his dart
to fall in
vain.
Were God my
aid, this
arm should
check his
power,
Though
strong in
battle as a
brazen
tower."
To whom the
son of Jove:
"That god
implore,
And be what
great
Achilles was
before.
From
heavenly
Venus thou
deriv'st thy
strain,
And he but
from a
sister of
the main;
An aged
sea-god
father of
his line;
But Jove
himself the
sacred
source of
thine.
Then lift
thy weapon
for a noble
blow,
Nor fear the
vaunting of
a mortal
foe."
This said,
and spirit
breathed
into his
breast,
Through the
thick troops
the
embolden'd
hero
press'd:
His
venturous
act the
white-arm'd
queen
survey'd,
And thus,
assembling
all the
powers, she
said:
"Behold an
action,
gods! that
claims your
care,
Lo great
Æneas
rushing to
the war!
Against
Pelides he
directs his
course,
Phoebus
impels, and
Phoebus
gives him
force.
Restrain his
bold career;
at least, to
attend
Our favour'd
hero, let
some power
descend.
To guard his
life, and
add to his
renown,
We, the
great
armament of
heaven, came
down.
Hereafter
let him
fall, as
Fates
design,
That spun so
short his
life's
illustrious
line:(262)
But lest
some adverse
god now
cross his
way,
Give him to
know what
powers
assist this
day:
For how
shall mortal
stand the
dire alarms,
When
heaven's
refulgent
host appear
in arms?"(263)
Thus she;
and thus the
god whose
force can
make
The solid
globe's
eternal
basis shake:
"Against the
might of
man, so
feeble
known,
Why should
celestial
powers exert
their own?
Suffice from
yonder mount
to view the
scene,
And leave to
war the
fates of
mortal men.
But if the
armipotent,
or god of
light,
Obstruct
Achilles, or
commence the
fight.
Thence on
the gods of
Troy we
swift
descend:
Full soon, I
doubt not,
shall the
conflict
end;
And these,
in ruin and
confusion
hurl'd,
Yield to our
conquering
arms the
lower
world."
Thus having
said, the
tyrant of
the sea,
Coerulean
Neptune,
rose, and
led the way.
Advanced
upon the
field there
stood a
mound
Of earth
congested,
wall'd, and
trench'd
around;
In elder
times to
guard
Alcides
made,
(The work of
Trojans,
with
Minerva's
aid,)
What time a
vengeful
monster of
the main
Swept the
wide shore,
and drove
him to the
plain.
Here Neptune
and the gods
of Greece
repair,
With clouds
encompass'd,
and a veil
of air:
The adverse
powers,
around
Apollo laid,
Crown the
fair hills
that silver
Simois
shade.
In circle
close each
heavenly
party sat,
Intent to
form the
future
scheme of
fate;
But mix not
yet in
fight,
though Jove
on high
Gives the
loud signal,
and the
heavens
reply.
Meanwhile
the rushing
armies hide
the ground;
The trampled
centre
yields a
hollow
sound:
Steeds cased
in mail, and
chiefs in
armour
bright,
The gleaming
champaign
glows with
brazen
light.
Amid both
hosts (a
dreadful
space)
appear,
There great
Achilles;
bold Æneas,
here.
With
towering
strides
Aeneas first
advanced;
The nodding
plumage on
his helmet
danced:
Spread o'er
his breast
the fencing
shield he
bore,
And, so he
moved, his
javelin
flamed
before.
Not so
Pelides;
furious to
engage,
He rush'd
impetuous.
Such the
lion's rage,
Who viewing
first his
foes with
scornful
eyes,
Though all
in arms the
peopled city
rise,
Stalks
careless on,
with
unregarding
pride;
Till at the
length, by
some brave
youth
defied,
To his bold
spear the
savage turns
alone,
He murmurs
fury with a
hollow
groan;
He grins, he
foams, he
rolls his
eyes around
Lash'd by
his tail his
heaving
sides
resound;
He calls up
all his
rage; he
grinds his
teeth,
Resolved on
vengeance,
or resolved
on death.
So fierce
Achilles on
Æneas flies;
So stands
Æneas, and
his force
defies.
Ere yet the
stern
encounter
join'd,
begun
The seed of
Thetis thus
to Venus'
son:
"Why comes
Æneas
through the
ranks so
far?
Seeks he to
meet
Achilles'
arm in war,
In hope the
realms of
Priam to
enjoy,
And prove
his merits
to the
throne of
Troy?
Grant that
beneath thy
lance
Achilles
dies,
The partial
monarch may
refuse the
prize;
Sons he has
many; those
thy pride
may quell:
And 'tis his
fault to
love those
sons too
well,
Or, in
reward of
thy
victorious
hand,
Has Troy
proposed
some
spacious
tract of
land
An ample
forest, or a
fair domain,
Of hills for
vines, and
arable for
grain?
Even this,
perhaps,
will hardly
prove thy
lot.
But can
Achilles be
so soon
forgot?
Once (as I
think) you
saw this
brandish'd
spear
And then the
great Æneas
seem'd to
fear:
With hearty
haste from
Ida's mount
he fled,
Nor, till he
reach'd
Lyrnessus,
turn'd his
head.
Her lofty
walls not
long our
progress
stay'd;
Those,
Pallas,
Jove, and
we, in ruins
laid:
In Grecian
chains her
captive race
were cast;
'Tis true,
the great
Aeneas fled
too fast.
Defrauded of
my conquest
once before,
What then I
lost, the
gods this
day restore.
Go; while
thou may'st,
avoid the
threaten'd
fate;
Fools stay
to feel it,
and are wise
too late."
To this
Anchises'
son: "Such
words employ
To one that
fears thee,
some
unwarlike
boy;
Such we
disdain; the
best may be
defied
With mean
reproaches,
and unmanly
pride;
Unworthy the
high race
from which
we came
Proclaim'd
so loudly by
the voice of
fame:
Each from
illustrious
fathers
draws his
line;
Each
goddess-born;
half human,
half divine.
Thetis' this
day, or
Venus'
offspring
dies,
And tears
shall
trickle from
celestial
eyes:
For when two
heroes, thus
derived,
contend,
'Tis not in
words the
glorious
strife can
end.
If yet thou
further seek
to learn my
birth
(A tale
resounded
through the
spacious
earth)
Hear how the
glorious
origin we
prove
From ancient
Dardanus,
the first
from Jove:
Dardania's
walls he
raised; for
Ilion, then,
(The city
since of
many-languaged
men,)
Was not. The
natives were
content to
till
The shady
foot of
Ida's
fountful
hill.(264)
From
Dardanus
great
Erichthonius
springs,
The richest,
once, of
Asia's
wealthy
kings;
Three
thousand
mares his
spacious
pastures
bred,
Three
thousand
foals beside
their
mothers fed.
Boreas,
enamour'd of
the
sprightly
train,
Conceal'd
his godhead
in a flowing
mane,
With voice
dissembled
to his loves
he neigh'd,
And coursed
the dappled
beauties
o'er the
mead:
Hence sprung
twelve
others of
unrivall'd
kind,
Swift as
their mother
mares, and
father wind.
These
lightly
skimming,
when they
swept the
plain,
Nor plied
the grass,
nor bent the
tender
grain;
And when
along the
level seas
they flew,(265)
Scarce on
the surface
curl'd the
briny dew.
Such
Erichthonius
was: from
him there
came
The sacred
Tros, of
whom the
Trojan name.
Three sons
renown'd
adorn'd his
nuptial bed,
Ilus,
Assaracus,
and Ganymed:
The
matchless
Ganymed,
divinely
fair,
Whom heaven,
enamour'd,
snatch'd to
upper air,
To bear the
cup of Jove
(ethereal
guest,
The grace
and glory of
the
ambrosial
feast).
The two
remaining
sons the
line divide:
First rose
Laomedon
from Ilus'
side;
From him
Tithonus,
now in cares
grown old,
And Priam,
bless'd with
Hector,
brave and
bold;
Clytius and
Lampus,
ever-honour'd
pair;
And
Hicetaon,
thunderbolt
of war.
From great
Assaracus
sprang
Capys, he
Begat
Anchises,
and Anchises
me.
Such is our
race: 'tis
fortune
gives us
birth,
But Jove
alone endues
the soul
with worth:
He, source
of power and
might! with
boundless
sway,
All human
courage
gives, or
takes away.
Long in the
field of
words we may
contend,
Reproach is
infinite,
and knows no
end,
Arm'd or
with truth
or
falsehood,
right or
wrong;
So voluble a
weapon is
the tongue;
Wounded, we
wound; and
neither side
can fail,
For every
man has
equal
strength to
rail:
Women alone,
when in the
streets they
jar,
Perhaps
excel us in
this wordy
war;
Like us they
stand,
encompass'd
with the
crowd,
And vent
their anger
impotent and
loud.
Cease
then--Our
business in
the field of
fight
Is not to
question,
but to prove
our might.
To all those
insults thou
hast offer'd
here,
Receive this
answer: 'tis
my flying
spear."
He spoke.
With all his
force the
javelin
flung,
Fix'd deep,
and loudly
in the
buckler
rung.
Far on his
outstretch'd
arm, Pelides
held
(To meet the
thundering
lance) his
dreadful
shield,
That
trembled as
it stuck;
nor void of
fear
Saw, ere it
fell, the
immeasurable
spear.
His fears
were vain;
impenetrable
charms
Secured the
temper of
the ethereal
arms.
Through two
strong
plates the
point its
passage
held,
But stopp'd,
and rested,
by the third
repell'd.
Five plates
of various
metal,
various
mould,
Composed the
shield; of
brass each
outward
fold,
Of tin each
inward, and
the middle
gold:
There stuck
the lance.
Then rising
ere he
threw,
The forceful
spear of
great
Achilles
flew,
And pierced
the Dardan
shield's
extremest
bound,
Where the
shrill brass
return'd a
sharper
sound:
Through the
thin verge
the Pelean
weapon
glides,
And the
slight
covering of
expanded
hides.
Æneas his
contracted
body bends,
And o'er him
high the
riven targe
extends,
Sees,
through its
parting
plates, the
upper air,
And at his
back
perceives
the
quivering
spear:
A fate so
near him,
chills his
soul with
fright;
And swims
before his
eyes the
many-colour'd
light.
Achilles,
rushing in
with
dreadful
cries,
Draws his
broad blade,
and at Æneas
flies:
Æneas
rousing as
the foe came
on,
With force
collected,
heaves a
mighty
stone:
A mass
enormous!
which in
modern days
No two of
earth's
degenerate
sons could
raise.
But ocean's
god, whose
earthquakes
rock the
ground.
Saw the
distress,
and moved
the powers
around:
"Lo! on the
brink of
fate Æneas
stands,
An instant
victim to
Achilles'
hands;
By Phoebus
urged; but
Phoebus has
bestow'd
His aid in
vain: the
man
o'erpowers
the god.
And can ye
see this
righteous
chief atone
With
guiltless
blood for
vices not
his own?
To all the
gods his
constant
vows were
paid;
Sure, though
he wars for
Troy, he
claims our
aid.
Fate wills
not this;
nor thus can
Jove resign
The future
father of
the Dardan
line:(266)
The first
great
ancestor
obtain'd his
grace,
And still
his love
descends on
all the
race:
For Priam
now, and
Priam's
faithless
kind,
At length
are odious
to the
all-seeing
mind;
On great
Æneas shall
devolve the
reign,
And sons
succeeding
sons the
lasting line
sustain."
The great
earth-shaker
thus: to
whom replies
The imperial
goddess with
the radiant
eyes:
"Good as he
is, to
immolate or
spare
The Dardan
prince, O
Neptune! be
thy care;
Pallas and
I, by all
that gods
can bind,
Have sworn
destruction
to the
Trojan kind;
Not even an
instant to
protract
their fate,
Or save one
member of
the sinking
state;
Till her
last flame
be quench'd
with her
last gore,
And even her
crumbling
ruins are no
more."
The king of
ocean to the
fight
descends,
Through all
the
whistling
darts his
course he
bends,
Swift
interposed
between the
warrior
flies,
And casts
thick
darkness
o'er
Achilles'
eyes.(267)
From great
Æneas'
shield the
spear he
drew,
And at his
master's
feet the
weapon
threw.
That done,
with force
divine he
snatch'd on
high
The Dardan
prince, and
bore him
through the
sky,
Smooth-gliding
without
step, above
the heads
Of warring
heroes, and
of bounding
steeds:
Till at the
battle's
utmost verge
they light,
Where the
slow Caucans
close the
rear of
fight.
The godhead
there (his
heavenly
form
confess'd)
With words
like these
the panting
chief
address'd:
"What power,
O prince!
with force
inferior
far,
Urged thee
to meet
Achilles'
arm in war?
Henceforth
beware, nor
antedate thy
doom,
Defrauding
fate of all
thy fame to
come.
But when the
day decreed
(for come it
must)
Shall lay
this
dreadful
hero in the
dust,
Let then the
furies of
that arm be
known,
Secure no
Grecian
force
transcends
thy own."
With that,
he left him
wondering as
he lay,
Then from
Achilles
chased the
mist away:
Sudden,
returning
with a
stream of
light,
The scene of
war came
rushing on
his sight.
Then thus,
amazed;
"What
wonders
strike my
mind!
My spear,
that parted
on the wings
of wind,
Laid here
before me!
and the
Dardan lord,
That fell
this
instant,
vanish'd
from my
sword!
I thought
alone with
mortals to
contend,
But powers
celestial
sure this
foe defend.
Great as he
is, our arms
he scarce
will try,
Content for
once, with
all his
gods, to
fly.
Now then let
others
bleed." This
said, aloud
He vents his
fury and
inflames the
crowd:
"O Greeks!
(he cries,
and every
rank alarms)
Join battle,
man to man,
and arms to
arms!
'Tis not in
me, though
favour'd by
the sky,
To mow whole
troops, and
make whole
armies fly:
No god can
singly such
a host
engage,
Not Mars
himself, nor
great
Minerva's
rage.
But
whatsoe'er
Achilles can
inspire,
Whate'er of
active
force, or
acting fire;
Whate'er
this heart
can prompt,
or hand
obey;
All, all
Achilles,
Greeks! is
yours
to-day.
Through yon
wide host
this arm
shall
scatter
fear,
And thin the
squadrons
with my
single
spear."
He said: nor
less elate
with martial
joy,
The godlike
Hector
warm'd the
troops of
Troy:
"Trojans, to
war! Think,
Hector leads
you on;
Nor dread
the vaunts
of Peleus'
haughty son.
Deeds must
decide our
fate. E'en
these with
words
Insult the
brave, who
tremble at
their
swords:
The weakest
atheist-wretch
all heaven
defies,
But shrinks
and shudders
when the
thunder
flies.
Nor from yon
boaster
shall your
chief
retire,
Not though
his heart
were steel,
his hands
were fire;
That fire,
that steel,
your Hector
should
withstand,
And brave
that
vengeful
heart, that
dreadful
hand."
Thus
(breathing
rage through
all) the
hero said;
A wood of
lances rises
round his
head,
Clamours on
clamours
tempest all
the air,
They join,
they throng,
they thicken
to the war.
But Phoebus
warns him
from high
heaven to
shun
The single
fight with
Thetis'
godlike son;
More safe to
combat in
the mingled
band,
Nor tempt
too near the
terrors of
his hand.
He hears,
obedient to
the god of
light,
And, plunged
within the
ranks,
awaits the
fight.
Then fierce
Achilles,
shouting to
the skies,
On Troy's
whole force
with
boundless
fury flies.
First falls
Iphytion, at
his army's
head;
Brave was
the chief,
and brave
the host he
led;
From great
Otrynteus he
derived his
blood,
His mother
was a Nais,
of the
flood;
Beneath the
shades of
Tmolus,
crown'd with
snow,
From Hyde's
walls he
ruled the
lands below.
Fierce as he
springs, the
sword his
head
divides:
The parted
visage falls
on equal
sides:
With
loud-resounding
arms he
strikes the
plain;
While thus
Achilles
glories o'er
the slain:
"Lie there,
Otryntides!
the Trojan
earth
Receives
thee dead,
though Gygae
boast thy
birth;
Those
beauteous
fields where
Hyllus'
waves are
roll'd,
And
plenteous
Hermus
swells with
tides of
gold,
Are thine no
more."--The
insulting
hero said,
And left him
sleeping in
eternal
shade.
The rolling
wheels of
Greece the
body tore,
And dash'd
their axles
with no
vulgar gore.
Demoleon
next,
Antenor's
offspring,
laid
Breathless
in dust, the
price of
rashness
paid.
The
impatient
steel with
full-descending
sway
Forced
through his
brazen helm
its furious
way,
Resistless
drove the
batter'd
skull
before,
And dash'd
and mingled
all the
brains with
gore.
This sees
Hippodamas,
and seized
with fright,
Deserts his
chariot for
a swifter
flight:
The lance
arrests him:
an ignoble
wound
The panting
Trojan
rivets to
the ground.
He groans
away his
soul: not
louder
roars,
At Neptune's
shrine on
Helice's
high shores,
The victim
bull; the
rocks
re-bellow
round,
And ocean
listens to
the grateful
sound.
Then fell on
Polydore his
vengeful
rage,(268)
The youngest
hope of
Priam's
stooping
age:
(Whose feet
for
swiftness in
the race
surpass'd:)
Of all his
sons, the
dearest, and
the last.
To the
forbidden
field he
takes his
flight,
In the first
folly of a
youthful
knight,
To vaunt his
swiftness
wheels
around the
plain,
But vaunts
not long,
with all his
swiftness
slain:
Struck where
the crossing
belts unite
behind,
And golden
rings the
double
back-plate
join'd
Forth
through the
navel burst
the
thrilling
steel;
And on his
knees with
piercing
shrieks he
fell;
The rushing
entrails
pour'd upon
the ground
His hands
collect; and
darkness
wraps him
round.
When Hector
view'd, all
ghastly in
his gore,
Thus sadly
slain the
unhappy
Polydore,
A cloud of
sorrow
overcast his
sight,
His soul no
longer
brook'd the
distant
fight:
Full in
Achilles'
dreadful
front he
came,
And shook
his javelin
like a
waving
flame.
The son of
Peleus sees,
with joy
possess'd,
His heart
high-bounding
in his
rising
breast.
"And, lo!
the man on
whom black
fates
attend;
The man,
that slew
Achilles, is
his friend!
No more
shall
Hector's and
Pelides'
spear
Turn from
each other
in the walks
of war."--
Then with
revengeful
eyes he
scann'd him
o'er:
"Come, and
receive thy
fate!" He
spake no
more.
Hector,
undaunted,
thus: "Such
words employ
To one that
dreads thee,
some
unwarlike
boy:
Such we
could give,
defying and
defied,
Mean
intercourse
of obloquy
and pride!
I know thy
force to
mine
superior
far;
But heaven
alone
confers
success in
war:
Mean as I
am, the gods
may guide my
dart,
And give it
entrance in
a braver
heart."
Then parts
the lance:
but Pallas'
heavenly
breath
Far from
Achilles
wafts the
winged
death:
The bidden
dart again
to Hector
flies,
And at the
feet of its
great master
lies.
Achilles
closes with
his hated
foe,
His heart
and eyes
with flaming
fury glow:
But present
to his aid,
Apollo
shrouds
The favour'd
hero in a
veil of
clouds.
Thrice
struck
Pelides with
indignant
heart,
Thrice in
impassive
air he
plunged the
dart;
The spear a
fourth time
buried in
the cloud.
He foams
with fury,
and exclaims
aloud:
"Wretch!
thou hast
'scaped
again; once
more thy
flight
Has saved
thee, and
the partial
god of
light.
But long
thou shalt
not thy just
fate
withstand,
If any power
assist
Achilles'
hand.
Fly then
inglorious!
but thy
flight this
day
Whole
hecatombs of
Trojan
ghosts shall
pay."
With that,
he gluts his
rage on
numbers
slain:
Then Dryops
tumbled to
the
ensanguined
plain,
Pierced
through the
neck: he
left him
panting
there,
And stopp'd
Demuchus,
great
Philetor's
heir.
Gigantic
chief! deep
gash'd the
enormous
blade,
And for the
soul an
ample
passage
made.
Laoganus and
Dardanus
expire,
The valiant
sons of an
unhappy
sire;
Both in one
instant from
the chariot
hurl'd,
Sunk in one
instant to
the nether
world:
This
difference
only their
sad fates
afford
That one the
spear
destroy'd,
and one the
sword.
Nor less
unpitied,
young
Alastor
bleeds;
In vain his
youth, in
vain his
beauty
pleads;
In vain he
begs thee,
with a
suppliant's
moan,
To spare a
form, an age
so like thy
own!
Unhappy boy!
no prayer,
no moving
art,
E'er bent
that fierce,
inexorable
heart!
While yet he
trembled at
his knees,
and cried,
The ruthless
falchion
oped his
tender side;
The panting
liver pours
a flood of
gore
That drowns
his bosom
till he
pants no
more.
Through
Mulius' head
then drove
the
impetuous
spear:
The warrior
falls,
transfix'd
from ear to
ear.
Thy life,
Echeclus!
next the
sword
bereaves,
Deep though
the front
the
ponderous
falchion
cleaves;
Warm'd in
the brain
the smoking
weapon lies,
The purple
death comes
floating
o'er his
eyes.
Then brave
Deucalion
died: the
dart was
flung
Where the
knit nerves
the pliant
elbow
strung;
He dropp'd
his arm, an
unassisting
weight,
And stood
all
impotent,
expecting
fate:
Full on his
neck the
falling
falchion
sped,
From his
broad
shoulders
hew'd his
crested
head:
Forth from
the bone the
spinal
marrow
flies,
And, sunk in
dust, the
corpse
extended
lies.
Rhigmas,
whose race
from
fruitful
Thracia
came,
(The son of
Pierus, an
illustrious
name,)
Succeeds to
fate: the
spear his
belly rends;
Prone from
his car the
thundering
chief
descends.
The squire,
who saw
expiring on
the ground
His
prostrate
master,
rein'd the
steeds
around;
His back,
scarce
turn'd, the
Pelian
javelin
gored,
And
stretch'd
the servant
o'er his
dying lord.
As when a
flame the
winding
valley
fills,
And runs on
crackling
shrubs
between the
hills;
Then o'er
the stubble
up the
mountain
flies,
Fires the
high woods,
and blazes
to the
skies,
This way and
that, the
spreading
torrent
roars:
So sweeps
the hero
through the
wasted
shores;
Around him
wide,
immense
destruction
pours
And earth is
deluged with
the sanguine
showers
As with
autumnal
harvests
cover'd
o'er,
And thick
bestrewn,
lies Ceres'
sacred
floor;
When round
and round,
with
never-wearied
pain,
The
trampling
steers beat
out the
unnumber'd
grain:
So the
fierce
coursers, as
the chariot
rolls,
Tread down
whole ranks,
and crush
out heroes'
souls,
Dash'd from
their hoofs
while o'er
the dead
they fly,
Black,
bloody drops
the smoking
chariot dye:
The spiky
wheels
through
heaps of
carnage
tore;
And thick
the groaning
axles
dropp'd with
gore.
High o'er
the scene of
death
Achilles
stood,
All grim
with dust,
all horrible
in blood:
Yet still
insatiate,
still with
rage on
flame;
Such is the
lust of
never-dying
fame! |
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