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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 BREACH OF
THE TRUCE, AND THE FIRST
BATTLE
The gods deliberate in
council concerning the
Trojan war: they agree
upon
the continuation of it,
and Jupiter sends down
Minerva to break the
truce.
She persuades Pandarus
to aim an arrow at
Menelaus, who is
wounded, but
cured by Machaon. In the
meantime some of the
Trojan troops attack the
Greeks. Agamemnon is
distinguished in all the
parts of a good general;
he
reviews the troops, and
exhorts the leaders,
some by praises and
others by
reproof. Nestor is
particularly celebrated
for his military
discipline.
The battle joins, and
great numbers are slain
on both sides.
The same day continues
through this as through
the last book (as it
does
also through the two
following, and almost to
the end of the seventh
book). The scene is
wholly in the field
before Troy.
And now
Olympus'
shining
gates
unfold;
The gods,
with Jove,
assume their
thrones of
gold:
Immortal
Hebe, fresh
with bloom
divine,
The golden
goblet
crowns with
purple wine:
While the
full bowls
flow round,
the powers
employ
Their
careful eyes
on
long-contended
Troy.
When Jove,
disposed to
tempt
Saturnia's
spleen,
Thus waked
the fury of
his partial
queen,
"Two powers
divine the
son of
Atreus aid,
Imperial
Juno, and
the martial
maid;(125)
But high in
heaven they
sit, and
gaze from
far,
The tame
spectators
of his deeds
of war.
Not thus
fair Venus
helps her
favour'd
knight,
The queen of
pleasures
shares the
toils of
fight,
Each danger
wards, and
constant in
her care,
Saves in the
moment of
the last
despair.
Her act has
rescued
Paris'
forfeit
life,
Though great
Atrides
gain'd the
glorious
strife.
Then say, ye
powers! what
signal issue
waits
To crown
this deed,
and finish
all the
fates!
Shall Heaven
by peace the
bleeding
kingdoms
spare,
Or rouse the
furies, and
awake the
war?
Yet, would
the gods for
human good
provide,
Atrides soon
might gain
his
beauteous
bride,
Still
Priam's
walls in
peaceful
honours
grow,
And through
his gates
the crowding
nations
flow."
Thus while
he spoke,
the queen of
heaven,
enraged,
And queen of
war, in
close
consult
engaged:
Apart they
sit, their
deep designs
employ,
And meditate
the future
woes of
Troy.
Though
secret anger
swell'd
Minerva's
breast,
The prudent
goddess yet
her wrath
suppress'd;
But Juno,
impotent of
passion,
broke
Her sullen
silence, and
with fury
spoke:
"Shall then,
O tyrant of
the ethereal
reign!
My schemes,
my labours,
and my hopes
be vain?
Have I, for
this, shook
Ilion with
alarms,
Assembled
nations, set
two worlds
in arms?
To spread
the war, I
flew from
shore to
shore;
The immortal
coursers
scarce the
labour bore.
At length
ripe
vengeance
o'er their
heads
impends,
But Jove
himself the
faithless
race
defends.
Loth as thou
art to
punish
lawless
lust,
Not all the
gods are
partial and
unjust."
The sire
whose
thunder
shakes the
cloudy
skies,
Sighs from
his inmost
soul, and
thus
replies:
"Oh lasting
rancour! oh
insatiate
hate
To Phrygia's
monarch, and
the Phrygian
state!
What high
offence has
fired the
wife of
Jove?
Can wretched
mortals harm
the powers
above,
That Troy,
and Troy's
whole race
thou wouldst
confound,
And yon fair
structures
level with
the ground!
Haste, leave
the skies,
fulfil thy
stern
desire,
Burst all
her gates,
and wrap her
walls in
fire!
Let Priam
bleed! if
yet you
thirst for
more,
Bleed all
his sons,
and Ilion
float with
gore:
To boundless
vengeance
the wide
realm be
given,
Till vast
destruction
glut the
queen of
heaven!
So let it
be, and Jove
his peace
enjoy,(126)
When heaven
no longer
hears the
name of
Troy.
But should
this arm
prepare to
wreak our
hate
On thy loved
realms,
whose guilt
demands
their fate;
Presume not
thou the
lifted bolt
to stay,
Remember
Troy, and
give the
vengeance
way.
For know, of
all the
numerous
towns that
rise
Beneath the
rolling sun
and starry
skies,
Which gods
have raised,
or
earth-born
men enjoy,
None stands
so dear to
Jove as
sacred Troy.
No mortals
merit more
distinguish'd
grace
Than godlike
Priam, or
than Priam's
race.
Still to our
name their
hecatombs
expire,
And altars
blaze with
unextinguish'd
fire."
At this the
goddess
rolled her
radiant
eyes,
Then on the
Thunderer
fix'd them,
and replies:
"Three towns
are Juno's
on the
Grecian
plains,
More dear
than all the
extended
earth
contains,
Mycenae,
Argos, and
the Spartan
wall;(127)
These thou
mayst raze,
nor I forbid
their fall:
'Tis not in
me the
vengeance to
remove;
The crime's
sufficient
that they
share my
love.
Of power
superior why
should I
complain?
Resent I
may, but
must resent
in vain.
Yet some
distinction
Juno might
require,
Sprung with
thyself from
one
celestial
sire,
A goddess
born, to
share the
realms
above,
And styled
the consort
of the
thundering
Jove;
Nor thou a
wife and
sister's
right deny;(128)
Let both
consent, and
both by
terms
comply;
So shall the
gods our
joint
decrees
obey,
And heaven
shall act as
we direct
the way.
See ready
Pallas waits
thy high
commands
To raise in
arms the
Greek and
Phrygian
bands;
Their sudden
friendship
by her arts
may cease,
And the
proud
Trojans
first
infringe the
peace."
The sire of
men and
monarch of
the sky
The advice
approved,
and bade
Minerva fly,
Dissolve the
league, and
all her arts
employ
To make the
breach the
faithless
act of Troy.
Fired with
the charge,
she headlong
urged her
flight,
And shot
like
lightning
from
Olympus'
height.
As the red
comet, from
Saturnius
sent
To fright
the nations
with a dire
portent,
(A fatal
sign to
armies on
the plain,
Or trembling
sailors on
the wintry
main,)
With
sweeping
glories
glides along
in air,
And shakes
the sparkles
from its
blazing
hair:(129)
Between both
armies thus,
in open
sight
Shot the
bright
goddess in a
trail of
light,
With eyes
erect the
gazing hosts
admire
The power
descending,
and the
heavens on
fire!
"The gods
(they
cried), the
gods this
signal sent,
And fate now
labours with
some vast
event:
Jove seals
the league,
or bloodier
scenes
prepares;
Jove, the
great
arbiter of
peace and
wars."
They said,
while Pallas
through the
Trojan
throng,
(In shape a
mortal,)
pass'd
disguised
along.
Like bold
Laodocus,
her course
she bent,
Who from
Antenor
traced his
high
descent.
Amidst the
ranks
Lycaon's son
she found,
The warlike
Pandarus,
for strength
renown'd;
Whose
squadrons,
led from
black
Æsepus'
flood,(130)
With flaming
shields in
martial
circle
stood.
To him the
goddess:
"Phrygian!
canst thou
hear
A well-timed
counsel with
a willing
ear?
What praise
were thine,
couldst thou
direct thy
dart,
Amidst his
triumph, to
the
Spartan's
heart?
What gifts
from Troy,
from Paris
wouldst thou
gain,
Thy
country's
foe, the
Grecian
glory slain?
Then seize
the
occasion,
dare the
mighty deed,
Aim at his
breast, and
may that aim
succeed!
But first,
to speed the
shaft,
address thy
vow
To Lycian
Phoebus with
the silver
bow,
And swear
the
firstlings
of thy flock
to pay,
On Zelia's
altars, to
the god of
day."(131)
He heard,
and madly at
the motion
pleased,
His polish'd
bow with
hasty
rashness
seized.
'Twas form'd
of horn, and
smooth'd
with artful
toil:
A mountain
goat
resign'd the
shining
spoil.
Who pierced
long since
beneath his
arrows bled;
The stately
quarry on
the cliffs
lay dead,
And sixteen
palms his
brow's large
honours
spread:
The workmen
join'd, and
shaped the
bended
horns,
And beaten
gold each
taper point
adorns.
This, by the
Greeks
unseen, the
warrior
bends,
Screen'd by
the shields
of his
surrounding
friends:
There
meditates
the mark;
and couching
low,
Fits the
sharp arrow
to the
well-strung
bow.
One from a
hundred
feather'd
deaths he
chose,
Fated to
wound, and
cause of
future woes;
Then offers
vows with
hecatombs to
crown
Apollo's
altars in
his native
town.
Now with
full force
the yielding
horn he
bends,
Drawn to an
arch, and
joins the
doubling
ends;
Close to his
breast he
strains the
nerve below,
Till the
barb'd
points
approach the
circling
bow;
The
impatient
weapon
whizzes on
the wing;
Sounds the
tough horn,
and twangs
the
quivering
string.
But thee,
Atrides! in
that
dangerous
hour
The gods
forget not,
nor thy
guardian
power,
Pallas
assists, and
(weakened in
its force)
Diverts the
weapon from
its destined
course:
So from her
babe, when
slumber
seals his
eye,
The watchful
mother wafts
the
envenom'd
fly.
Just where
his belt
with golden
buckles
join'd,
Where linen
folds the
double
corslet
lined,
She turn'd
the shaft,
which,
hissing from
above,
Pass'd the
broad belt,
and through
the corslet
drove;
The folds it
pierced, the
plaited
linen tore,
And razed
the skin,
and drew the
purple gore.
As when some
stately
trappings
are decreed
To grace a
monarch on
his bounding
steed,
A nymph in
Caria or
Maeonia
bred,
Stains the
pure ivory
with a
lively red;
With equal
lustre
various
colours vie,
The shining
whiteness,
and the
Tyrian dye:
So great
Atrides!
show'd thy
sacred
blood,
As down thy
snowy thigh
distill'd
the
streaming
flood.
With horror
seized, the
king of men
descried
The shaft
infix'd, and
saw the
gushing
tide:
Nor less the
Spartan
fear'd,
before he
found
The shining
barb appear
above the
wound,
Then, with a
sigh, that
heaved his
manly
breast,
The royal
brother thus
his grief
express'd,
And grasp'd
his hand;
while all
the Greeks
around
With
answering
sighs
return'd the
plaintive
sound.
"Oh, dear as
life! did I
for this
agree
The solemn
truce, a
fatal truce
to thee!
Wert thou
exposed to
all the
hostile
train,
To fight for
Greece, and
conquer, to
be slain!
The race of
Trojans in
thy ruin
join,
And faith is
scorn'd by
all the
perjured
line.
Not thus our
vows,
confirm'd
with wine
and gore,
Those hands
we plighted,
and those
oaths we
swore,
Shall all be
vain: when
Heaven's
revenge is
slow,
Jove but
prepares to
strike the
fiercer
blow.
The day
shall come,
that great
avenging
day,
When Troy's
proud
glories in
the dust
shall lay,
When Priam's
powers and
Priam's self
shall fall,
And one
prodigious
ruin swallow
all.
I see the
god,
already,
from the
pole
Bare his red
arm, and bid
the thunder
roll;
I see the
Eternal all
his fury
shed,
And shake
his aegis
o'er their
guilty head.
Such mighty
woes on
perjured
princes
wait;
But thou,
alas!
deserv'st a
happier
fate.
Still must I
mourn the
period of
thy days,
And only
mourn,
without my
share of
praise?
Deprived of
thee, the
heartless
Greeks no
more
Shall dream
of conquests
on the
hostile
shore;
Troy seized
of Helen,
and our
glory lost,
Thy bones
shall
moulder on a
foreign
coast;
While some
proud Trojan
thus
insulting
cries,
(And spurns
the dust
where
Menelaus
lies,)
'Such are
the trophies
Greece from
Ilion
brings,
And such the
conquest of
her king of
kings!
Lo his proud
vessels
scatter'd
o'er the
main,
And
unrevenged,
his mighty
brother
slain.'
Oh! ere that
dire
disgrace
shall blast
my fame,
O'erwhelm
me, earth!
and hide a
monarch's
shame."
He said: a
leader's and
a brother's
fears
Possess his
soul, which
thus the
Spartan
cheers:
"Let not thy
words the
warmth of
Greece
abate;
The feeble
dart is
guiltless of
my fate:
Stiff with
the rich
embroider'd
work around,
My varied
belt
repell'd the
flying
wound."
To whom the
king: "My
brother and
my friend,
Thus, always
thus, may
Heaven thy
life defend!
Now seek
some skilful
hand, whose
powerful art
May stanch
the
effusion,
and extract
the dart.
Herald, be
swift, and
bid Machaon
bring
His speedy
succour to
the Spartan
king;
Pierced with
a winged
shaft (the
deed of
Troy),
The
Grecian's
sorrow, and
the Dardan's
joy."
With hasty
zeal the
swift
Talthybius
flies;
Through the
thick files
he darts his
searching
eyes,
And finds
Machaon,
where
sublime he
stands(132)
In arms
incircled
with his
native
bands.
Then thus:
"Machaon, to
the king
repair,
His wounded
brother
claims thy
timely care;
Pierced by
some Lycian
or Dardanian
bow,
A grief to
us, a
triumph to
the foe."
The heavy
tidings
grieved the
godlike man
Swift to his
succour
through the
ranks he
ran.
The
dauntless
king yet
standing
firm he
found,
And all the
chiefs in
deep concern
around.
Where to the
steely point
the reed was
join'd,
The shaft he
drew, but
left the
head behind.
Straight the
broad belt
with gay
embroidery
graced,
He loosed;
the corslet
from his
breast
unbraced;
Then suck'd
the blood,
and
sovereign
balm
infused,(133)
Which Chiron
gave, and
Æsculapius
used.
While round
the prince
the Greeks
employ their
care,
The Trojans
rush
tumultuous
to the war;
Once more
they glitter
in refulgent
arms,
Once more
the fields
are fill'd
with dire
alarms.
Nor had you
seen the
king of men
appear
Confused,
unactive, or
surprised
with fear;
But fond of
glory, with
severe
delight,
His beating
bosom
claim'd the
rising
fight.
No longer
with his
warlike
steeds he
stay'd,
Or press'd
the car with
polish'd
brass inlaid
But left
Eurymedon
the reins to
guide;
The fiery
coursers
snorted at
his side.
On foot
through all
the martial
ranks he
moves
And these
encourages,
and those
reproves.
"Brave men!"
he cries,
(to such who
boldly dare
Urge their
swift steeds
to face the
coming war),
"Your
ancient
valour on
the foes
approve;
Jove is with
Greece, and
let us trust
in Jove.
'Tis not for
us, but
guilty Troy,
to dread,
Whose crimes
sit heavy on
her perjured
head;
Her sons and
matrons
Greece shall
lead in
chains,
And her dead
warriors
strew the
mournful
plains."
Thus with
new ardour
he the brave
inspires;
Or thus the
fearful with
reproaches
fires:
"Shame to
your
country,
scandal of
your kind;
Born to the
fate ye well
deserve to
find!
Why stand ye
gazing round
the dreadful
plain,
Prepared for
flight, but
doom'd to
fly in vain?
Confused and
panting
thus, the
hunted deer
Falls as he
flies, a
victim to
his fear.
Still must
ye wait the
foes, and
still
retire,
Till yon
tall vessels
blaze with
Trojan fire?
Or trust ye,
Jove a
valiant foe
shall chase,
To save a
trembling,
heartless,
dastard
race?"
This said,
he stalk'd
with ample
strides
along,
To Crete's
brave
monarch and
his martial
throng;
High at
their head
he saw the
chief
appear,
And bold
Meriones
excite the
rear.
At this the
king his
generous joy
express'd,
And clasp'd
the warrior
to his armed
breast.
"Divine
Idomeneus!
what thanks
we owe
To worth
like thine!
what praise
shall we
bestow?
To thee the
foremost
honours are
decreed,
First in the
fight and
every
graceful
deed.
For this, in
banquets,
when the
generous
bowls
Restore our
blood, and
raise the
warriors'
souls,
Though all
the rest
with stated
rules we
bound,
Unmix'd,
unmeasured,
are thy
goblets
crown'd.
Be still
thyself, in
arms a
mighty name;
Maintain thy
honours, and
enlarge thy
fame."
To whom the
Cretan thus
his speech
address'd:
"Secure of
me, O king!
exhort the
rest.
Fix'd to thy
side, in
every toil I
share,
Thy firm
associate in
the day of
war.
But let the
signal be
this moment
given;
To mix in
fight is all
I ask of
Heaven.
The field
shall prove
how
perjuries
succeed,
And chains
or death
avenge the
impious
deed."
Charm'd with
this heat,
the king his
course
pursues,
And next the
troops of
either Ajax
views:
In one firm
orb the
bands were
ranged
around,
A cloud of
heroes
blacken'd
all the
ground.
Thus from
the lofty
promontory's
brow
A swain
surveys the
gathering
storm below;
Slow from
the main the
heavy
vapours
rise,
Spread in
dim streams,
and sail
along the
skies,
Till black
as night the
swelling
tempest
shows,
The cloud
condensing
as the
west-wind
blows:
He dreads
the
impending
storm, and
drives his
flock
To the close
covert of an
arching
rock.
Such, and so
thick, the
embattled
squadrons
stood,
With spears
erect, a
moving iron
wood:
A shady
light was
shot from
glimmering
shields,
And their
brown arms
obscured the
dusky
fields.
"O heroes!
worthy such
a dauntless
train,
Whose
godlike
virtue we
but urge in
vain,
(Exclaim'd
the king),
who raise
your eager
bands
With great
examples,
more than
loud
commands.
Ah! would
the gods but
breathe in
all the rest
Such souls
as burn in
your exalted
breast,
Soon should
our arms
with just
success be
crown'd,
And Troy's
proud walls
lie smoking
on the
ground."
Then to the
next the
general
bends his
course;
(His heart
exults, and
glories in
his force);
There
reverend
Nestor ranks
his Pylian
bands,
And with
inspiring
eloquence
commands;
With
strictest
order sets
his train in
arms,
The chiefs
advises, and
the soldiers
warms.
Alastor,
Chromius,
Haemon,
round him
wait,
Bias the
good, and
Pelagon the
great.
The horse
and chariots
to the front
assign'd,
The foot
(the
strength of
war) he
ranged
behind;
The middle
space
suspected
troops
supply,
Inclosed by
both, nor
left the
power to
fly;
He gives
command to
"curb the
fiery steed,
Nor cause
confusion,
nor the
ranks
exceed:
Before the
rest let
none too
rashly ride;
No strength
nor skill,
but just in
time, be
tried:
The charge
once made,
no warrior
turn the
rein,
But fight,
or fall; a
firm
embodied
train.
He whom the
fortune of
the field
shall cast
From forth
his chariot,
mount the
next in
haste;
Nor seek
unpractised
to direct
the car,
Content with
javelins to
provoke the
war.
Our great
forefathers
held this
prudent
course,
Thus ruled
their
ardour, thus
preserved
their force;
By laws like
these
immortal
conquests
made,
And earth's
proud
tyrants low
in ashes
laid."
So spoke the
master of
the martial
art,
And touch'd
with
transport
great
Atrides'
heart.
"Oh! hadst
thou
strength to
match thy
brave
desires,
And nerves
to second
what thy
soul
inspires!
But wasting
years, that
wither human
race,
Exhaust thy
spirits, and
thy arms
unbrace.
What once
thou wert,
oh ever
mightst thou
be!
And age the
lot of any
chief but
thee."
Thus to the
experienced
prince
Atrides
cried;
He shook his
hoary locks,
and thus
replied:
"Well might
I wish,
could mortal
wish renew(134)
That
strength
which once
in boiling
youth I
knew;
Such as I
was, when
Ereuthalion,
slain
Beneath this
arm, fell
prostrate on
the plain.
But heaven
its gifts
not all at
once
bestows,
These years
with wisdom
crowns, with
action
those:
The field of
combat fits
the young
and bold,
The solemn
council best
becomes the
old:
To you the
glorious
conflict I
resign,
Let sage
advice, the
palm of age,
be mine."
He said.
With joy the
monarch
march'd
before,
And found
Menestheus
on the dusty
shore,
With whom
the firm
Athenian
phalanx
stands;
And next
Ulysses,
with his
subject
bands.
Remote their
forces lay,
nor knew so
far
The peace
infringed,
nor heard
the sounds
of war;
The tumult
late begun,
they stood
intent
To watch the
motion,
dubious of
the event.
The king,
who saw
their
squadrons
yet unmoved,
With hasty
ardour thus
the chiefs
reproved:
"Can Peleus'
son forget a
warrior's
part.
And fears
Ulysses,
skill'd in
every art?
Why stand
you distant,
and the rest
expect
To mix in
combat which
yourselves
neglect?
From you
'twas hoped
among the
first to
dare
The shock of
armies, and
commence the
war;
For this
your names
are call'd
before the
rest,
To share the
pleasures of
the genial
feast:
And can you,
chiefs!
without a
blush survey
Whole troops
before you
labouring in
the fray?
Say, is it
thus those
honours you
requite?
The first in
banquets,
but the last
in fight."
Ulysses
heard: the
hero's
warmth
o'erspread
His cheek
with
blushes: and
severe, he
said:
"Take back
the unjust
reproach!
Behold we
stand
Sheathed in
bright arms,
and but
expect
command.
If glorious
deeds afford
thy soul
delight,
Behold me
plunging in
the thickest
fight.
Then give
thy
warrior-chief
a warrior's
due,
Who dares to
act whate'er
thou dar'st
to view."
Struck with
his generous
wrath, the
king
replies:
"O great in
action, and
in council
wise!
With ours,
thy care and
ardour are
the same,
Nor need I
to commend,
nor aught to
blame.
Sage as thou
art, and
learn'd in
human kind,
Forgive the
transport of
a martial
mind.
Haste to the
fight,
secure of
just amends;
The gods
that make,
shall keep
the worthy,
friends."
He said, and
pass'd where
great
Tydides lay,
His steeds
and chariots
wedged in
firm array;
(The warlike
Sthenelus
attends his
side;)(135)
To whom with
stern
reproach the
monarch
cried:
"O son of
Tydeus! (he,
whose
strength
could tame
The bounding
steed, in
arms a
mighty name)
Canst thou,
remote, the
mingling
hosts
descry,
With hands
unactive,
and a
careless
eye?
Not thus thy
sire the
fierce
encounter
fear'd;
Still first
in front the
matchless
prince
appear'd:
What
glorious
toils, what
wonders they
recite,
Who view'd
him
labouring
through the
ranks of
fight?
I saw him
once, when
gathering
martial
powers,
A peaceful
guest, he
sought
Mycenae's
towers;
Armies he
ask'd, and
armies had
been given,
Not we
denied, but
Jove forbade
from heaven;
While
dreadful
comets
glaring from
afar,
Forewarn'd
the horrors
of the
Theban war.(136)
Next, sent
by Greece
from where
Asopus
flows,
A fearless
envoy, he
approach'd
the foes;
Thebes'
hostile
walls
unguarded
and alone,
Dauntless he
enters, and
demands the
throne.
The tyrant
feasting
with his
chiefs he
found,
And dared to
combat all
those chiefs
around:
Dared, and
subdued
before their
haughty
lord;
For Pallas
strung his
arm and
edged his
sword.
Stung with
the shame,
within the
winding way,
To bar his
passage
fifty
warriors
lay;
Two heroes
led the
secret
squadron on,
Mason the
fierce, and
hardy
Lycophon;
Those fifty
slaughter'd
in the
gloomy vale.
He spared
but one to
bear the
dreadful
tale,
Such Tydeus
was, and
such his
martial
fire;
Gods! how
the son
degenerates
from the
sire!"
No words the
godlike
Diomed
return'd,
But heard
respectful,
and in
secret
burn'd:
Not so
fierce
Capaneus'
undaunted
son;
Stern as his
sire, the
boaster thus
begun:
"What needs,
O monarch!
this
invidious
praise,
Ourselves to
lessen,
while our
sire you
raise?
Dare to be
just,
Atrides! and
confess
Our value
equal,
though our
fury less.
With fewer
troops we
storm'd the
Theban wall,
And happier
saw the
sevenfold
city fall,(137)
In impious
acts the
guilty
father died;
The sons
subdued, for
Heaven was
on their
side.
Far more
than heirs
of all our
parents'
fame,
Our glories
darken their
diminish'd
name."
To him
Tydides
thus: "My
friend,
forbear;
Suppress thy
passion, and
the king
revere:
His high
concern may
well excuse
this rage,
Whose cause
we follow,
and whose
war we wage:
His the
first
praise, were
Ilion's
towers
o'erthrown,
And, if we
fail, the
chief
disgrace his
own.
Let him the
Greeks to
hardy toils
excite,
'Tis ours to
labour in
the glorious
fight."
He spoke,
and ardent,
on the
trembling
ground
Sprung from
his car: his
ringing arms
resound.
Dire was the
clang, and
dreadful
from afar,
Of arm'd
Tydides
rushing to
the war.
As when the
winds,
ascending by
degrees,(138)
First move
the
whitening
surface of
the seas,
The billows
float in
order to the
shore,
The wave
behind rolls
on the wave
before;
Till, with
the growing
storm, the
deeps arise,
Foam o'er
the rocks,
and thunder
to the
skies.
So to the
fight the
thick
battalions
throng,
Shields
urged on
shields, and
men drove
men along
Sedate and
silent move
the numerous
bands;
No sound, no
whisper, but
the chief's
commands,
Those only
heard; with
awe the rest
obey,
As if some
god had
snatch'd
their voice
away.
Not so the
Trojans;
from their
host ascends
A general
shout that
all the
region
rends.
As when the
fleecy
flocks
unnumber'd
stand
In wealthy
folds, and
wait the
milker's
hand,
The hollow
vales
incessant
bleating
fills,
The lambs
reply from
all the
neighbouring
hills:
Such
clamours
rose from
various
nations
round,
Mix'd was
the murmur,
and confused
the sound.
Each host
now joins,
and each a
god
inspires,
These Mars
incites, and
those
Minerva
fires,
Pale flight
around, and
dreadful
terror
reign;
And discord
raging
bathes the
purple
plain;
Discord!
dire sister
of the
slaughtering
power,
Small at her
birth, but
rising every
hour,
While scarce
the skies
her horrid
head can
bound,
She stalks
on earth,
and shakes
the world
around;(139)
The nations
bleed,
where'er her
steps she
turns,
The groan
still
deepens, and
the combat
burns.
Now shield
with shield,
with helmet
helmet
closed,
To armour
armour,
lance to
lance
opposed,
Host against
host with
shadowy
squadrons
drew,
The sounding
darts in
iron
tempests
flew,
Victors and
vanquish'd
join'd
promiscuous
cries,
And
shrilling
shouts and
dying groans
arise;
With
streaming
blood the
slippery
fields are
dyed,
And
slaughter'd
heroes swell
the dreadful
tide.
As torrents
roll,
increased by
numerous
rills,
With rage
impetuous,
down their
echoing
hills
Rush to the
vales, and
pour'd along
the plain.
Roar through
a thousand
channels to
the main:
The distant
shepherd
trembling
hears the
sound;
So mix both
hosts, and
so their
cries
rebound.
The bold
Antilochus
the
slaughter
led,
The first
who struck a
valiant
Trojan dead:
At great
Echepolus
the lance
arrives,
Razed his
high crest,
and through
his helmet
drives;
Warm'd in
the brain
the brazen
weapon lies,
And shades
eternal
settle o'er
his eyes.
So sinks a
tower, that
long
assaults had
stood
Of force and
fire, its
walls
besmear'd
with blood.
Him, the
bold leader
of the
Abantian
throng,(140)
Seized to
despoil, and
dragg'd the
corpse
along:
But while he
strove to
tug the
inserted
dart,
Agenor's
javelin
reach'd the
hero's
heart.
His flank,
unguarded by
his ample
shield,
Admits the
lance: he
falls, and
spurns the
field;
The nerves,
unbraced,
support his
limbs no
more;
The soul
comes
floating in
a tide of
gore.
Trojans and
Greeks now
gather round
the slain;
The war
renews, the
warriors
bleed again:
As o'er
their prey
rapacious
wolves
engage,
Man dies on
man, and all
is blood and
rage.
In blooming
youth fair
Simoisius
fell,
Sent by
great Ajax
to the
shades of
hell;
Fair
Simoisius,
whom his
mother bore
Amid the
flocks on
silver
Simois'
shore:
The nymph
descending
from the
hills of
Ide,
To seek her
parents on
his flowery
side,
Brought
forth the
babe, their
common care
and joy,
And thence
from Simois
named the
lovely boy.
Short was
his date! by
dreadful
Ajax slain,
He falls,
and renders
all their
cares in
vain!
So falls a
poplar, that
in watery
ground
Raised high
the head,
with stately
branches
crown'd,
(Fell'd by
some artist
with his
shining
steel,
To shape the
circle of
the bending
wheel,)
Cut down it
lies, tall,
smooth, and
largely
spread,
With all its
beauteous
honours on
its head
There, left
a subject to
the wind and
rain,
And scorch'd
by suns, it
withers on
the plain
Thus pierced
by Ajax,
Simoisius
lies
Stretch'd on
the shore,
and thus
neglected
dies.
At Ajax,
Antiphus his
javelin
threw;
The pointed
lance with
erring fury
flew,
And Leucus,
loved by
wise
Ulysses,
slew.
He drops the
corpse of
Simoisius
slain,
And sinks a
breathless
carcase on
the plain.
This saw
Ulysses, and
with grief
enraged,
Strode where
the foremost
of the foes
engaged;
Arm'd with
his spear,
he meditates
the wound,
In act to
throw; but
cautious
look'd
around,
Struck at
his sight
the Trojans
backward
drew,
And
trembling
heard the
javelin as
it flew.
A chief
stood nigh,
who from
Abydos came,
Old Priam's
son,
Democoon was
his name.
The weapon
entered
close above
his ear,
Cold through
his temples
glides the
whizzing
spear;(141)
With
piercing
shrieks the
youth
resigns his
breath,
His
eye-balls
darken with
the shades
of death;
Ponderous he
falls; his
clanging
arms
resound,
And his
broad
buckler
rings
against the
ground.
Seized with
affright the
boldest foes
appear;
E'en godlike
Hector seems
himself to
fear;
Slow he gave
way, the
rest
tumultuous
fled;
The Greeks
with shouts
press on,
and spoil
the dead:
But Phoebus
now from
Ilion's
towering
height
Shines forth
reveal'd,
and animates
the fight.
"Trojans, be
bold, and
force with
force
oppose;
Your foaming
steeds urge
headlong on
the foes!
Nor are
their bodies
rocks, nor
ribb'd with
steel;
Your weapons
enter, and
your strokes
they feel.
Have ye
forgot what
seem'd your
dread
before?
The great,
the fierce
Achilles
fights no
more."
Apollo thus
from Ilion's
lofty
towers,
Array'd in
terrors,
roused the
Trojan
powers:
While war's
fierce
goddess
fires the
Grecian foe,
And shouts
and thunders
in the
fields
below.
Then great
Diores fell,
by doom
divine,
In vain his
valour and
illustrious
line.
A broken
rock the
force of
Pyrus threw,
(Who from
cold Ænus
led the
Thracian
crew,)(142)
Full on his
ankle
dropp'd the
ponderous
stone,
Burst the
strong
nerves, and
crash'd the
solid bone.
Supine he
tumbles on
the crimson
sands,
Before his
helpless
friends, and
native
bands,
And spreads
for aid his
unavailing
hands.
The foe
rush'd
furious as
he pants for
breath,
And through
his navel
drove the
pointed
death:
His gushing
entrails
smoked upon
the ground,
And the warm
life came
issuing from
the wound.
His lance
bold Thoas
at the
conqueror
sent,
Deep in his
breast above
the pap it
went,
Amid the
lungs was
fix'd the
winged wood,
And
quivering in
his heaving
bosom stood:
Till from
the dying
chief,
approaching
near,
The Ætolian
warrior
tugg'd his
weighty
spear:
Then sudden
waved his
flaming
falchion
round,
And gash'd
his belly
with a
ghastly
wound;
The corpse
now
breathless
on the
bloody
plain,
To spoil his
arms the
victor
strove in
vain;
The Thracian
bands
against the
victor
press'd,
A grove of
lances
glitter'd at
his breast.
Stern Thoas,
glaring with
revengeful
eyes,
In sullen
fury slowly
quits the
prize.
Thus fell
two heroes;
one the
pride of
Thrace,
And one the
leader of
the Epeian
race;
Death's
sable shade
at once
o'ercast
their eyes,
In dust the
vanquish'd
and the
victor lies.
With copious
slaughter
all the
fields are
red,
And heap'd
with growing
mountains of
the dead.
Had some
brave chief
this martial
scene
beheld,
By Pallas
guarded
through the
dreadful
field;
Might darts
be bid to
turn their
points away,
And swords
around him
innocently
play;
The war's
whole art
with wonder
had he seen,
And counted
heroes where
he counted
men.
So fought
each host,
with thirst
of glory
fired,
And crowds
on crowds
triumphantly
expired. |
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