The Iliad of Homer


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Prone on his face he sinks beside the wheel:  
Atrides o'er him shakes his vengeful steel;  
The fallen chief in suppliant posture press'd  
The victor's knees, and thus his prayer address'd:  
"
O spare my youth, and for the life I owe  
Large gifts of price my father shall bestow.  
When fame shall tell, that, not in battle slain,  
Thy hollow ships his captive son detain:  
Rich heaps of brass shall in thy tent be told,(163)  
And steel well-temper'd, and persuasive gold."  
He said: compassion touch'd the hero's heart  
He stood, suspended with the lifted dart:  
As pity pleaded for his vanquish'd prize,  
Stern Agamemnon swift to vengeance flies,  
And, furious, thus: "Oh impotent of mind!(164)  
Shall these, shall these Atrides' mercy find?  
Well hast thou known proud Troy's perfidious land,  
And well her natives merit at thy hand!  
Not one of all the race, nor sex, nor age,  
Shall save a Trojan from our boundless rage:  
Ilion shall perish whole, and bury all;  
Her babes, her infants at the breast, shall fall;(165)  
A dreadful lesson of exampled fate,  
To warn the nations, and to curb the great!"  
257  


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255 256 257 258 259

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980