The Iliad of Homer


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Then sourly slow the indignant beast retires:  
So turn'd stern Ajax, by whole hosts repell'd,  
While his swoln heart at every step rebell'd.  
As the slow beast, with heavy strength endued,  
In some wide field by troops of boys pursued,  
Though round his sides a wooden tempest rain,  
Crops the tall harvest, and lays waste the plain;  
Thick on his hide the hollow blows resound,  
The patient animal maintains his ground,  
Scarce from the field with all their efforts chased,  
And stirs but slowly when he stirs at last:  
On Ajax thus a weight of Trojans hung,  
The strokes redoubled on his buckler rung;  
Confiding now in bulky strength he stands,  
Now turns, and backward bears the yielding bands;  
Now stiff recedes, yet hardly seems to fly,  
And threats his followers with retorted eye.  
Fix'd as the bar between two warring powers,  
While hissing darts descend in iron showers:  
In his broad buckler many a weapon stood,  
Its surface bristled with a quivering wood;  
And many a javelin, guiltless on the plain,  
Marks the dry dust, and thirsts for blood in vain.  
But bold Eurypylus his aid imparts,  
And dauntless springs beneath a cloud of darts;  
432  


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430 431 432 433 434

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980