The Iliad of Homer


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In their fell jaws high-lifting through the wood,  
And sprinkling all the shrubs with drops of blood;  
So these, the chief: great Ajax from the dead  
Strips his bright arms; Oileus lops his head:  
Toss'd like a ball, and whirl'd in air away,  
At Hector's feet the gory visage lay.  
The god of ocean, fired with stern disdain,  
And pierced with sorrow for his grandson slain,  
Inspires the Grecian hearts, confirms their hands,  
And breathes destruction on the Trojan bands.  
Swift as a whirlwind rushing to the fleet,  
He finds the lance-famed Idomen of Crete,  
His pensive brow the generous care express'd  
With which a wounded soldier touch'd his breast,  
Whom in the chance of war a javelin tore,  
And his sad comrades from the battle bore;  
Him to the surgeons of the camp he sent:  
That office paid, he issued from his tent  
Fierce for the fight: to whom the god begun,  
In Thoas' voice, Andraemon's valiant son,  
Who ruled where Calydon's white rocks arise,  
And Pleuron's chalky cliffs emblaze the skies:  
"
Where's now the imperious vaunt, the daring boast,  
Of Greece victorious, and proud Ilion lost?"  
81  
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Page
479 480 481 482 483

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980