The Iliad of Homer


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She said. With awe divine, the queen of love  
Obey'd the sister and the wife of Jove;  
And from her fragrant breast the zone embraced,(233)  
With various skill and high embroidery graced.  
In this was every art, and every charm,  
To win the wisest, and the coldest warm:  
Fond love, the gentle vow, the gay desire,  
The kind deceit, the still-reviving fire,  
Persuasive speech, and the more persuasive sighs,  
Silence that spoke, and eloquence of eyes.  
This on her hand the Cyprian Goddess laid:  
"Take this, and with it all thy wish;" she said.  
With smiles she took the charm; and smiling press'd  
The powerful cestus to her snowy breast.  
Then Venus to the courts of Jove withdrew;  
Whilst from Olympus pleased Saturnia flew.  
O'er high Pieria thence her course she bore,  
O'er fair Emathia's ever-pleasing shore,  
O'er Hemus' hills with snows eternal crown'd;  
Nor once her flying foot approach'd the ground.  
Then taking wing from Athos' lofty steep,  
She speeds to Lemnos o'er the rolling deep,  
And seeks the cave of Death's half-brother, Sleep.(234)  
"Sweet pleasing Sleep! (Saturnia thus began)  
525  


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