The Iliad of Homer


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Go, guide thy darksome steps to Pluto's dreary hall."  
He said, and sorrow touch'd each Argive breast:  
The soul of Ajax burn'd above the rest.  
As by his side the groaning warrior fell,  
At the fierce foe he launch'd his piercing steel;  
The foe, reclining, shunn'd the flying death;  
But fate, Archilochus, demands thy breath:  
Thy lofty birth no succour could impart,  
The wings of death o'ertook thee on the dart;  
Swift to perform heaven's fatal will, it fled  
Full on the juncture of the neck and head,  
And took the joint, and cut the nerves in twain:  
The dropping head first tumbled on the plain.  
So just the stroke, that yet the body stood  
Erect, then roll'd along the sands in blood.  
"
Here, proud Polydamas, here turn thy eyes!  
(The towering Ajax loud-insulting cries:)  
Say, is this chief extended on the plain  
A worthy vengeance for Prothoenor slain?  
Mark well his port! his figure and his face  
Nor speak him vulgar, nor of vulgar race;  
Some lines, methinks, may make his lineage known,  
Antenor's brother, or perhaps his son."  
537  


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535 536 537 538 539

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980