The Iliad of Homer


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On Ida's summit sat imperial Jove:  
Round the wide fields he cast a careful view,  
There saw the Trojans fly, the Greeks pursue;  
These proud in arms, those scatter'd o'er the plain  
And, 'midst the war, the monarch of the main.  
Not far, great Hector on the dust he spies,  
(
His sad associates round with weeping eyes,)  
Ejecting blood, and panting yet for breath,  
His senses wandering to the verge of death.  
The god beheld him with a pitying look,  
And thus, incensed, to fraudful Juno spoke:  
"O thou, still adverse to the eternal will,  
For ever studious in promoting ill!  
Thy arts have made the godlike Hector yield,  
And driven his conquering squadrons from the field.  
Canst thou, unhappy in thy wiles, withstand  
Our power immense, and brave the almighty hand?  
Hast thou forgot, when, bound and fix'd on high,  
From the vast concave of the spangled sky,  
I hung thee trembling in a golden chain,  
And all the raging gods opposed in vain?  
Headlong I hurl'd them from the Olympian hall,  
Stunn'd in the whirl, and breathless with the fall.  
For godlike Hercules these deeds were done,  
Nor seem'd the vengeance worthy such a son:  
542  


Page
540 541 542 543 544

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980