The Iliad of Homer


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And left their monarch with the common dead:  
Around, in heaps on heaps, a dreadful wall  
Of carnage rises, as the heroes fall.  
(So Jove decreed!) At length the Greeks obtain  
The prize contested, and despoil the slain.  
The radiant arms are by Patroclus borne;  
Patroclus' ships the glorious spoils adorn.  
Then thus to Phoebus, in the realms above,  
Spoke from his throne the cloud-compelling Jove:  
"
Descend, my Phoebus! on the Phrygian plain,  
And from the fight convey Sarpedon slain;  
Then bathe his body in the crystal flood,  
With dust dishonour'd, and deform'd with blood;  
O'er all his limbs ambrosial odours shed,  
And with celestial robes adorn the dead.  
Those rites discharged, his sacred corse bequeath  
To the soft arms of silent Sleep and Death.  
They to his friends the immortal charge shall bear;  
His friends a tomb and pyramid shall rear:  
What honour mortals after death receive,  
Those unavailing honours we may give!"  
Apollo bows, and from mount Ida's height,  
Swift to the field precipitates his flight;  
Thence from the war the breathless hero bore,  
614  


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612 613 614 615 616

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980