The Iliad of Homer


google search for The Iliad of Homer

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
617 618 619 620 621

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980

Mix the contending hosts in mortal fight.  
So pent by hills, the wild winds roar aloud  
In the deep bosom of some gloomy wood;  
Leaves, arms, and trees, aloft in air are blown,  
The broad oaks crackle, and the Sylvans groan;  
This way and that, the rattling thicket bends,  
And the whole forest in one crash descends.  
Not with less noise, with less tumultuous rage,  
In dreadful shock the mingled hosts engage.  
Darts shower'd on darts, now round the carcase ring;  
Now flights of arrows bounding from the string:  
Stones follow stones; some clatter on the fields,  
Some hard, and heavy, shake the sounding shields.  
But where the rising whirlwind clouds the plains,  
Sunk in soft dust the mighty chief remains,  
And, stretch'd in death, forgets the guiding reins!  
Now flaming from the zenith, Sol had driven  
His fervid orb through half the vault of heaven;  
While on each host with equal tempests fell  
The showering darts, and numbers sank to hell.  
But when his evening wheels o'erhung the main,  
Glad conquest rested on the Grecian train.  
Then from amidst the tumult and alarms,  
They draw the conquer'd corse and radiant arms.  
Then rash Patroclus with new fury glows,  
619  


Page
617 618 619 620 621

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980