The Iliad of Homer


google search for The Iliad of Homer

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
624 625 626 627 628

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980

Great Menelaus, touch'd with generous woe,  
Springs to the front, and guards him from the foe.  
Thus round her new-fallen young the heifer moves,  
Fruit of her throes, and first-born of her loves;  
And anxious (helpless as he lies, and bare)  
Turns, and re-turns her, with a mother's care,  
Opposed to each that near the carcase came,  
His broad shield glimmers, and his lances flame.  
The son of Panthus, skill'd the dart to send,  
Eyes the dead hero, and insults the friend.  
"
This hand, Atrides, laid Patroclus low;  
Warrior! desist, nor tempt an equal blow:  
To me the spoils my prowess won, resign:  
Depart with life, and leave the glory mine"  
The Trojan thus: the Spartan monarch burn'd  
With generous anguish, and in scorn return'd:  
"Laugh'st thou not, Jove! from thy superior throne,  
When mortals boast of prowess not their own?  
Not thus the lion glories in his might,  
Nor panther braves his spotted foe in fight,  
Nor thus the boar (those terrors of the plain;)  
Man only vaunts his force, and vaunts in vain.  
But far the vainest of the boastful kind,  
These sons of Panthus vent their haughty mind.  
626  


Page
624 625 626 627 628

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980