The Iliad of Homer


google search for The Iliad of Homer

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
658 659 660 661 662

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980

Wave their thick falchions, and their javelins shower:  
But Ajax turning, to their fears they yield,  
All pale they tremble and forsake the field.  
While thus aloft the hero's corse they bear,  
Behind them rages all the storm of war:  
Confusion, tumult, horror, o'er the throng  
Of men, steeds, chariots, urged the rout along:  
Less fierce the winds with rising flames conspire  
To whelm some city under waves of fire;  
Now sink in gloomy clouds the proud abodes,  
Now crack the blazing temples of the gods;  
The rumbling torrent through the ruin rolls,  
And sheets of smoke mount heavy to the poles.  
The heroes sweat beneath their honour'd load:  
As when two mules, along the rugged road,  
From the steep mountain with exerted strength  
Drag some vast beam, or mast's unwieldy length;  
Inly they groan, big drops of sweat distil,  
The enormous timber lumbering down the hill:  
So these--Behind, the bulk of Ajax stands,  
And breaks the torrent of the rushing bands.  
Thus when a river swell'd with sudden rains  
Spreads his broad waters o'er the level plains,  
Some interposing hill the stream divides.  
And breaks its force, and turns the winding tides.  
660  


Page
658 659 660 661 662

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980