The Iliad of Homer


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And now it rises, now it sinks by turns.  
Meanwhile, where Hellespont's broad waters flow,  
Stood Nestor's son, the messenger of woe:  
There sat Achilles, shaded by his sails,  
On hoisted yards extended to the gales;  
Pensive he sat; for all that fate design'd  
Rose in sad prospect to his boding mind.  
Thus to his soul he said: "Ah! what constrains  
The Greeks, late victors, now to quit the plains?  
Is this the day, which heaven so long ago  
Ordain'd, to sink me with the weight of woe?  
(So Thetis warn'd;) when by a Trojan hand  
The bravest of the Myrmidonian band  
Should lose the light! Fulfilled is that decree;  
Fallen is the warrior, and Patroclus he!  
In vain I charged him soon to quit the plain,  
And warn'd to shun Hectorean force in vain!"  
Thus while he thinks, Antilochus appears,  
And tells the melancholy tale with tears.  
"Sad tidings, son of Peleus! thou must hear;  
And wretched I, the unwilling messenger!  
Dead is Patroclus! For his corse they fight;  
His naked corse: his arms are Hector's right."  
A sudden horror shot through all the chief,  
663  


Page
661 662 663 664 665

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980