The Iliad of Homer


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He, deeply groaning--"To this cureless grief,  
Not even the Thunderer's favour brings relief.  
Patroclus--Ah!--say, goddess, can I boast  
A pleasure now? revenge itself is lost;  
Patroclus, loved of all my martial train,  
Beyond mankind, beyond myself is slain!  
Lost are those arms the gods themselves bestow'd  
On Peleus; Hector bears the glorious load.  
Cursed be that day, when all the powers above  
Thy charms submitted to a mortal love:  
O hadst thou still, a sister of the main,  
Pursued the pleasures of the watery reign:  
And happier Peleus, less ambitious, led  
A mortal beauty to his equal bed!  
Ere the sad fruit of thy unhappy womb  
Had caused such sorrows past, and woes to come.  
For soon, alas! that wretched offspring slain,  
New woes, new sorrows, shall create again.  
'Tis not in fate the alternate now to give;  
Patroclus dead, Achilles hates to live.  
Let me revenge it on proud Hector's heart,  
Let his last spirit smoke upon my dart;  
On these conditions will I breathe: till then,  
I blush to walk among the race of men."  
A flood of tears, at this, the goddess shed:  
667  


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665 666 667 668 669

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1 245 490 735 980