The Iliad of Homer


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The son of Panthus, thus express'd his fears  
The friend of Hector, and of equal years;  
(
The self-same night to both a being gave,  
One wise in council, one in action brave):  
"In free debate, my friends, your sentence speak;  
For me, I move, before the morning break,  
To raise our camp: too dangerous here our post,  
Far from Troy walls, and on a naked coast.  
I deem'd not Greece so dreadful, while engaged  
In mutual feuds her king and hero raged;  
Then, while we hoped our armies might prevail  
We boldly camp'd beside a thousand sail.  
I dread Pelides now: his rage of mind  
Not long continues to the shores confined,  
Nor to the fields, where long in equal fray  
Contending nations won and lost the day;  
For Troy, for Troy, shall henceforth be the strife,  
And the hard contest not for fame, but life.  
Haste then to Ilion, while the favouring night  
Detains these terrors, keeps that arm from fight.  
If but the morrow's sun behold us here,  
That arm, those terrors, we shall feel, not fear;  
And hearts that now disdain, shall leap with joy,  
If heaven permit them then to enter Troy.  
Let not my fatal prophecy be true,  
675  


Page
673 674 675 676 677

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980