The Iliad of Homer


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Slow as she pass'd, beheld with sad survey  
Where, gash'd with cruel wounds, Patroclus lay.  
Prone on the body fell the heavenly fair,  
Beat her sad breast, and tore her golden hair;  
All beautiful in grief, her humid eyes  
Shining with tears she lifts, and thus she cries:  
"Ah, youth for ever dear, for ever kind,  
Once tender friend of my distracted mind!  
I left thee fresh in life, in beauty gay;  
Now find thee cold, inanimated clay!  
What woes my wretched race of life attend!  
Sorrows on sorrows, never doom'd to end!  
The first loved consort of my virgin bed  
Before these eyes in fatal battle bled:  
My three brave brothers in one mournful day  
All trod the dark, irremeable way:  
Thy friendly hand uprear'd me from the plain,  
And dried my sorrows for a husband slain;  
Achilles' care you promised I should prove,  
The first, the dearest partner of his love;  
That rites divine should ratify the band,  
And make me empress in his native land.  
Accept these grateful tears! for thee they flow,  
For thee, that ever felt another's woe!"  
706  


Page
704 705 706 707 708

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980