The Iliad of Homer


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Prone fell the youth; and panting on the land,  
The gushing purple dyed the thirsty sand.  
The victor to the stream the carcase gave,  
And thus insults him, floating on the wave:  
"Lie there, Lycaon! let the fish surround  
Thy bloated corpse, and suck thy gory wound:  
There no sad mother shall thy funerals weep,  
But swift Scamander roll thee to the deep,  
Whose every wave some watery monster brings,  
To feast unpunish'd on the fat of kings.  
So perish Troy, and all the Trojan line!  
Such ruin theirs, and such compassion mine.  
What boots ye now Scamander's worshipp'd stream,  
His earthly honours, and immortal name?  
In vain your immolated bulls are slain,  
Your living coursers glut his gulfs in vain!  
Thus he rewards you, with this bitter fate;  
Thus, till the Grecian vengeance is complete:  
Thus is atoned Patroclus' honour'd shade,  
And the short absence of Achilles paid."  
These boastful words provoked the raging god;  
With fury swells the violated flood.  
What means divine may yet the power employ  
To check Achilles, and to rescue Troy?  
745  


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