The Iliad of Homer


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And, scoffing, thus to war's victorious maid:  
"
Lo! what an aid on Mars's side is seen!  
The smiles' and loves' unconquerable queen!  
Mark with what insolence, in open view,  
She moves: let Pallas, if she dares, pursue."  
Minerva smiling heard, the pair o'ertook,  
And slightly on her breast the wanton strook:  
She, unresisting, fell (her spirits fled);  
On earth together lay the lovers spread.  
"And like these heroes be the fate of all  
(
Minerva cries) who guard the Trojan wall!  
To Grecian gods such let the Phrygian be,  
So dread, so fierce, as Venus is to me;  
Then from the lowest stone shall Troy be moved."  
Thus she, and Juno with a smile approved.  
Meantime, to mix in more than mortal fight,  
The god of ocean dares the god of light.  
"What sloth has seized us, when the fields around  
Ring with conflicting powers, and heaven returns the sound:  
Shall, ignominious, we with shame retire,  
No deed perform'd, to our Olympian sire?  
Come, prove thy arm! for first the war to wage,  
Suits not my greatness, or superior age:  
760  


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758 759 760 761 762

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980