The Iliad of Homer


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(
O'erturn'd by Pallas), where the slippery shore  
Was clogg'd with slimy dung and mingled gore.  
The self-same place beside Patroclus' pyre,  
(
Where late the slaughter'd victims fed the fire.)  
Besmear'd with filth, and blotted o'er with clay,  
Obscene to sight, the rueful racer lay;  
The well-fed bull (the second prize) he shared,  
And left the urn Ulysses' rich reward.  
Then, grasping by the horn the mighty beast,  
The baffled hero thus the Greeks address'd:  
"Accursed fate! the conquest I forego;  
A mortal I, a goddess was my foe;  
She urged her favourite on the rapid way,  
And Pallas, not Ulysses, won the day."  
Thus sourly wail'd he, sputtering dirt and gore;  
A burst of laughter echoed through the shore.  
Antilochus, more humorous than the rest,  
Takes the last prize, and takes it with a jest:  
"Why with our wiser elders should we strive?  
The gods still love them, and they always thrive.  
Ye see, to Ajax I must yield the prize:  
He to Ulysses, still more aged and wise;  
(
A green old age unconscious of decays,  
837  


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Quick Jump
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