The Iliad of Homer


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"What make ye here, officious crowds! (he cries).  
Hence! nor obtrude your anguish on my eyes.  
Have ye no griefs at home, to fix ye there:  
Am I the only object of despair?  
Am I become my people's common show,  
Set up by Jove your spectacle of woe?  
No, you must feel him too; yourselves must fall;  
The same stern god to ruin gives you all:  
Nor is great Hector lost by me alone;  
Your sole defence, your guardian power is gone!  
I see your blood the fields of Phrygia drown,  
I see the ruins of your smoking town!  
O send me, gods! ere that sad day shall come,  
A willing ghost to Pluto's dreary dome!"  
He said, and feebly drives his friends away:  
The sorrowing friends his frantic rage obey.  
Next on his sons his erring fury falls,  
Polites, Paris, Agathon, he calls;  
His threats Deiphobus and Dius hear,  
Hippothous, Pammon, Helenes the seer,  
And generous Antiphon: for yet these nine  
Survived, sad relics of his numerous line.  
"
Inglorious sons of an unhappy sire!  
Why did not all in Hector's cause expire?  
57  
8


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