The Iliad of Homer


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Sudden (a venerable sight!) appears;  
Embraced his knees, and bathed his hands in tears;  
Those direful hands his kisses press'd, embrued  
Even with the best, the dearest of his blood!  
As when a wretch (who, conscious of his crime,  
Pursued for murder, flies his native clime)  
Just gains some frontier, breathless, pale, amazed,  
All gaze, all wonder: thus Achilles gazed:  
Thus stood the attendants stupid with surprise:  
All mute, yet seem'd to question with their eyes:  
Each look'd on other, none the silence broke,  
Till thus at last the kingly suppliant spoke:  
"Ah think, thou favour'd of the powers divine!(295)  
Think of thy father's age, and pity mine!  
In me that father's reverend image trace,  
Those silver hairs, that venerable face;  
His trembling limbs, his helpless person, see!  
In all my equal, but in misery!  
Yet now, perhaps, some turn of human fate  
Expels him helpless from his peaceful state;  
Think, from some powerful foe thou seest him fly,  
And beg protection with a feeble cry.  
Yet still one comfort in his soul may rise;  
He hears his son still lives to glad his eyes,  
869  


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