The Iliad of Homer


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Or else some Greek whose father press'd the plain,  
Or son, or brother, by great Hector slain,  
In Hector's blood his vengeance shall enjoy,  
And hurl thee headlong from the towers of Troy.(297)  
For thy stern father never spared a foe:  
Thence all these tears, and all this scene of woe!  
Thence many evils his sad parents bore,  
His parents many, but his consort more.  
Why gav'st thou not to me thy dying hand?  
And why received not I thy last command?  
Some word thou would'st have spoke, which, sadly dear,  
My soul might keep, or utter with a tear;  
Which never, never could be lost in air,  
Fix'd in my heart, and oft repeated there!"  
Thus to her weeping maids she makes her moan,  
Her weeping handmaids echo groan for groan.  
The mournful mother next sustains her part:  
"O thou, the best, the dearest to my heart!  
Of all my race thou most by heaven approved,  
And by the immortals even in death beloved!  
While all my other sons in barbarous bands  
Achilles bound, and sold to foreign lands,  
This felt no chains, but went a glorious ghost,  
Free, and a hero, to the Stygian coast.  
883  


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