The Iliad by Homer (ebooks children's books free TXT) đ
Some other spoil? no common fund have we
Of hoarded treasures; what our arms have won
From captur'd towns, has been already shar'd,
Nor can we now resume th' apportion'd spoil.
Restore the maid, obedient to the God!
And if Heav'n will that we the strong-built walls
Of Troy should raze, our warriors will to thee
A threefold, fourfold recompense assign."
To whom the monarch Agamemnon thus:
"Think not, Achilles, valiant though thou art
In fight, and godlike, to defraud me thus;
Thou shalt not so persuade me, nor o'erreach.
Think'st thou to keep thy portion of the spoil,
While I with empty hands sit humbly down?
The bright-ey'd girl thou bidd'st me to restore;
If then the valiant Greeks for me seek out
Some other spoil, some compensation just,
'Tis well: if not, I with my own right hand
Will from some other chief, from thee perchance,
Or Ajax, or Ulysses, wrest his prey;
And woe to him, on whomsoe'er I call
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- Author: Homer
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Forthwith Amphoterus, and Erymas,
Epaltes, Echius, and Tlepolemus,
Son of Damastor, Pyris, Ipheus brave,
Euippus, Polymelus, Argeasâ son,
In quick succession to the ground he brought.
Sarpedon his ungirdled forces saw
Promiscuous fall before Menoetiusâ son, And to the Lycians callâd in loud reproof: âShame, Lycians! whither fly ye? why this haste?
I will myself this chief confront, and learn Who this may be of bearing proud and high, Who on the Trojans grievous harm hath wrought, And many a warriorâs limbs relaxâd in death.â
He said, and from his car, accoutred, sprang; Patroclus saw, and he too leapâd to earth.
As on a lofty rock, with angry screams, Hook-beakâd, with talons curvâd, two vultures fight; So with loud shouts these two to battle rushâd.
The son of Saturn pitying saw, and thus To Juno spoke, his sister and his wife: âWoe, woe! that fate decrees my best-belovâd, Sarpedon, by Patroclusâ hand to fall;
Eâen now conflicting thoughts my soul divide, To bear him from the fatal strife unhurt, And set him down on Lyciaâs fertile plains, Or leave him by Patroclusâ hand to fall.â
Whom, answerâd thus the stag-eyâd Queen of Heavân: âWhat words, dread son of Saturn, dost thou speak?
Wouldst thou a mortal man from death withdraw Long since by fate decreed? Do what thou wilt; Yet cannot we, the rest, applaud thine act.
This too I say, and turn it in thy mind: If to his home Sarpedon thou restore
Alive, bethink thee, will not other Gods Their sons too from the stubborn fight withdraw?
For in the field around the walls of Troy Are many sons of Gods, in all of whom
This act of thine will angry feelings rouse.
But if thou love him, and thy soul deplore His coming doom, yet in the stubborn fight Leave him beneath Patroclusâ hand to fall: Then, when his spirit hath fled, the charge assign To Death and gentle Sleep, that in their arms They bear him safe to Lyciaâs wide-spread plains: There shall his brethren and his friends perform His funâral rites, and mound and column raise, The fitting tribute to the mighty dead.â
Thus she; the Sire of Gods and men complied: But to the ground some drops of blood let fall, In honour of his son, whom fate decreed, Far from his country, on the fertile plains Of Troy to perish by Patroclusâ hand.
As near the champions drew, Patroclus first His weapon hurlâd, and Thrasymedes brave, The faithful follower of Sarpedon, struck Below the waist, and slackâd his limbs in death.
Thrown in his turn, Sarpedonâs glittâring spear Flew wide; and Pedasus, the gallant horse, Through the right shoulder wounded; with a scream He fell, and in the dust breathâd forth his life, As, shrieking loud, his noble spirit fled.
This way and that his two companions swervâd; Creakâd the strong yoke, and tangled were the reins, As in the dust the prostrate courser lay.
Automedon the means of safety saw;
And drawing from beside his brawny thigh His keen-edgâd sword, with no uncertain blow Cut loose the fallen horse; again set straight, The two, extended, stretchâd the tightened rein.
Again in mortal strife the warriors closâd: Once more Sarpedon hurlâd his glittâring spear In vain; above Patroclusâ shoulder flew The point, innocuous; from his hand in turn The spear not vainly thrown, Sarpedon struck Where lies the diaphragm, below the heart.
He fell; as falls an oak, or poplar tall, Or lofty pine, which on the mountain top For some proud ship the woodmanâs axe hath hewn: So he, with death-cry sharp, before his car Extended lay, and clutchâd the blood-stainâd soil.
As when a lion on the herd has sprung, And, âmid the heifers seizâd, the lordly bull Lies bellowing, crushâd between the lionâs jaws; So by Patroclus slain, the Lycian chief, Undaunted still, his faithful comrade callâd: âGood Glaucus, warrior tried, behoves thee now Thy spearmanship to prove, and warlike might.
Welcome the fray; put forth thine utmost speed; Call on the Lycian chiefs, on evâry side, To press around, and for Sarpedon fight; Thou too thine arms for my protection wield; For I to thee, through all thy future days, Shall be a ceaseless scandal and reproach, If me, thus slain before the Grecian ships, The Greeks be sufferâd of my arms to spoil: But stand thou fast, and othersâ courage raise.â
Thus as he spoke, the shades of death oâerspread His eyes and nostrils; then with foot firm-set Upon his chest, Patroclus from the corpse Drew, by main force, the fast-adhering spear; The life forth issuing with the weaponâs point.
Loosâd from the royal car, the snorting steeds, Eager for flight, the Myrmidons detainâd.
Deep-grieving, Glaucus heard his voice: and chafed His spirit within him, that he lacked the power To aid his comrade; with his hand he graspâd His wounded arm, in torture from the shaft By Teucer shot, to save the Greeks from death, As on he pressed to scale the lofty wall: Then to Apollo thus addressâd his prayâr: âHear me, great King, who, as on Lyciaâs plains, Art here in Troy; and hearâst in evâry place Their voice who suffer, as I suffer now.
A grievous wound I bear, and sharpest pangs My arm assail, nor may the blood he stanchâd: The pain weighs down my shoulder; and my hand Hath lost its powâr to fight, or grasp my spear.
Sarpedon, bravest of the brave, is slain, The son of Jove; yet Jove preservâd him not.
But thou, O King, this grievous wound relieve; Assuage the pain, and give me strength to urge My Lycian comrades to maintain the war, And fight myself to guard the noble dead.â
Thus as he prayâd, his prayâr Apollo heard, Assuagâd his pains, and from the grievous wound Stanchâ d the dark blood, and fillâd his soul with strength.
Glaucus within himself perceivâd, and knew, Rejoicing, that the God had heard his prayâr.
The Lycian leaders first on evâry side He urgâd to hasten for their King to fight: Then âmid the Trojans went with lofty step, And first to Panthousâ son, Polydamas, To brave Agenor and AEneas next;
Then Hector of the brazen helm himself Approaching, thus with winged words addressâd: âHector, forgettâst thou quite thy brave allies, Who freely in thy cause pour forth their lives, Far from their home and friends? but they from thee No aid receive; Sarpedon lies in death, The leader of the bucklerâd Lycian bands, Whose justice and whose powâr were Lyciaâs shield; Him by Patroclusâ hand hath Mars subdued.
But, friends, stand by me now! with just revenge Inspirâd, determine that the Myrmidons Shall not, how grievâd soeâer for all the Greeks Who by our spears beside the ships have fallân, Our dead dishonour, and his arms obtain.â
He said; and through the Trojans thrillâd the sense Of grief intolerable, unrestrainâd;
For he, though stranger-born, was of the State A mighty pillar; and his followers
A numârous host; and he himself in fight Among the foremost; so, against the Greeks, With fiery zeal they rushâd, by Hector led, Grievâd for Sarpedonâs loss; on thâ other side Patroclusâ manly heart the Greeks arousâd, And to thâ Ajaces first, themselves inflamed With warlike zeal, he thus addressâd his speech: âYe sons of Ajax, now is come the time Your former fame to rival, or surpass: The man hath fallân, who first oâerleapâd our wall, Sarpedon; now remains, that, having slain, We should his corpse dishonour, and his arms Strip off; and should some comrade dare attempt His rescue, him too with our spears subdue.â
He said; and they, with martial ardour firâd, Rushâd to the conflict. When on either side The reinforcâd battalions were arrayâd, Trojans and Lycians, Myrmidons and Greeks Around the dead in sternest combat met, With fearful shouts; and loud their armour rang.
Then, to enhance the horror of the strife Around his son, with darkness Jove oâerspread The stubborn fight: the Trojans first drove back The keen-eyâd Greeks; for first a warrior fell, Not of the meanest âmid the Myrmidons, Epegeus, son of valiant Agacles;
Who in Budaeumâs thriving state bore rule Erewhile; but flying for a kinsman slain, To Peleus and the silver-footed Queen
He came a suppliant; with Achilles thence To Ilium sent, to join the war of Troy.
Him, as he stretchâd his hand to seize the dead, Full on the forehead with a massive stone Great Hector smote; within the pondârous helm The skull was split in twain; prone on the corpse He fell, by life-destroying death subdued.
Grievâd was Patroclus for his comrade slain; Forward he darted, as a swift-wingâd hawk, That swoops amid the starlings and the daws; So swift didst thou, Patroclus, car-borne chief, Upon the Trojans and the Lycians spring, Thy soul with anger for thy comrade fillâd.
A pondârous stone he hurlâd at Sthenelas, Son of Ithaemenes; the mighty mass
Fell on his neck, and all the muscles crushâd.
Back drew great Hector and the chiefs of Troy; Far as a javâlinâs flight, in sportive strife, Or in the deadly battle, hurlâd by one His utmost strength exerting; back so far The Trojans drew, so far the Greeks pursued.
Glaucus, the leader of the Lycian spears, First turning, slew the mighty Bathycles, The son of Chalcon; he in Hellas dwelt, In wealth surpassing all the Myrmidons.
Him, as he gainâd upon him in pursuit, Quick turning, Glaucus through the breast transfixâd; Thundâring he fell; deep grief possessâd the Greeks At loss of one so valiant; fiercely joyâd The Trojans, and around him crowded thick; Nor of their wonted valour were the Greeks Oblivious, but still onward held their course.
Then slew Meriones a crested chief,
The bold Laogonus, Onetorâs son;
Onetor, of Idaean Jove the priest,
And by the people as a God reverâd.
Below the ear he struck him; from his limbs The spirit fled, and darkness veilâd his eyes.
Then at Meriones AEneas threw
His brazen spear, in hopes beneath his shield To find a spot unguarded; he beheld,
And downward stooping, shunnâd the brazen death; Behind him far, deep in the soil infixâd, The weapon stood; there Mars its impulse stayâd; So, bootless hurlâd, though by no feeble hand, AEneasâ spear stood quivâring in the ground; Then thus in wrath he cried: âMeriones, Had it but struck thee, nimble as thou art, My spear had brought thy dancing to a close.â
To whom the spearman skillâd, Meriones: âBrave as thou art, AEneas, âtis too much For thee to hope the might of all to quell, Who dare confront thee; thou art mortal too!
And if my aim be true, and should my spear But strike thee fair, all valiant as thou art, And confident, yet me thy fall shall crown With triumph, and thy soul to Hades send.â
He said; and him Menoetiusâ noble son
Addressâd with grave rebuke: âMeriones, Brave warrior, why thus waste the time in words?
Trust me, good friend, âtis not by vaunting speech, Unseconded by deeds, that we may hope
To scare away the Trojans from the slain: Hands are for battle, words for council meet; Boots it not now to wrangle, but to fight.â
He said, and led the way; him followâd straight The godlike chief; forthwith, as loudly rings, Amid the mountain forestâs deep recess, The woodmanâs axe, and far is heard the sound; So from the wide-spread earth their clamour rose, As brazen arms, and shields, and tough bullâs-hide Encounterâd swords and double-pointed spears.
Nor might the sharpest sight Sarpedon know, From head to foot with wounds and blood and dust Disfigurâd; thickly round the dead they swarmâd.
As when at spring-tide in the cattle-sheds Around the milk-cans swarm the buzzing flies, While
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