The Iliad by Homer (the alpha prince and his bride full story free .txt) đ
And stones and darts in mingled tempests fly.
As when sharp Boreas blows abroad, and brings
The dreary winter on his frozen wings;
Beneath the low-hung clouds the sheets of snow
Descend, and whiten all the fields below:
So fast the darts on either army pour,
So down the rampires rolls the rocky shower:
Heavy, and thick, resound the batter'd shields,
And the deaf echo rattles round the fields.
With shame repulsed, with grief and fury driven,
The frantic Asius thus accuses Heaven:
"In powers immortal who shall now believe?
Can those too flatter, and can Jove deceive?
What man could doubt but Troy's victorious power
Should humble Greece, and this her fatal hour?
But like when wasps from hollow crannies drive,
To guard the entrance of their common hive,
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But Neptune, rising from the seas profound, The god whose earthquakes rock the solid ground, Now wears a mortal form; like Calchas seen, Such his loud voice, and such his manly mien; His shouts incessant every Greek inspire, But most the Ajaces, adding fire to fire.
{Illustration: NEPTUNE RISING FROM THE SEA.}
ââTis yours, O warriors, all our hopes to raise: Oh recollect your ancient worth and praise!
âTis yours to save us, if you cease to fear; Flight, more than shameful, is destructive here.
On other works though Troy with fury fall, And pour her armies oâer our batterâd wall: There Greece has strength: but this, this part oâerthrown, Her strength were vain; I dread for you alone: Here Hector rages like the force of fire, Vaunts of his gods, and calls high Jove his sire: If yet some heavenly power your breast excite, Breathe in your hearts, and string your arms to fight, Greece yet may live, her threatenâd fleet maintain: And Hectorâs force, and Joveâs own aid, be vain.â
Then with his sceptre, that the deep controls, He touchâd the chiefs, and steelâd their manly souls: Strength, not their own, the touch divine imparts, Prompts their light limbs, and swells their daring hearts.
Then, as a falcon from the rocky height, Her quarry seen, impetuous at the sight, Forth-springing instant, darts herself from high, Shoots on the wing, and skims along the sky: Such, and so swift, the power of ocean flew; The wide horizon shut him from their view.
The inspiring god Oileusâ active son
Perceived the first, and thus to Telamon: âSome god, my friend, some god in human form Favouring descends, and wills to stand the storm.
Not Calchas this, the venerable seer;
Short as he turned, I saw the power appear: I markâd his parting, and the steps he trod; His own bright evidence reveals a god.
Even now some energy divine I share,
And seem to walk on wings, and tread in air!â
âWith equal ardour (Telamon returns)
My soul is kindled, and my bosom burns; New rising spirits all my force alarm,
Lift each impatient limb, and brace my arm.
This ready arm, unthinking, shakes the dart; The blood pours back, and fortifies my heart: Singly, methinks, yon towering chief I meet, And stretch the dreadful Hector at my feet.â
Full of the god that urged their burning breast, The heroes thus their mutual warmth expressâd.
Neptune meanwhile the routed Greeks inspired; Who, breathless, pale, with length of labours tired, Pant in the ships; while Troy to conquest calls, And swarms victorious oâer their yielding walls: Trembling before the impending storm they lie, While tears of rage stand burning in their eye.
Greece sunk they thought, and this their fatal hour; But breathe new courage as they feel the power.
Teucer and Leitus first his words excite; Then stern Peneleus rises to the fight; Thoas, Deipyrus, in arms renownâd,
And Merion next, the impulsive fury found; Last Nestorâs son the same bold ardour takes, While thus the god the martial fire awakes: âOh lasting infamy, oh dire disgrace
To chiefs of vigorous youth, and manly race!
I trusted in the gods, and you, to see
Brave Greece victorious, and her navy free: Ah, noâthe glorious combat you disclaim, And one black day clouds all her former fame.
Heavens! what a prodigy these eyes survey, Unseen, unthought, till this amazing day!
Fly we at length from Troyâs oft-conquerâd bands?
And falls our fleet by such inglorious hands?
A rout undisciplined, a straggling train, Not born to glories of the dusty plain; Like frighted fawns from hill to hill pursued, A prey to every savage of the wood:
Shall these, so late who trembled at your name, Invade your camps, involve your ships in flame?
A change so shameful, say, what cause has wrought?
The soldiersâ baseness, or the generalâs fault?
Fools! will ye perish for your leaderâs vice; The purchase infamy, and life the price?
âTis not your cause, Achillesâ injured fame: Anotherâs is the crime, but yours the shame.
Grant that our chief offend through rage or lust, Must you be cowards, if your kingâs unjust?
Prevent this evil, and your country save: Small thought retrieves the spirits of the brave.
Think, and subdue! on dastards dead to fame I waste no anger, for they feel no shame: But you, the pride, the flower of all our host, My heart weeps blood to see your glory lost!
Nor deem this day, this battle, all you lose; A day more black, a fate more vile, ensues.
Let each reflect, who prizes fame or breath, On endless infamy, on instant death:
For, lo! the fated time, the appointed shore: Hark! the gates burst, the brazen barriers roar!
Impetuous Hector thunders at the wall;
The hour, the spot, to conquer, or to fall.â
These words the Greciansâ fainting hearts inspire, And listening armies catch the godlike fire.
Fixâd at his post was each bold Ajax found, With well-ranged squadrons strongly circled round: So close their order, so disposed their fight, As Pallasâ self might view with fixâd delight; Or had the god of war inclined his eyes, The god of war had ownâd a just surprise.
A chosen phalanx, firm, resolved as fate, Descending Hector and his battle wait.
An iron scene gleams dreadful oâer the fields, Armour in armour lockâd, and shields in shields, Spears lean on spears, on targets targets throng, Helms stuck to helms, and man drove man along.
The floating plumes unnumberâd wave above, As when an earthquake stirs the nodding grove; And levellâd at the skies with pointing rays, Their brandishâd lances at each motion blaze.
Thus breathing death, in terrible array, The close compacted legions urged their way: Fierce they drove on, impatient to destroy; Troy charged the first, and Hector first of Troy.
As from some mountainâs craggy forehead torn, A rockâs round fragment flies, with fury borne, (Which from the stubborn stone a torrent rends,) Precipitate the ponderous mass descends: From steep to steep the rolling ruin bounds; At every shock the crackling wood resounds; Still gathering force, it smokes; and urged amain, Whirls, leaps, and thunders down, impetuous to the plain: There stopsâso Hector. Their whole force he proved, [190]
Resistless when he raged, and, when he stoppâd, unmoved.
On him the war is bent, the darts are shed, And all their falchions wave around his head: Repulsed he stands, nor from his stand retires; But with repeated shouts his army fires.
âTrojans! be firm; this arm shall make your way Through yon square body, and that black array: Stand, and my spear shall rout their scattering power, Strong as they seem, embattled like a tower; For he that Junoâs heavenly bosom warms, The first of gods, this day inspires our arms.â
He said; and roused the soul in every breast: Urged with desire of fame, beyond the rest, Forth marchâd Deiphobus; but, marching, held Before his wary steps his ample shield.
Bold Merion aimâd a stroke (nor aimâd it wide); The glittering javelin pierced the tough bull-hide; But pierced not through: unfaithful to his hand, The point broke short, and sparkled in the sand.
The Trojan warrior, touchâd with timely fear, On the raised orb to distance bore the spear.
The Greek, retreating, mournâd his frustrate blow, And cursed the treacherous lance that spared a foe; Then to the ships with surly speed he went, To seek a surer javelin in his tent.
Meanwhile with rising rage the battle glows, The tumult thickens, and the clamour grows.
By Teucerâs arm the warlike Imbrius bleeds, The son of Mentor, rich in generous steeds.
Ere yet to Troy the sons of Greece were led, In fair Pedaeusâ verdant pastures bred, The youth had dwelt, remote from warâs alarms, And blest in bright Medesicasteâs arms: (This nymph, the fruit of Priamâs ravishâd joy, Allied the warrior to the house of Troy:) To Troy, when glory callâd his arms, he came, And matchâd the bravest of her chiefs in fame: With Priamâs sons, a guardian of the throne, He lived, beloved and honourâd as his own.
Him Teucer pierced between the throat and ear: He groans beneath the Telamonian spear.
As from some far-seen mountainâs airy crown, Subdued by steel, a tall ash tumbles down, And soils its verdant tresses on the ground; So falls the youth; his arms the fall resound.
Then Teucer rushing to despoil the dead, From Hectorâs hand a shining javelin fled: He saw, and shunnâd the death; the forceful dart Sung on, and pierced Amphimachusâs heart, Cteatusâ son, of Neptuneâs forceful line; Vain was his courage, and his race divine!
Prostrate he falls; his clanging arms resound, And his broad buckler thunders on the ground.
To seize his beamy helm the victor flies, And just had fastened on the dazzling prize, When Ajaxâ manly arm a javelin flung;
Full on the shieldâs round boss the weapon rung; He felt the shock, nor more was doomâd to feel, Secure in mail, and sheathâd in shining steel.
Repulsed he yields; the victor Greeks obtain The spoils contested, and bear off the slain.
Between the leaders of the Athenian line, (Stichius the brave, Menestheus the divine,) Deplored Amphimachus, sad object! lies; Imbrius remains the fierce Ajacesâ prize.
As two grim lions bear across the lawn, Snatchâd from devouring hounds, a slaughterâd fawn.
In their fell jaws high-lifting through the wood, And sprinkling all the shrubs with drops of blood; So these, the chief: great Ajax from the dead Strips his bright arms; Oileus lops his head: Tossâd like a ball, and whirlâd in air away, At Hectorâs feet the gory visage lay.
The god of ocean, fired with stern disdain, And pierced with sorrow for his grandson slain, Inspires the Grecian hearts, confirms their hands, And breathes destruction on the Trojan bands.
Swift as a whirlwind rushing to the fleet, He finds the lance-famed Idomen of Crete, His pensive brow the generous care expressâd With which a wounded soldier touchâd his breast, Whom in the chance of war a javelin tore, And his sad comrades from the battle bore; Him to the surgeons of the camp he sent: That office paid, he issued from his tent Fierce for the fight: to whom the god begun, In Thoasâ voice, Andraemonâs valiant son, Who ruled where Calydonâs white rocks arise, And Pleuronâs chalky cliffs emblaze the skies: âWhereâs now the imperious vaunt, the daring boast, Of Greece victorious, and proud Ilion lost?â
To whom the king: âOn Greece no blame be thrown; Arms are her trade, and war is all her own.
Her hardy heroes from the well-fought plains Nor fear withholds, nor shameful sloth detains: âTis heaven, alas! and Joveâs all-powerful doom, That far, far distant from our native home Wills us to fall inglorious! Oh, my friend!
Once foremost in the fight, still prone to lend Or arms or counsels, now perform thy best, And what thou canst not singly, urge the rest.â
Thus he: and thus the god whose force can make The solid globeâs eternal basis shake:
âAh! never may he see his native land,
But feed the vultures on this hateful strand, Who seeks ignobly in his ships to stay, Nor dares to combat on this signal day!
For this, behold! in horrid arms I shine, And urge thy soul to rival acts with mine.
Together let us battle on the plain;
Two, not the worst; nor even this succour vain: Not vain the weakest, if their force unite; But ours, the bravest have confessâd in fight.â
This said, he rushes where the combat burns; Swift to his tent the Cretan king returns: From thence, two javelins glittering
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