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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How vain, without the merit, is the name!
Since battle is renounced, thy thoughts employ What other methods may preserve thy Troy: âTis time to try if Ilionâs state can stand By thee alone, nor ask a foreign hand:
Mean, empty boast! but shall the Lycians stake Their lives for you? those Lycians you forsake?
What from thy thankless arms can we expect?
Thy friend Sarpedon proves thy base neglect; Say, shall our slaughterâd bodies guard your walls, While unrevengâd the great Sarpedon falls?
Even where he died for Troy, you left him there, A feast for dogs, and all the fowls of air.
On my command if any Lycian wait,
Hence let him march, and give up Troy to fate.
Did such a spirit as the gods impart
Impel one Trojan hand or Trojan heart,
(Such as should burn in every soul that draws The sword for glory, and his countryâs cause) Even yet our mutual arms we might employ, And drag yon carcase to the walls of Troy.
Oh! were Patroclus ours, we might obtain Sarpedonâs arms and honourâd corse again!
Greece with Achillesâ friend should be repaid, And thus due honours purchased to his shade.
But words are vainâLet Ajax once appear, And Hector trembles and recedes with fear; Thou darâst not meet the terrors of his eye; And lo! already thou preparâst to fly.â
The Trojan chief with fixâd resentment eyed The Lycian leader, and sedate replied:
âSay, is it just, my friend, that Hectorâs ear From such a warrior such a speech should hear?
I deemâd thee once the wisest of thy kind, But ill this insult suits a prudent mind.
I shun great Ajax? I desert my train?
âTis mine to prove the rash assertion vain; I joy to mingle where the battle bleeds, And hear the thunder of the sounding steeds.
But Joveâs high will is ever uncontrollâd, The strong he withers, and confounds the bold; Now crowns with fame the mighty man, and now Strikes the fresh garland from the victorâs brow!
Come, through yon squadrons let us hew the way, And thou be witness, if I fear to-day;
If yet a Greek the sight of Hector dread, Or yet their hero dare defend the dead.â
Then turning to the martial hosts, he cries: âYe Trojans, Dardans, Lycians, and allies!
Be men, my friends, in action as in name, And yet be mindful of your ancient fame.
Hector in proud Achillesâ arms shall shine, Torn from his friend, by right of conquest mine.â
He strode along the field, as thus he said: (The sable plumage nodded oâer his head:) Swift through the spacious plain he sent a look; One instant saw, one instant overtook
The distant band, that on the sandy shore The radiant spoils to sacred Ilion bore.
There his own mail unbraced the field bestrowâd; His train to Troy conveyâd the massy load.
Now blazing in the immortal arms he stands; The work and present of celestial hands; By aged Peleus to Achilles given,
As first to Peleus by the court of heaven: His fatherâs arms not long Achilles wears, Forbid by fate to reach his fatherâs years.
Him, proud in triumph, glittering from afar, The god whose thunder rends the troubled air Beheld with pity; as apart he sat,
And, conscious, lookâd through all the scene of fate.
He shook the sacred honours of his head; Olympus trembled, and the godhead said; âAh, wretched man! unmindful of thy end!
A momentâs glory; and what fates attend!
In heavenly panoply divinely bright
Thou standâst, and armies tremble at thy sight, As at Achillesâ self! beneath thy dart
Lies slain the great Achillesâ dearer part.
Thou from the mighty dead those arms hast torn, Which once the greatest of mankind had worn.
Yet live! I give thee one illustrious day, A blaze of glory ere thou fadâst away.
For ah! no more Andromache shall come
With joyful tears to welcome Hector home; No more officious, with endearing charms, From thy tired limbs unbrace Pelidesâ arms!â
Then with his sable brow he gave the nod That seals his word; the sanction of the god.
The stubborn arms (by Joveâs command disposed) Conformâd spontaneous, and around him closed: Fillâd with the god, enlarged his members grew, Through all his veins a sudden vigour flew, The blood in brisker tides began to roll, And Mars himself came rushing on his soul.
Exhorting loud through all the field he strode, And lookâd, and moved, Achilles, or a god.
Now Mesthles, Glaucus, Medon, he inspires, Now Phorcys, Chromius, and Hippothous fires; The great Thersilochus like fury found, Asteropaeus kindled at the sound,
And Ennomus, in augury renownâd.
âHear, all ye hosts, and hear, unnumberâd bands Of neighbouring nations, or of distant lands!
âTwas not for state we summonâd you so far, To boast our numbers, and the pomp of war: Ye came to fight; a valiant foe to chase, To save our present, and our future race.
Tor this, our wealth, our products, you enjoy, And glean the relics of exhausted Troy.
Now then, to conquer or to die prepare; To die or conquer are the terms of war.
Whatever hand shall win Patroclus slain, Whoeâer shall drag him to the Trojan train, With Hectorâs self shall equal honours claim; With Hector part the spoil, and share the fame.â
Fired by his words, the troops dismiss their fears, They join, they thicken, they protend their spears; Full on the Greeks they drive in firm array, And each from Ajax hopes the glorious prey: Vain hope! what numbers shall the field oâerspread, What victims perish round the mighty dead!
Great Ajax markâd the growing storm from far, And thus bespoke his brother of the war: âOur fatal day, alas! is come, my friend; And all our wars and glories at an end!
âTis not this corse alone we guard in vain, Condemnâd to vultures on the Trojan plain; We too must yield: the same sad fate must fall On thee, on me, perhaps, my friend, on all.
See what a tempest direful Hector spreads, And lo! it bursts, it thunders on our heads!
Call on our Greeks, if any hear the call, The bravest Greeks: this hour demands them all.â
The warrior raised his voice, and wide around The field re-echoed the distressful sound.
âO chiefs! O princes, to whose hand is given The rule of men; whose glory is from heaven!
Whom with due honours both Atrides grace: Ye guides and guardians of our Argive race!
All, whom this well-known voice shall reach from far, All, whom I see not through this cloud of war; Come all! let generous rage your arms employ, And save Patroclus from the dogs of Troy.â
Oilean Ajax first the voice obeyâd,
Swift was his pace, and ready was his aid: Next him Idomeneus, more slow with age, And Merion, burning with a heroâs rage.
The long-succeeding numbers who can name?
But all were Greeks, and eager all for fame.
Fierce to the charge great Hector led the throng; Whole Troy embodied rushâd with shouts along.
Thus, when a mountain billow foams and raves, Where some swoln river disembogues his waves, Full in the mouth is stoppâd the rushing tide, The boiling ocean works from side to side, The river trembles to his utmost shore, And distant rocks rebellow to the roar.
Nor less resolved, the firm Achaian band With brazen shields in horrid circle stand.
Jove, pouring darkness oâer the mingled fight, Conceals the warriorsâ shining helms in night: To him, the chief for whom the hosts contend Had lived not hateful, for he lived a friend: Dead he protects him with superior care.
Nor dooms his carcase to the birds of air.
{Illustration: FIGHT FOR THE BODY OF PATROCLUS.}
The first attack the Grecians scarce sustain, Repulsed, they yield; the Trojans seize the slain.
Then fierce they rally, to revenge led on By the swift rage of Ajax Telamon.
(Ajax to Peleusâ son the second name,
In graceful stature next, and next in fame) With headlong force the foremost ranks he tore; So through the thicket bursts the mountain boar, And rudely scatters, for a distance round, The frighted hunter and the baying hound.
The son of Lethus, brave Pelasgusâ heir, Hippothous, draggâd the carcase through the war; The sinewy ankles bored, the feet he bound With thongs inserted through the double wound: Inevitable fate oâertakes the deed;
Doomâd by great Ajaxâ vengeful lance to bleed: It cleft the helmetâs brazen cheeks in twain; The shatterâd crest and horse-hair strow the plain: With nerves relaxâd he tumbles to the ground: The brain comes gushing through the ghastly wound: He drops Patroclusâ foot, and oâer him spread, Now lies a sad companion of the dead:
Far from Larissa lies, his native air,
And ill requites his parentsâ tender care.
Lamented youth! in lifeâs first bloom he fell, Sent by great Ajax to the shades of hell.
Once more at Ajax Hectorâs javelin flies; The Grecian marking, as it cut the skies, Shunnâd the descending death; which hissing on, Stretchâd in the dust the great Iphytusâ son, Schedius the brave, of all the Phocian kind The boldest warrior and the noblest mind: In little Panope, for strength renownâd, He held his seat, and ruled the realms around.
Plunged in his throat, the weapon drank his blood, And deep transpiercing through the shoulder stood; In clanging arms the hero fell and all
The fields resounded with his weighty fall.
Phorcys, as slain Hippothous he defends, The Telamonian lance his belly rends;
The hollow armour burst before the stroke, And through the wound the rushing entrails broke: In strong convulsions panting on the sands He lies, and grasps the dust with dying hands.
Struck at the sight, recede the Trojan train: The shouting Argives strip the heroes slain.
And now had Troy, by Greece compellâd to yield, Fled to her ramparts, and resignâd the field; Greece, in her native fortitude elate,
With Jove averse, had turnâd the scale of fate: But Phoebus urged AEneas to the fight;
He seemâd like aged Periphas to sight:
(A herald in Anchisesâ love grown old,
Revered for prudence, and with prudence bold.) Thus heââWhat methods yet, O chief! remain, To save your Troy, though heaven its fall ordain?
There have been heroes, who, by virtuous care, By valour, numbers, and by arts of war, Have forced the powers to spare a sinking state, And gainâd at length the glorious odds of fate: But you, when fortune smiles, when Jove declares His partial favour, and assists your wars, Your shameful efforts âgainst yourselves employ, And force the unwilling god to ruin Troy.â
AEneas through the form assumed descries The power concealâd, and thus to Hector cries: âOh lasting shame! to our own fears a prey, We seek our ramparts, and desert the day.
A god, nor is he less, my bosom warms,
And tells me, Jove asserts the Trojan arms.â
He spoke, and foremost to the combat flew: The bold example all his hosts pursue.
Then, first, Leocritus beneath him bled, In vain beloved by valiant Lycomede;
Who viewâd his fall, and, grieving at the chance, Swift to revenge it sent his angry lance; The whirling lance, with vigorous force addressâd, Descends, and pants in Apisaonâs breast; From rich Paeoniaâs vales the warrior came, Next thee, Asteropeus! in place and fame.
Asteropeus with grief beheld the slain, And rushâd to combat, but he rushâd in vain: Indissolubly firm, around the dead,
Rank within rank, on buckler buckler spread, And hemmâd with bristled spears, the Grecians stood, A brazen bulwark, and an iron wood.
Great Ajax eyes them with incessant care, And in an orb contracts the crowded war, Close in their ranks commands to fight or fall, And stands the centre and the soul of
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