The Iliad by Homer (e reader books .TXT) đ
- Author: Homer
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Still, with your voice the slothful soldiers raise, Urge by their fathersâ fame their future praise.
Forget we now our state and lofty birth; Not titles here, but works, must prove our worth.
To labour is the lot of man below;
And when Jove gave us life, he gave us woe.â
This said, each parted to his several cares: The king to Nestorâs sable ship repairs; The sage protector of the Greeks he found Stretchâd in his bed with all his arms around The various-colourâd scarf, the shield he rears, The shining helmet, and the pointed spears; The dreadful weapons of the warriorâs rage, That, old in arms, disdainâd the peace of age.
Then, leaning on his hand his watchful head, The hoary monarch raised his eyes and said: âWhat art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus range the camp alone; Seekâst thou some friend or nightly sentinel?
Stand off, approach not, but thy purpose tell.â
âO son of Neleus, (thus the king rejoinâd,) Pride of the Greeks, and glory of thy kind!
Lo, here the wretched Agamemnon stands, The unhappy general of the Grecian bands, Whom Jove decrees with daily cares to bend, And woes, that only with his life shall end!
Scarce can my knees these trembling limbs sustain, And scarce my heart support its load of pain.
No taste of sleep these heavy eyes have known, Confused, and sad, I wander thus alone, With fears distracted, with no fixâd design; And all my peopleâs miseries are mine.
If aught of use thy waking thoughts suggest, (Since cares, like mine, deprive thy soul of rest,) Impart thy counsel, and assist thy friend; Now let us jointly to the trench descend, At every gate the fainting guard excite, Tired with the toils of day and watch of night; Else may the sudden foe our works invade, So near, and favourâd by the gloomy shade.â
To him thus Nestor: âTrust the powers above, Nor think proud Hectorâs hopes confirmâd by Jove: How ill agree the views of vain mankind, And the wise counsels of the eternal mind!
Audacious Hector, if the gods ordain
That great Achilles rise and rage again, What toils attend thee, and what woes remain!
Lo, faithful Nestor thy command obeys;
The care is next our other chiefs to raise: Ulysses, Diomed, we chiefly need;
Meges for strength, Oileus famed for speed.
Some other be despatchâd of nimbler feet, To those tall ships, remotest of the fleet, Where lie great Ajax and the king of Crete. [176]
To rouse the Spartan I myself decree;
Dear as he is to us, and dear to thee,
Yet must I tax his sloth, that claims no share With his great brother in his martial care: Him it behoved to every chief to sue,
Preventing every part performâd by you; For strong necessity our toils demands, Claims all our hearts, and urges all our hands.â
To whom the king: âWith reverence we allow Thy just rebukes, yet learn to spare them now: My generous brother is of gentle kind,
He seems remiss, but bears a valiant mind; Through too much deference to our sovereign sway, Content to follow when we lead the way: But now, our ills industrious to prevent, Long ere the rest he rose, and sought my tent.
The chiefs you named, already at his call, Prepare to meet us near the navy-wall;
Assembling there, between the trench and gates, Near the night-guards, our chosen council waits.â
âThen none (said Nestor) shall his rule withstand, For great examples justify command.â
With that, the venerable warrior rose;
The shining greaves his manly legs enclose; His purple mantle golden buckles joinâd, Warm with the softest wool, and doubly lined.
Then rushing from his tent, he snatchâd in haste His steely lance, that lightenâd as he passâd.
The camp he traversed through the sleeping crowd, Stoppâd at Ulyssesâ tent, and callâd aloud.
Ulysses, sudden as the voice was sent,
Awakes, starts up, and issues from his tent.
âWhat new distress, what sudden cause of fright, Thus leads you wandering in the silent night?â
âO prudent chief! (the Pylian sage replied) Wise as thou art, be now thy wisdom tried: Whatever means of safety can be sought, Whatever counsels can inspire our thought, Whatever methods, or to fly or fight;
All, all depend on this important night!â
He heard, returnâd, and took his painted shield; Then joinâd the chiefs, and followâd through the field.
Without his tent, bold Diomed they found, All sheathed in arms, his brave companions round: Each sunk in sleep, extended on the field, His head reclining on his bossy shield.
A wood of spears stood by, that, fixâd upright, Shot from their flashing points a quivering light.
A bullâs black hide composed the heroâs bed; A splendid carpet rollâd beneath his head.
Then, with his foot, old Nestor gently shakes The slumbering chief, and in these words awakes: âRise, son of Tydeus! to the brave and strong Rest seems inglorious, and the night too long.
But sleepâst thou now, when from yon hill the foe Hangs oâer the fleet, and shades our walls below?â
At this, soft slumber from his eyelids fled; The warrior saw the hoary chief, and said: âWondrous old man! whose soul no respite knows, Though years and honours bid thee seek repose, Let younger Greeks our sleeping warriors wake; Ill fits thy age these toils to undertake.â
âMy friend, (he answered,) generous is thy care; These toils, my subjects and my sons might bear; Their loyal thoughts and pious love conspire To ease a sovereign and relieve a sire: But now the last despair surrounds our host; No hour must pass, no moment must be lost; Each single Greek, in this conclusive strife, Stands on the sharpest edge of death or life: Yet, if my years thy kind regard engage, Employ thy youth as I employ my age;
Succeed to these my cares, and rouse the rest; He serves me most, who serves his country best.â
This said, the hero oâer his shoulders flung A lionâs spoils, that to his ankles hung; Then seized his ponderous lance, and strode along.
Meges the bold, with Ajax famed for speed, The warrior roused, and to the entrenchments lead.
And now the chiefs approach the nightly guard; A wakeful squadron, each in arms prepared: The unwearied watch their listening leaders keep, And, couching close, repel invading sleep.
So faithful dogs their fleecy charge maintain, With toil protected from the prowling train; When the gaunt lioness, with hunger bold, Springs from the mountains toward the guarded fold: Through breaking woods her rustling course they hear; Loud, and more loud, the clamours strike their ear Of hounds and men: they start, they gaze around, Watch every side, and turn to every sound.
Thus watchâd the Grecians, cautious of surprise, Each voice, each motion, drew their ears and eyes: Each step of passing feet increased the affright; And hostile Troy was ever full in sight.
Nestor with joy the wakeful band surveyâd, And thus accosted through the gloomy shade.
ââTis well, my sons! your nightly cares employ; Else must our host become the scorn of Troy.
Watch thus, and Greece shall live.â The hero said; Then oâer the trench the following chieftains led.
His son, and godlike Merion, marchâd behind (For these the princes to their council joinâd).
The trenches passâd, the assembled kings around In silent state the consistory crownâd.
A place there was, yet undefiled with gore, The spot where Hector stoppâd his rage before; When night descending, from his vengeful hand Reprieved the relics of the Grecian band: (The plain beside with mangled corps was spread, And all his progress markâd by heaps of dead:) There sat the mournful kings: when Neleusâ son, The council opening, in these words begun: âIs there (said he) a chief so greatly brave, His life to hazard, and his country save?
Lives there a man, who singly dares to go To yonder camp, or seize some straggling foe?
Or favourâd by the night approach so near, Their speech, their counsels, and designs to hear?
If to besiege our navies they prepare,
Or Troy once more must be the seat of war?
This could he learn, and to our peers recite, And pass unharmâd the dangers of the night; What fame were his through all succeeding days, While Phoebus shines, or men have tongues to praise!
What gifts his grateful country would bestow!
What must not Greece to her deliverer owe?
A sable ewe each leader should provide, With each a sable lambkin by her side;
At every rite his share should be increased, And his the foremost honours of the feast.â
Fear held them mute: alone, untaught to fear, Tydides spokeââThe man you seek is here.
Through yon black camps to bend my dangerous way, Some god within commands, and I obey.
But let some other chosen warrior join, To raise my hopes, and second my design.
By mutual confidence and mutual aid,
Great deeds are done, and great discoveries made; The wise new prudence from the wise acquire, And one brave hero fans anotherâs fire.â
Contending leaders at the word arose;
Each generous breast with emulation glows; So brave a task each Ajax strove to share, Bold Merion strove, and Nestorâs valiant heir; The Spartan wishâd the second place to gain, And great Ulysses wishâd, nor wishâd in vain.
Then thus the king of men the contest ends: âThou first of warriors, and thou best of friends, Undaunted Diomed! what chief to join
In this great enterprise, is only thine.
Just be thy choice, without affection made; To birth, or office, no respect be paid; Let worth determine here.â The monarch spake, And inly trembled for his brotherâs sake.
âThen thus (the godlike Diomed rejoinâd) My choice declares the impulse of my mind.
How can I doubt, while great Ulysses stands To lend his counsels and assist our hands?
A chief, whose safety is Minervaâs care; So famed, so dreadful, in the works of war: Blessâd in his conduct, I no aid require; Wisdom like his might pass through flames of fire.â
âIt fits thee not, before these chiefs of fame, (Replied the sage,) to praise me, or to blame: Praise from a friend, or censure from a foe, Are lost on hearers that our merits know.
But let us hasteâNight rolls the hours away, The reddening orient shows the coming day, The stars shine fainter on the ethereal plains, And of nightâs empire but a third remains.â
Thus having spoke, with generous ardour pressâd, In arms terrific their huge limbs they dressâd.
A two-edged falchion Thrasymed the brave, And ample buckler, to Tydides gave:
Then in a leathern helm he cased his head, Short of its crest, and with no plume oâerspread: (Such as by youths unused to arms are worn:) No spoils enrich it, and no studs adorn.
Next him Ulysses took a shining sword,
A bow and quiver, with bright arrows stored: A well-proved casque, with leather braces bound, (Thy gift, Meriones,) his temples crownâd; Soft wool within; without, in order spread, [177]
A boarâs white teeth grinnâd horrid oâer his head.
This from Amyntor, rich Ormenusâ son,
Autolycus by fraudful rapine won,
And gave Amphidamas; from him the prize Molus received, the pledge of social ties; The helmet next by Merion was possessâd, And now Ulyssesâ thoughtful temples pressâd.
Thus sheathed in arms, the council they forsake, And dark through paths oblique their progress take.
Just then, in sign she favourâd their intent, A long-wingâd heron great Minerva sent: This, though surrounding shades obscured their view.
By the shrill clang and whistling wings they knew.
As from the right she soarâd, Ulysses prayâd, Hailâd the glad omen, and addressâd the maid: âO daughter of that god whose arm can wield The avenging
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