Complete works of homer, p.68

Complete Works of Homer, page 68

 

Complete Works of Homer
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  With those whom Cephalenia's line inclosed,

  Or till their fields along the coast opposed;

  Or where fair Ithaca o'erlooks the floods,

  Where high Neritos shakes his waving woods,

  Where Ægilipa's rugged sides are seen,

  Crocylia rocky, and Zacynthus green.

  These in twelve galleys with vermilion prores,

  Beneath his conduct sought the Phrygian shores.

  Thoas came next, Andraemon's valiant son,

  From Pleuron's walls, and chalky Calydon,

  And rough Pylene, and the Olenian steep,

  And Chalcis, beaten by the rolling deep.

  He led the warriors from the Ætolian shore,

  For now the sons of OEneus were no more!

  The glories of the mighty race were fled!

  OEneus himself, and Meleager dead!

  To Thoas' care now trust the martial train,

  His forty vessels follow through the main.

  Next, eighty barks the Cretan king commands,

  Of Gnossus, Lyctus, and Gortyna's bands;

  And those who dwell where Rhytion's domes arise,

  Or white Lycastus glitters to the skies,

  Or where by Phaestus silver Jardan runs;

  Crete's hundred cities pour forth all her sons.

  These march'd, Idomeneus, beneath thy care,

  And Merion, dreadful as the god of war.

  Tlepolemus, the sun of Hercules,

  Led nine swift vessels through the foamy seas,

  From Rhodes, with everlasting sunshine bright,

  Jalyssus, Lindus, and Camirus white.

  His captive mother fierce Alcides bore

  From Ephyr's walls and Selle's winding shore,

  Where mighty towns in ruins spread the plain,

  And saw their blooming warriors early slain.

  The hero, when to manly years he grew,

  Alcides' uncle, old Licymnius, slew;

  For this, constrain'd to quit his native place,

  And shun the vengeance of the Herculean race,

  A fleet he built, and with a numerous train

  Of willing exiles wander'd o'er the main;

  Where, many seas and many sufferings past,

  On happy Rhodes the chief arrived at last:

  There in three tribes divides his native band,

  And rules them peaceful in a foreign land;

  Increased and prosper'd in their new abodes

  By mighty Jove, the sire of men and gods;

  With joy they saw the growing empire rise,

  And showers of wealth descending from the skies.

  Three ships with Nireus sought the Trojan shore,

  Nireus, whom Aglae to Charopus bore,

  Nireus, in faultless shape and blooming grace,

  The loveliest youth of all the Grecian race;

  Pelides only match'd his early charms;

  But few his troops, and small his strength in arms.

  Next thirty galleys cleave the liquid plain,

  Of those Calydnae's sea-girt isles contain;

  With them the youth of Nisyrus repair,

  Casus the strong, and Crapathus the fair;

  Cos, where Eurypylus possess'd the sway,

  Till great Alcides made the realms obey:

  These Antiphus and bold Phidippus bring,

  Sprung from the god by Thessalus the king.

  Now, Muse, recount Pelasgic Argos' powers,

  From Alos, Alope, and Trechin's towers:

  From Phthia's spacious vales; and Hella, bless'd

  With female beauty far beyond the rest.

  Full fifty ships beneath Achilles' care,

  The Achaians, Myrmidons, Hellenians bear;

  Thessalians all, though various in their name;

  The same their nation, and their chief the same.

  But now inglorious, stretch'd along the shore,

  They hear the brazen voice of war no more;

  No more the foe they face in dire array:

  Close in his fleet the angry leader lay;

  Since fair Briseis from his arms was torn,

  The noblest spoil from sack'd Lyrnessus borne,

  Then, when the chief the Theban walls o'erthrew,

  And the bold sons of great Evenus slew.

  There mourn'd Achilles, plunged in depth of care,

  But soon to rise in slaughter, blood, and war.

  To these the youth of Phylace succeed,

  Itona, famous for her fleecy breed,

  And grassy Pteleon deck'd with cheerful greens,

  The bowers of Ceres, and the sylvan scenes.

  Sweet Pyrrhasus, with blooming flowerets crown'd,

  And Antron's watery dens, and cavern'd ground.

  These own'd, as chief, Protesilas the brave,

  Who now lay silent in the gloomy grave:

  The first who boldly touch'd the Trojan shore,

  And dyed a Phrygian lance with Grecian gore;

  There lies, far distant from his native plain;

  Unfinish'd his proud palaces remain,

  And his sad consort beats her breast in vain.

  His troops in forty ships Podarces led,

  Iphiclus' son, and brother to the dead;

  Nor he unworthy to command the host;

  Yet still they mourn'd their ancient leader lost.

  The men who Glaphyra's fair soil partake,

  Where hills incircle Boebe's lowly lake,

  Where Phaere hears the neighbouring waters fall,

  Or proud Iolcus lifts her airy wall,

  In ten black ships embark'd for Ilion's shore,

  With bold Eumelus, whom Alceste bore:

  All Pelias' race Alceste far outshined,

  The grace and glory of the beauteous kind,

  The troops Methone or Thaumacia yields,

  Olizon's rocks, or Meliboea's fields,

  With Philoctetes sail'd whose matchless art

  From the tough bow directs the feather'd dart.

  Seven were his ships; each vessel fifty row,

  Skill'd in his science of the dart and bow.

  But he lay raging on the Lemnian ground,

  A poisonous hydra gave the burning wound;

  There groan'd the chief in agonizing pain,

  Whom Greece at length shall wish, nor wish in vain.

  His forces Medon led from Lemnos' shore,

  Oileus' son, whom beauteous Rhena bore.

  The Œchalian race, in those high towers contain'd

  Where once Eurytus in proud triumph reign'd,

  Or where her humbler turrets Tricca rears,

  Or where Ithome, rough with rocks, appears,

  In thirty sail the sparkling waves divide,

  Which Podalirius and Machaon guide.

  To these his skill their parent-god imparts,

  Divine professors of the healing arts.

  The bold Ormenian and Asterian bands

  In forty barks Eurypylus commands.

  Where Titan hides his hoary head in snow,

  And where Hyperia's silver fountains flow.

  Thy troops, Argissa, Polypoetes leads,

  And Eleon, shelter'd by Olympus' shades,

  Gyrtone's warriors; and where Orthe lies,

  And Oloosson's chalky cliffs arise.

  Sprung from Pirithous of immortal race,

  The fruit of fair Hippodame's embrace,

  (That day, when hurl'd from Pelion's cloudy head,

  To distant dens the shaggy Centaurs fled)

  With Polypoetes join'd in equal sway

  Leonteus leads, and forty ships obey.

  In twenty sail the bold Perrhaebians came

  From Cyphus, Guneus was their leader's name.

  With these the Enians join'd, and those who freeze

  Where cold Dodona lifts her holy trees;

  Or where the pleasing Titaresius glides,

  And into Peneus rolls his easy tides;

  Yet o'er the silvery surface pure they flow,

  The sacred stream unmix'd with streams below,

  Sacred and awful! from the dark abodes

  Styx pours them forth, the dreadful oath of gods!

  Last, under Prothous the Magnesians stood,

  (Prothous the swift, of old Tenthredon's blood;)

  Who dwell where Pelion, crown'd with piny boughs,

  Obscures the glade, and nods his shaggy brows;

  Or where through flowery Tempe Peneus stray'd:

  (The region stretch'd beneath his mighty shade:)

  In forty sable barks they stemm'd the main;

  Such were the chiefs, and such the Grecian train.

  Say next, O Muse! of all Achaia breeds,

  Who bravest fought, or rein'd the noblest steeds?

  Eumelus' mares were foremost in the chase,

  As eagles fleet, and of Pheretian race;

  Bred where Pieria's fruitful fountains flow,

  And train'd by him who bears the silver bow.

  Fierce in the fight their nostrils breathed a flame,

  Their height, their colour, and their age the same;

  O'er fields of death they whirl the rapid car,

  And break the ranks, and thunder through the war.

  Ajax in arms the first renown acquired,

  While stern Achilles in his wrath retired:

  (His was the strength that mortal might exceeds,

  And his the unrivall'd race of heavenly steeds:)

  But Thetis' son now shines in arms no more;

  His troops, neglected on the sandy shore.

  In empty air their sportive javelins throw,

  Or whirl the disk, or bend an idle bow:

  Unstain'd with blood his cover'd chariots stand;

  The immortal coursers graze along the strand;

  But the brave chiefs the inglorious life deplored,

  And, wandering o'er the camp, required their lord.

  Now, like a deluge, covering all around,

  The shining armies sweep along the ground;

  Swift as a flood of fire, when storms arise,

  Floats the wild field, and blazes to the skies.

  Earth groan'd beneath them; as when angry Jove

  Hurls down the forky lightning from above,

  On Arime when he the thunder throws,

  And fires Typhoeus with redoubled blows,

  Where Typhon, press'd beneath the burning load,

  Still feels the fury of the avenging god.

  But various Iris, Jove's commands to bear,

  Speeds on the wings of winds through liquid air;

  In Priam's porch the Trojan chiefs she found,

  The old consulting, and the youths around.

  Polites' shape, the monarch's son, she chose,

  Who from Æsetes' tomb observed the foes,

  High on the mound; from whence in prospect lay

  The fields, the tents, the navy, and the bay.

  In this dissembled form, she hastes to bring

  The unwelcome message to the Phrygian king.

  "Cease to consult, the time for action calls;

  War, horrid war, approaches to your walls!

  Assembled armies oft have I beheld;

  But ne'er till now such numbers charged a field:

  Thick as autumnal leaves or driving sand,

  The moving squadrons blacken all the strand.

  Thou, godlike Hector! all thy force employ,

  Assemble all the united bands of Troy;

  In just array let every leader call

  The foreign troops: this day demands them all!"

  The voice divine the mighty chief alarms;

  The council breaks, the warriors rush to arms.

  The gates unfolding pour forth all their train,

  Nations on nations fill the dusky plain,

  Men, steeds, and chariots, shake the trembling ground:

  The tumult thickens, and the skies resound.

  Amidst the plain, in sight of Ilion, stands

  A rising mount, the work of human hands;

  (This for Myrinne's tomb the immortals know,

  Though call'd Bateia in the world below;)

  Beneath their chiefs in martial order here,

  The auxiliar troops and Trojan hosts appear.

  The godlike Hector, high above the rest,

  Shakes his huge spear, and nods his plumy crest:

  In throngs around his native bands repair,

  And groves of lances glitter in the air.

  Divine Æneas brings the Dardan race,

  Anchises' son, by Venus' stolen embrace,

  Born in the shades of Ida's secret grove;

  (A mortal mixing with the queen of love;)

  Archilochus and Acamas divide

  The warrior's toils, and combat by his side.

  Who fair Zeleia's wealthy valleys till,

  Fast by the foot of Ida's sacred hill,

  Or drink, Æsepus, of thy sable flood,

  Were led by Pandarus, of royal blood;

  To whom his art Apollo deign'd to show,

  Graced with the presents of his shafts and bow.

  From rich Apaesus and Adrestia's towers,

  High Teree's summits, and Pityea's bowers;

  From these the congregated troops obey

  Young Amphius and Adrastus' equal sway;

  Old Merops' sons; whom, skill'd in fates to come,

  The sire forewarn'd, and prophesied their doom:

  Fate urged them on! the sire forewarn'd in vain,

  They rush'd to war, and perish'd on the plain.

  From Practius' stream, Percote's pasture lands,

  And Sestos and Abydos' neighbouring strands,

  From great Arisba's walls and Selle's coast,

  Asius Hyrtacides conducts his host:

  High on his car he shakes the flowing reins,

  His fiery coursers thunder o'er the plains.

  The fierce Pelasgi next, in war renown'd,

  March from Larissa's ever-fertile ground:

  In equal arms their brother leaders shine,

  Hippothous bold, and Pyleus the divine.

  Next Acamas and Pyrous lead their hosts,

  In dread array, from Thracia's wintry coasts;

  Round the bleak realms where Hellespontus roars,

  And Boreas beats the hoarse-resounding shores.

  With great Euphemus the Ciconians move,

  Sprung from Troezenian Ceus, loved by Jove.

  Pyraechmes the Paeonian troops attend,

  Skill'd in the fight their crooked bows to bend;

  From Axius' ample bed he leads them on,

  Axius, that laves the distant Amydon,

  Axius, that swells with all his neighbouring rills,

  And wide around the floating region fills.

  The Paphlagonians Pylaemenes rules,

  Where rich Henetia breeds her savage mules,

  Where Erythinus' rising cliffs are seen,

  Thy groves of box, Cytorus! ever green,

  And where Ægialus and Cromna lie,

  And lofty Sesamus invades the sky,

  And where Parthenius, roll'd through banks of flowers,

  Reflects her bordering palaces and bowers.

  Here march'd in arms the Halizonian band,

  Whom Odius and Epistrophus command,

  From those far regions where the sun refines

  The ripening silver in Alybean mines.

  There mighty Chromis led the Mysian train,

  And augur Ennomus, inspired in vain;

  For stern Achilles lopp'd his sacred head,

  Roll'd down Scamander with the vulgar dead.

  Phorcys and brave Ascanius here unite

  The Ascanian Phrygians, eager for the fight.

  Of those who round Maeonia's realms reside,

  Or whom the vales in shades of Tmolus hide,

  Mestles and Antiphus the charge partake,

  Born on the banks of Gyges' silent lake.

  There, from the fields where wild Maeander flows,

  High Mycale, and Latmos' shady brows,

  And proud Miletus, came the Carian throngs,

  With mingled clamours and with barbarous tongues.

  Amphimachus and Naustes guide the train,

  Naustes the bold, Amphimachus the vain,

  Who, trick'd with gold, and glittering on his car,

  Rode like a woman to the field of war.

  Fool that he was! by fierce Achilles slain,

  The river swept him to the briny main:

  There whelm'd with waves the gaudy warrior lies

  The valiant victor seized the golden prize.

  The forces last in fair array succeed,

  Which blameless Glaucus and Sarpedon lead

  The warlike bands that distant Lycia yields,

  Where gulfy Xanthus foams along the fields.

  * * *

  BOOK III.

  ARGUMENT.

  THE DUEL OF MENELAUS AND PARIS.

  The armies being ready to engage, a single combat is agreed upon between Menelaus and Paris (by the intervention of Hector) for the determination of the war. Iris is sent to call Helen to behold the fight. She leads her to the walls of Troy, where Priam sat with his counsellers observing the Grecian leaders on the plain below, to whom Helen gives an account of the chief of them. The kings on either part take the solemn oath for the conditions of the combat. The duel ensues; wherein Paris being overcome, he is snatched away in a cloud by Venus, and transported to his apartment. She then calls Helen from the walls, and brings the lovers together. Agamemnon, on the part of the Grecians, demands the restoration of Helen, and the performance of the articles.

  The three-and-twentieth day still continues throughout this book. The scene is sometimes in the fields before Troy, and sometimes in Troy itself.

  Thus by their leaders' care each martial band

  Moves into ranks, and stretches o'er the land.

  With shouts the Trojans, rushing from afar,

  Proclaim their motions, and provoke the war

  So when inclement winters vex the plain

  With piercing frosts, or thick-descending rain,

  To warmer seas the cranes embodied fly,

  With noise, and order, through the midway sky;

  To pigmy nations wounds and death they bring,

  And all the war descends upon the wing,

  But silent, breathing rage, resolved and skill'd

  By mutual aids to fix a doubtful field,

  Swift march the Greeks: the rapid dust around

  Darkening arises from the labour'd ground.

  Thus from his flaggy wings when Notus sheds

  A night of vapours round the mountain heads,

 

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