The Iliad of Homer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 667 pages of information about The Iliad of Homer.
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The Iliad of Homer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 667 pages of information about The Iliad of Homer.
Of Rhytius him obey’d; nor these were all,
But others from her hundred cities Crete 795
Sent forth, all whom Idomeneus the brave
Commanded, with Meriones in arms
Dread as the God of battles blood-imbrued. 
Nine ships Tlepolemus, Herculean-born,
For courage famed and for superior size, 800
Fill’d with his haughty Rhodians.  They, in tribes
Divided, dwelt distinct.  Jelyssus these,
Those Lindus, and the rest the shining soil
Of white Camirus occupied.  Him bore
To Hercules, (what time he led the nymph 805
From Ephyre, and from Sellea’s banks,
After full many a city laid in dust.)
Astyocheia.  In his father’s house
Magnificent, Tlepolemus spear-famed
Had scarce up-grown to manhood’s lusty prime 810
When he his father’s hoary uncle slew
Lycimnius, branch of Mars.  Then built he ships,
And, pushing forth to sea, fled from the threats
Of the whole house of Hercules.  Huge toil
And many woes he suffer’d, till at length 815
At Rhodes arriving, in three separate bands
He spread himself abroad, Much was he loved
Of all-commanding Jove, who bless’d him there,
And shower’d abundant riches on them all. 
Nireus of Syma, with three vessels came; 820
Nireus, Aglaea’s offspring, whom she bore
To Charopus the King; Nireus in form,
(The faultless son of Peleus sole except,)
Loveliest of all the Grecians call’d to Troy. 
But he was heartless and his men were few.[26] 825
Nisyrus, Casus, Crapathus, and Cos
Where reign’d Eurypylus, with all the isles
Calydnae named, under two valiant Chiefs
Their troops disposed; Phidippus one, and one,
His brother Antiphus, begotten both 830
By Thessalus, whom Hercules begat. 
In thirty ships they sought the shores of Troy. 
The warriors of Pelasgian Argos next,
Of Alus, and Alope, and who held
Trechina, Phthia, and for women fair 835
Distinguish’d, Hellas; known by various names
Hellenes, Myrmidons, Achaeans, them
In fifty ships embark’d, Achilles ruled. 
But these were deaf to the hoarse-throated war,
For there was none to draw their battle forth, 840
And give them just array.  Close in his ships
Achilles, after loss of the bright-hair’d
Briseis, lay, resentful; her obtained
Not without labor hard, and after sack
Of Thebes and of Lyrnessus, where he slew 845
Two mighty Chiefs, sons of Evenus both,
Epistrophus and Mynes, her he mourn’d,
And for her sake self-prison’d in his fleet
And idle lay, though soon to rise again. 
From Phylace, and from the flowery fields 850
Of Pyrrhasus, a land to Ceres given
By consecration, and from Iton green,
Mother of flocks; from Antron by the sea,
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The Iliad of Homer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.