Page:Homer - Iliad, translation Pope, 1909.djvu/309

656—704 Now fires Agenor, now Polydamas;

Æneas next, and Hector he accosts;

Inflaming thus the rage of all their hosts:

"What thoughts, regardless chief! thy breast employ?

Oh too forgetful of the friends of Troy!

Those generous friends, who, from their country far,

Breathe their brave souls out in another's war.

See I where in dust the great Sarpedon lies,

In action valiant, and in council wise,

Who guarded right, and kept his people free;

To all his Lycians lost, and lost to thee,

Stretched by Patroclus' arm on yonder plains;

Oh save from hostile rage his loved remains!

Ah! let not Greece his conquered trophies boast,

Nor on his corse revenge her heroes lost."

He spoke: each leader in his grief partook;

Troy, at the loss, through all her legions shook;

Transfixed with deep regret, they view o'erthrown

At once his country's pillar, and their own;

A chief, who led to Troy's beleagured wall

A host of heroes, and outshined them all.

Fired, they rush on; first Hector seeks the foes,

And with superior vengeance greatly glows.

But o'er the head the fierce Patroclus stands,

And, rousing Ajax, roused the listening bands:

"Heroes, be men! be what you were before;

Or weigh the great occasion, and be more.

The chief who taught our lofty walls to yield,

Lies pale in death, extended on the field:

To guard his body, Troy in numbers flies;

'Tis half the glory to maintain our prize.

Haste, strip his arms, the slaughter round him spread,

And send the living Lycians to the dead."

The heroes kindle at his fierce command;

The martial squadrons close on either hand:

Here Troy and Lycia charge with loud alarms,

Thessalia there and Greece oppose their arms.

With horrid shouts they circle round the slain;

The clash of armour rings o'er all the plain.

Great Jove, to swell the horrors of the fight,

O'er the fierce armies pours pernicious night,

And round his son confounds the warring hosts,

His fate ennobling with a crowd of ghosts.

Now Greece gives way, and great Epigeus falls;

Agacleus' son, from Budium's lofty walls:

Who, chased for murder thence, a suppliant came

To Peleus and the silver-footed dame;

Now sent to Troy, Achilles' arms to aid,

He pays the vengeance to his kinsman's shade.