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Homer, Iliad
Editions and translations: Greek | English | English (ed. Samuel Butler)
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But when the strife of the Pylians and Epeians began, I was first to slay my man, and to get me his single-hooved horses--even the spearman Mulius; son by marriage was he of Augeias, [740] and had to wife his eldest daughter, fair-haired Agamede, who knew all simples that the wide earth nourisheth. Him as he came against me I smote with may bronze-tipped spear, and he fell in the dust; but I leapt upon his chariot and took my stand amid the foremost fighters. But the great-souled Epeians [745] fled one here, one there, when they saw the man fallen, even him that was leader of the horsemen and preeminent in fight. But I sprang upon them like a black tempest and fifty chariots I took, and about each one two warriors bit the ground, quelled by my spear. [750] And now had I slain the two Moliones, of the blood of Actor, but that their father, the wide-ruling Shaker of Earth, saved them from war, and shrouded them in thick mist. Then Zeus vouchsafed great might to the men of Pylos, for so long did we follow through the wide plain, [755] slaying the men and gathering their goodly battle-gear, even till we drave our horses to Buprasium, rich in wheat, and the rock of Olen and the place where is the hill called the hill of Alesium, whence Athene again turned back the host. Then I slew the last man, and left him; but the Achaeans drave back their swift horses [760] from Buprasium to Pylos, and all gave glory among the gods to Zeus, and to Nestor among men. Of such sort was I among warriors, as sure as ever I was. But Achilles would alone have profit of his valour. Nay, verily, methinks he will bitterly lament hereafter, when the folk perisheth. [765] Ah, friend, of a surety Menoetius thus laid charge upon thee on the day when he sent thee forth from Phthia to Agamemnon. And we twain were within, I and goodly Odysseus, and in the halls we heard all things, even as he gave thee charge. For we had come to the well-builded house of Peleus, [770] gathering the host throughout the bounteous land of Achaia. There then we found in the house the warrior Menoetius and thee, and with you Achilles; and the old man Peleus, driver of chariots, was burning the fat thighs of a bull to Zeus that hurleth the thunderbolt, in the enclosure of the court, and he held in his hand a golden cup, [775] pouring forth the flaming wine to accompany the burning offerings. Ye twain were busied about the flesh of the bull, and lo, we stood in the doorway; and Achilles, seized with wonder, sprang up, and took us by the hand and led us in, and bade us be seated, and he set before us abundant entertainment, all that is the due of strangers.
There are a total of 18 comments on and cross references to this page.
Further comments from Walter Leaf, Commentary on the Iliad (1900):
book 11, card 737 (general note)
book 11, card 737: Agamêdên
book 11, card 737: amphis
book 11, card 737: diphros
book 11, card 737: alapaxa
book 11, card 737: euru kreiôn
book 11, card 737: dia spideos
book 11, card 737: spideos
book 11, card 737: petrê Ôleniê
book 11, card 737: Bouprasion
book 11, card 737: entha keklêtai
book 11, card 737: euchetoônto
book 11, card 737: hôs eon, ei pot' eon ge
book 11, card 737: autar Achilleus
book 11, card 737: tês
book 11, card 737: oios aponêsetai
book 11, card 737: meta-
book 11, card 737: <*>de
book 11, card 737: nôï de endon
book 11, card 737: pouluboteiran
book 11, card 737: kaie
book 11, card 737: terpikeraunôi
book 11, card 737: chortôi
book 11, card 737: aleison
book 11, card 737: epi
book 11, card 737: amphi hepeton
book 11, card 737: xeinois themis estin
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This text is based on the following book(s): Homer. The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. OCLC: 38101377 ISBN: 0674991885, 0674991893
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