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  • Homer, Iliad

    Editions and translations: Greek | English | English (ed. Samuel Butler)
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    book=1:card=92 book=1:card=245 book=1:card=386 book=1:card=493 book=2:card=35 book=2:card=188 book=2:card=301 book=2:card=459 book=2:card=581 book=2:card=734 book=3:card=1 book=3:card=111 book=3:card=264 book=3:card=381 book=4:card=85 book=4:card=223 book=4:card=350 book=4:card=517 book=5:card=84 book=5:card=239 book=5:card=363 book=5:card=493 book=5:card=668 book=5:card=792 book=6:card=1 book=6:card=156 book=6:card=297 book=6:card=414 book=7:card=43 book=7:card=175 book=7:card=313 book=7:card=442 book=8:card=112 book=8:card=245 book=8:card=381 book=8:card=512 book=9:card=89 book=9:card=244 book=9:card=374 book=9:card=492 book=9:card=669 book=10:card=86 book=10:card=218 book=10:card=372 book=10:card=503 book=11:card=47 book=11:card=210 book=11:card=336 book=11:card=489 book=11:card=616 book=11:card=780 book=12:card=34 book=12:card=195 book=12:card=329 book=13:card=1 book=13:card=125 book=13:card=266 book=13:card=402 book=13:card=526 book=13:card=673 book=13:card=821 book=14:card=103 book=14:card=242 book=14:card=378 book=15 book=15:card=113 book=15:card=253 book=15:card=379 book=15:card=514 book=15:card=653 book=16:card=46 book=16:card=200 book=16:card=306 book=16:card=477 book=16:card=619 book=16:card=750 book=17:card=1 book=17:card=140 book=17:card=274 book=17:card=423 book=17:card=543 book=17:card=694 book=18:card=22 book=18:card=181 book=18:card=324 book=18:card=462 book=18:card=590 book=19:card=114 book=19:card=238 book=19:card=387 book=20:card=86 book=20:card=199 book=20:card=340 book=20:card=490 book=21:card=97 book=21:card=233 book=21:card=361 book=21:card=502 book=22:card=38 book=22:card=131 book=22:card=289 book=22:card=437 book=23:card=54 book=23:card=192 book=23:card=319 book=23:card=473 book=23:card=586 book=23:card=740 book=23:card=859 book=24:card=120 book=24:card=228 book=24:card=372 book=24:card=507 book=24:card=643

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    [200] Myrmidons, let no man, I bid you, be forgetful of the threats, wherewith heside the swift ships ye threatened the Trojans throughout all the time of my wrath, and upbraided me, each man of you, saying:Cruel son of Peleus, surely it was on gall that thy mother reared thee, thou pitiless one, seeing that in their own despite thou holdest back thy comrades beside the ships. [205] Nay, homeward let us return again with our seafaring ships, since in this wise evil wrath hath fallen upom thy heart. With such words would ye ofttimes gather together and prate at me, but now is set before you a great work of war, whereof in time past ye were enamoured. Therefore let it be with valiant heart that each man fights with the Trojans. [210] So saying, he aroused the strength and spirit of every man, and yet closer were their ranks serried when they heard their king. And as when a man buildeth the wall of a high house with close-set stones, to avoid the might of the winds, even so close were arrayed their helms and bossed shields; [215] buckler pressed on buckler, helm upon helm, and man on man. The horse-hair crests on the bright helmet-ridges touched each other, as the men moved their heads, in such close array stood they one by another. And in the front of all two warriors arrayed themselves for war, even Patroclus and Automedon, both of one mind, [220] to war in the forefront of the Myrmidons. But Achilles went into his hut, and opened the lid of a chest, fair and richly-dight, that silver-footed Thetis had set on his ship for him to carry with him, whem she had filled it well with tunics, and cloaks to keep off the wind, and woollen rugs. [225] Therein had he a fair-fashioned cup, wherefrom neither was any other man wont to drink the flaming wine, nor was he wont to pour drink offerings to any other of the gods save only to father Zeus. This cup he then took from the chest and cleansed it first with sulphur, and thereafter washed it in fair streams of water; [230] and himself he washed his hands, and drew flaming wine. Then he made prayer, standing in the midst of the court, and poured forth the wine, looking up to heaven; and not unmarked was he of Zeus, that hurleth the thunderbolt:Zeus, thou king, Dodonaean, Pelasgian, thou that dwellest afar, ruling over wintry Dodona,--and about thee dwell the Selli, [235] thine interpreters, men with unwashen feet that couch on the ground. Aforetime verily thou didst hear my word, when I prayed: me thou didst honour, and didst mightily smite the host of the Achaeans; even so now also fulfill thou for me this my desire. Myself verily will I abide in the gathering of the ships, [240] but my comrade am I sending forth amid the host of the Myrmidons to war: with him do thou send forth glory, O Zeus, whose voice is borne afar, and make bold the heart in his breast, to the end that Hector, too, may know whether even alone my squire hath skill to fight, or whether his hands [245] then only rage invincible, whenso I enter the turmoil of Ares. But when away from the ships he hath driven war and the din of war, thea all-unscathed let him come back to the swift ships with all his arms, and his comrades that fight in close combat.



    There are a total of 44 comments on and cross references to this page.

    Further comments from Walter Leaf, Commentary on the Iliad (1900):
    book 16, card 200 (general note)
    book 16, card 200: mê
    book 16, card 200: hupo
    book 16, card 200: m' êitiaasthe
    book 16, card 200: m'
    book 16, card 200: pephantai
    book 16, card 200: heês
    book 16, card 200: tis
    book 16, card 200: araron
    book 16, card 200: thôrêssesthon
    book 16, card 200: proparoithe
    book 16, card 200: anemoskepeôn
    book 16, card 200: oulôn
    book 16, card 200: hote mê
    book 16, card 200: to
    book 16, card 200: theeiôi
    book 16, card 200: aphussato
    book 16, card 200: mesôi herkeï
    book 16, card 200: eisanidôn
    book 16, card 200: terpikeraunon
    book 16, card 200: duscheimerou
    book 16, card 200: soi
    book 16, card 200: chamaieunai
    book 16, card 200: nêôn en agôni
    book 16, card 200: kudos hama proes
    book 16, card 200: eisetai
    book 16, card 200: ê
    book 16, card 200: epistêtai
    book 16, card 200: diêtai
    book 16, card 200: teuchesi

    Further comments from Allen Rogers Benner, Selections from Homer's Iliad:
    book 16, card 200 (general note)
    book 16, card 200: moi
    book 16, card 200: hupo
    book 16, card 200: cholôi
    book 16, card 200: m
    book 16, card 200: pephantai
    book 16, card 200: heês
    book 16, card 200: entha
    book 16, card 200: tis
    book 16, card 200: arthen
    book 16, card 200: bias anemôn aleeinôn
    book 16, card 200: lamproisi phaloisi
    book 16, card 200: neuontôn
    book 16, card 200: oulôn tapêtôn
    book 16, card 200: tetugmenon
    book 16, card 200: hoti mê
    book 16, card 200: to
    book 16, card 200: ana
    book 16, card 200: Selloi
    book 16, card 200: aniptopodes, chamaieunai
    book 16, card 200: euxamenoio
    book 16, card 200: nêôn en agôni
    book 16, card 200: ophra
    book 16, card 200: ê rha kai oios
    book 16, card 200: nauphi

    Cross references from Raphael Kühner, Bernhard Gerth, Ausführliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache (ed. Ildar Ibraguimov):
    397 [d. Imperativ.]

    Cross references from W. Walter Merry, James Riddell, D. B. Monro, Commentary on the Odyssey (1886):
    12, 251 [Book 12 (m)]


    Preferred URL for linking to this page: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Hom.+Il.+16.200

    The Annenberg CPB/Project provided support for entering this text.

    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

    Buy a copy of this text (not necessarily the same edition) from Amazon.com: vol. 1; vol. 2

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