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.
When Agamemnon thus his prayer preferred. 
Almighty Father!  Glorious above all! 
Cloud-girt, who dwell’st in heaven thy throne sublime,
Let not the sun go down, till Priam’s roof
Fall flat into the flames; till I shall burn 500
His gates with fire; till I shall hew away
His hack’d and riven corslet from the breast
Of Hector, and till numerous Chiefs, his friends,
Around him, prone in dust, shall bite the ground. 
So prayed he, but with none effect, The God 505
Received his offering, but to double toil
Doom’d them, and sorrow more than all the past. 
They then, the triturated barley grain
First duly sprinkling, the sharp steel infix’d
Deep in the victim’s neck reversed, then stripp’d 510
The carcase, and divided at their joint
The thighs, which in the double caul involved
They spread with slices crude, and burn’d with fire
Ascending fierce from billets sere and dry. 
The spitted entrails next they o’er the coals 515
Suspended held.  The thighs with fire consumed,
They gave to each his portion of the maw,
Then slash’d the remnant, pierced it with the spits,
And managing with culinary skill
The roast, withdrew it from the spits again. 520
Thus, all their task accomplished, and the board
Set forth, they feasted, and were all sufficed. 
When neither hunger more nor thirst remain’d
Unsatisfied, Gerenian Nestor spake. 
Atrides!  Agamemnon!  King of men! 525
No longer waste we time in useless words,
Nor to a distant hour postpone the work
To which heaven calls thee.  Send thine heralds forth. 
Who shall convene the Achaians at the fleet,
That we, the Chiefs assembled here, may range, 530
Together, the imbattled multitude,
And edge their spirits for immediate fight. 
He spake, nor Agamemnon not complied. 
At once he bade his clear-voiced heralds call
The Greeks to battle.  They the summons loud 535
Gave forth, and at the sound the people throng’d. 
Then Agamemnon and the Kings of Greece
Dispatchful drew them into order just,
With whom Minerva azure-eyed advanced,
The inestimable AEgis on her arm, 540
Immortal, unobnoxious to decay
A hundred braids, close twisted, all of gold,
Each valued at a hundred beeves,[17] around
Dependent fringed it.  She from side to side
Her eyes cerulean rolled, infusing thirst 545
Of battle endless into every breast. 
War won them now, war sweeter now to each
Than gales to waft them over ocean home.[18]
As when devouring flames some forest seize
On the high mountains, splendid from afar 550
The blaze appears, so, moving on the plain,
The steel-clad host innumerous flash’d to heaven. 
And as a multitude of fowls in flocks
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Project Gutenberg
The Iliad of Homer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.