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Iliad by Homer - Join iZDOT

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<strong>Homer</strong>’s <strong>Iliad</strong><br />

have had for their incessant hardships. Are you likely, sir, to do<br />

anything to help a man of less note, after leaving Sarpedon, who<br />

was at once your guest and comrade in arms, to be the spoil and<br />

prey of the Danaans? So long as he lived he did good service both<br />

to your city and yourself; yet you had no stomach to save his body<br />

from the dogs. If the Lycians will listen to me, they will go home<br />

and leave Troy to its fate. If the Trojans had any of that daring<br />

fearless spirit which lays hold of men who are fighting for their<br />

country and harassing those who would attack it, we should soon<br />

bear off Patroclus into Ilius. Could we get this dead man away and<br />

bring him into the city of Priam, the Argives would readily give up<br />

the armour of Sarpedon, and we should get his body to boot. For<br />

he whose squire has been now killed is the foremost man at the<br />

ships of the Achaeans- he and his close-fighting followers.<br />

Nevertheless you dared not make a stand against Ajax, nor face<br />

him, eye to eye, with battle all round you, for he is a braver man<br />

than you are.”<br />

Hector scowled at him and answered, “Glaucus, you should know<br />

better. I have held you so far as a man of more understanding than<br />

any in all Lycia, but now I despise you for saying that I am afraid of<br />

Ajax. I fear neither battle nor the din of chariots, but Jove’s will is<br />

stronger than ours; Jove at one time makes even a strong man draw<br />

back and snatches victory from his grasp, while at another he will<br />

set him on to fight. Come hither then, my friend, stand <strong>by</strong> me and<br />

see indeed whether I shall play the coward the whole day through<br />

as you say, or whether I shall not stay some even of the boldest<br />

Danaans from fighting round the body of Patroclus.”<br />

337

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