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Iliad by Homer - Join iZDOT

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

Aeneas sprang from his chariot armed with shield and spear,<br />

fearing lest the Achaeans should carry off the body. He bestrode it<br />

as a lion in the pride of strength, with shield and on spear before<br />

him and a cry of battle on his lips resolute to kill the first that<br />

should dare face him. But the son of Tydeus caught up a mighty<br />

stone, so huge and great that as men now are it would take two to<br />

lift it; nevertheless he bore it aloft with ease unaided, and with this<br />

he struck Aeneas on the groin where the hip turns in the joint that is<br />

called the “cup-bone.” The stone crushed this joint, and broke both<br />

the sinews, while its jagged edges tore away all the flesh. The hero<br />

fell on his knees, and propped himself with his hand resting on the<br />

ground till the darkness of night fell upon his eyes. And now<br />

Aeneas, king of men, would have perished then and there, had not<br />

his mother, Jove’s daughter Venus, who had conceived him <strong>by</strong><br />

Anchises when he was herding cattle, been quick to mark, and<br />

thrown her two white arms about the body of her dear son. She<br />

protected him <strong>by</strong> covering him with a fold of her own fair garment,<br />

lest some Danaan should drive a spear into his breast and kill him.<br />

Thus, then, did she bear her dear son out of the fight. But the son of<br />

Capaneus was not unmindful of the orders that Diomed had given<br />

him. He made his own horses fast, away from the hurly-burly, <strong>by</strong><br />

binding the reins to the rim of the chariot. Then he sprang upon<br />

Aeneas’s horses and drove them from the Trojan to the Achaean<br />

ranks. When he had so done he gave them over to his chosen<br />

comrade Deipylus, whom he valued above all others as the one<br />

who was most like-minded with himself, to take them on to the<br />

ships. He then remounted his own chariot, seized the reins, and<br />

drove with all speed in search of the son of Tydeus.<br />

92

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