Victorious. Thus repuls'd, our final hope Is flat despair; we must exasperate
Th' almighty victor to spend all his rage,
And that must end us; that must be our cure To be no more.-Sad cure!-for who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being, Those thoughts that wander through eternity,- To perish rather, swallow'd up and lost In the wide tomb of uncreated night,
Devoid of sense and motion?-And who knows (Let this be good) whether our angry foe Can give it, or will ever? how he can, Is doubtful; that he never will, is sure. Will he, so wise, let loose at once his ire, Belike through impotence, or unawares, To give his enemies their wish, and end Them in his anger, whom his anger saves To punish endless? Wherefore cease we then ?4 Say they, "who counsel war; we are decreed, Reserv'd, and destin'd to eternal woe: Whatever doing, what can we suffer more, What can we suffer worse?" Is this then worst, Thus sitting, thus consulting, thus in arms? What, when we fled amain, pursu'd and struck With heav'n's afflicting thunder, and besought The deep to shelter us? this hell then seem'd A refuge from those wounds! or when we lay Chain'd on the burning lake? that sure was worse. What if the breath that kindled those grim fires, Awak'd, should blow them into sev❜nfold rage, And plunge us in the flames? or, from above, Should intermitted vengeance armi again His red right hand to plague us? what if all Her stores were open'd, and this firmament: Of hell should spout her cataracts of fire, Impending horrors, threat'ning hideous fall One day upon our heads; while we, perhaps, Designing or exhorting glorious war, Caught in a fiery tempest, shall be hurl'd Each on his rock transfix'd, the sport and prey Of wracking whirlwinds; or for ever sunk Under yon boiling ocean, wrapt in chains; There to converse with overlasting gooans,
Unrespited, unpitied, unrepriev'd,
Ages of hopeless end?-this would be worse. War, therefore, open or conceal'd, alike My voice dissuades.
XXII. Old Nestor's speech, endeavouring to reconcile Achilles and Agamemnon.
YE gods! great sorrow falls on Greece to-day. Priam, and Priam's sons, with all in Troy- Oh how will they exult, what triumph feel, Once hearing of this strife aris'n between The prime of Greece in council and in arms. But be persuaded; ye are younger both Than I, and I was conversant of old With princes your superiors, yet from them No disrespect at any time received. Their equals saw I never; never shall; Pirithous, Dryas, godlike Polypheme, Exadius, Caneus, and the hero son Of Egeus, mighty Theseus; warriors, all, In force superior to the race of man.
Brave chiefs they were, and with brave foes they fought,
With the rude dwellers on the mountain-heights
The Centaurs, whom with havock such as fame
Shall never cease to celebrate, they slew. With these men I consorted erst, what time From Pylus, though a land from theirs remote, They call'd me forth, and such as was my strength, With all that strength L serv'd them. Who is he? What prince or chief of the degen'rate race Now seen on earth, who might with these compare? Yet even these would listen to my voice,
Which hear ye also for compliance proves a bro s Ofttimes the safer and the manlier course. :3 Thou, Agamemnon, valiant as thou art,
Seize not the maid, his portion from the Greeks, But leave her his ; nor thou, Achilles, strive With our imperial chief; for never king. Had equal honour at the hands of Jove With Agamemnon, or was thron'd so high,r
Say thou art stronger, and art goddess-born. How then? His territory passes thine,
And he is lord of thousands more than thou. Cease therefore, Agamemnon; calm thy wrath; And it shall be mine office to entreat Achilles also to a calm, whose might The chief munition is of all our host.
Agamemnon's artful speech, proposing a return, in order to try the disposition of the army.
FRIENDS, Grecian heroes, ministers of Mars! Hard is my lot, entangled as I am
By unpropitious Jove. He promised once, And with a sign, that Troy should be our own; But now, (that promise void) he sends me back To Greece, ashamed and with diminish'd pow'rs. So stands his sov'reign pleasure, who hath laid Many a proud citadel in dust, and more Hereafter shall, resistless in his might.
That such a numerous host of Greeks as we, Warring with fewer than ourselves, should find No fruit of all our toil, (and none appears,) Will make us vile with ages yet to come.
For should we now swear truce, till Greece and Troy Might number each her own, and were the Greeks Distributed in bands, ten Greeks in each,
Our banded decads should exceed so far Their units, that all Troy could not supply. For ev'ry ten, a man, to fill us wine; So far the Grecians, in my thought, surpass The native Trojans. But her walls include Still others-men from various cities call'd, Who much impede me, and defeat my wish To desolate her streets with sword and fire. Nine years have also pass'd, nine years complete; Our ships are rotted, and our tackle marred, And all our wives and little ones at home Sit watching our return; meantime, the work That brought us, is a work still unperform'd. Accept ye then my counsel. Let us hence-
Hence to our country-since in vain we wait The fall of Troy, not yet to be subdu'd.
XXIV. Mutinous harangue of Thersites.
WHEREOF Complains, what wants Atrides now? Thy tents are fill'd with treasure, and contain The choicest damsels, giv'n thee by the Greeks, And taken in the towns that we have won. Or is more gold thy wish? A ransom brought By some rich Trojan for his son's release, Whom I, or other valiant Greek may bind? Or yet some new Chryseïs, to be thine, And thine for ever? Our Supreme, methinks, Ought not have caus'd us that accursed plague.
Oh nerveless things! mere women as we are! Why launch we not our barks, and leave him here To brood his hoards alone, that he may learn The value of a chief without his host? For he hath dared to irritate a man Far braver than himself, whose lovely prize He even now detains. But as for him, He sleeps; Achilles is an easy man
And gall hath none within him, or his hand Would make this contumelious wrong thy last.
XXV. Ulysses' indignant rebuke of Thersites.
THERSITES! railer!-peace-nor deem thyself, Although thus eloquent, alone excused
The def'rence due to kings. Thou, least of all Atrides' followers, being, as thou art,
So far the worst of all, shouldst dare to sport With royal names, or take them on thy lips. Nor art thou worthier to appoint the Greeks Their time to voyage home. How soon, how late, With what success, at last, we shall return,
Is dark and doubtful to the wisest here.
And whence thy spleen? and wherefore from thy seat
Hast thou reviled the king? It is because The Grecians nobly recompense his toils. But mark me. If I find thee yet again Raving and foaming at the lips as now, May never man behold Ulysses' head
On these my shoulders more, and may my son Prove the begotten of another sire,
If I not strip thee to that hide of thine
As bare as thou wast born, and whip thee hence Home to thy galley, snivelling like a boy.
XXVI. Agamemnon's reply to Nestor, his generous confession, and his spirited address.
OLDEST, and worthiest of Achaia's sons To be consulted! Oh I would to heav'n That I had ten, in council wise as thou, Then, soon should Priam's royal city fall, And yield her spoils to our victorious hands. But Jove afflicts me. From Saturnian Jove My doom is altercation to no end;
Thence came, between Achilles and myself That fiery clash of words, a girl the cause, Myself aggressor. Once that breach repaird, Troy's long reprieve thenceforth is at an end. Go take refreshment now, that we may march Forth to our enemies. Let each whet well His spear, brace well his shield, well feed his brisk High-mettled horses, well survey and search His chariot on all sides, that no defect Disgrace his bright habiliments of war. So will we give the day from morn to eve To dreadful battle. Pause there shall be none Till night divide us.
Shall sweat on the toil'd bosom, every hand That shakes the spear shall ache, and every steed Shall smoke that whirls the chariot o'er the plain. Woe then to whom I shall discover here
Loitering among the tents; none such with ease Shall 'scape due punishment. The vulture's maw Shall have his carcase, and the dogs his bones.
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