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The Iliad of Homer. HomerЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Iliad of Homer - Homer


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foul reproach. The Grecians with contempt

       Listen'd, and indignation, while with voice270

       At highest pitch, he thus the monarch mock'd.

      What wouldst thou now? Whereof is thy complaint

       Now, Agamemnon? Thou hast fill'd thy tents

       With treasure, and the Grecians, when they take

       A city, choose the loveliest girls for thee.275

       Is gold thy wish? More gold? A ransom brought

       By some chief Trojan for his son's release

       Whom I, or other valiant Greek may bind?

       Or wouldst thou yet a virgin, one, by right

       Another's claim, but made by force thine own?280

       It was not well, great Sir, that thou shouldst bring

       A plague on the Achaians, as of late.

       But come, my Grecian sisters, soldiers named

       Unfitly, of a sex too soft for war,

       Come, let us homeward: let him here digest285

       What he shall gorge, alone; that he may learn

       If our assistance profit him or not.

       For when he shamed Achilles, he disgraced

       A Chief far worthier than himself, whose prize

       He now withholds. But tush—Achilles lacks290

       Himself the spirit of a man; no gall

       Hath he within him, or his hand long since

       Had stopp'd that mouth,[9] that it should scoff no more.

      Thus, mocking royal Agamemnon, spake

       Thersites. Instant starting to his side,

       295

       Noble Ulysses with indignant brows

       Survey'd him, and him thus reproved severe.

      040 Thersites! Railer!—peace. Think not thyself,

       Although thus eloquent, alone exempt

       From obligation not to slander Kings.300

       I deem thee most contemptible, the worst

       Of Agamemnon's followers to the war;

       Presume not then to take the names revered

       Of Sovereigns on thy sordid lips, to asperse

       Their sacred character, and to appoint305

       The Greeks a time when they shall voyage home.

       How soon, how late, with what success at last

       We shall return, we know not: but because

       Achaia's heroes numerous spoils allot

       To Agamemnon, Leader of the host,310

       Thou therefore from thy seat revilest the King.

       But mark me. If I find thee, as even now,

       Raving and foaming at the lips again,

       May never man behold Ulysses' head

       On these my shoulders more, and may my son315

       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, sniveling like a boy.

      He ceased, and with his sceptre on the back320

       And shoulders smote him. Writhing to and fro,

       He wept profuse, while many a bloody whelk

       Protuberant beneath the sceptre sprang.

       Awe-quell'd he sat, and from his visage mean,

       Deep-sighing, wiped the rheums. It was no time325

       For mirth, yet mirth illumined every face,

       And laughing, thus they spake. A thousand acts

       Illustrious, both by well-concerted plans

       And prudent disposition of the host

       Ulysses hath achieved, but this by far330

       Transcends his former praise, that he hath quell'd

       Such contumelious rhetoric profuse.

       The valiant talker shall not soon, we judge,

       Take liberties with royal names again.[10] 041 So spake the multitude. Then, stretching forth335 The sceptre, city-spoiler Chief, arose Ulysses. Him beside, herald in form, Appeared Minerva. Silence she enjoined To all, that all Achaia's sons might hear, Foremost and rearmost, and might weigh his words.340 He then his counsel, prudent, thus proposed.

      Atrides! Monarch! The Achaians seek

       To make thee ignominious above all

       In sight of all mankind. None recollects

       His promise more in steed-famed Argos pledged,345

       Here to abide till Ilium wall'd to heaven

       Should vanquish'd sink, and all her wealth be ours.

       No—now, like widow'd women, or weak boys,

       They whimper to each other, wishing home.

       And home, I grant, to the afflicted soul350

       Seems pleasant.[11] The poor seaman from his wife One month detain'd, cheerless his ship and sad Possesses, by the force of wintry blasts, And by the billows of the troubled deep Fast lock'd in port. But us the ninth long year355 Revolving, finds camp'd under Ilium still. I therefore blame not, if they mourn beside Their sable barks, the Grecians. Yet the shame That must attend us after absence long Returning unsuccessful, who can bear?360 Be patient, friends! wait only till we learn If Calchas truly prophesied, or not; For well we know, and I to all appeal, Whom Fate hath not already snatch'd away, (It seems but yesterday, or at the most365 042 A day or two before) that when the ships Wo-fraught for Priam, and the race of Troy, At Aulis met, and we beside the fount With perfect hecatombs the Gods adored Beneath the plane-tree, from whose root a stream370 Ran crystal-clear, there we beheld a sign Wonderful in all eyes. A serpent huge, Tremendous spectacle! with crimson spots His back all dappled, by Olympian Jove Himself protruded, from the altar's foot375 Slipp'd into light, and glided to the tree. There on the topmost bough, close-cover'd sat With foliage broad, eight sparrows, younglings all, Then newly feather'd, with their dam, the ninth. The little ones lamenting shrill he gorged,380 While, wheeling o'er his head, with screams the dam Bewail'd her darling brood. Her also next, Hovering and clamoring, he by the wing Within his spiry folds drew, and devoured. All eaten thus, the nestlings and the dam,385 The God who sent him, signalized him too, For him Saturnian Jove transform'd to stone. We wondering stood, to see that strange portent Intrude itself into our holy rites, When Calchas, instant, thus the sign explain'd.390

      Why stand ye, Greeks, astonish'd? Ye behold

       A prodigy by Jove himself produced,

       An omen, whose accomplishment indeed

       Is distant, but whose fame shall never die.[12] E'en as this serpent in your sight devour'd395 Eight youngling sparrows, with their dam, the ninth, So we nine years must war on yonder plain, And in the tenth, wide-bulwark'd Troy is ours.

      So spake the seer, and as he spake, is done.

       043 Wait, therefore, brave Achaians! go not hence400

       Till Priam's spacious city be your prize.

      He ceased, and such a shout ensued, that all

       The hollow ships the deafening roar return'd

       Of acclamation, every voice the speech

       Extolling of Ulysses, glorious Chief.405

      Then Nestor the Gerenian,[13] warrior old, Arising, spake; and, by the Gods, he said, Ye more resemble children inexpert In


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