<p>Say now, ye Nine, who on Olympus dwell,<br/>
Muses (for ye are Goddesses, and ye<br/>
Were present, and know all things: we ourselves<br/>
But hear from Rumour’s voice, and nothing know),<br/>
Who were the chiefs and mighty Lords of Greece.<br/>
But should I seek the multitude to name,<br/>
Not if ten tongues were mine, ten mouths to speak,<br/>
Voice inexhaustible, and heart of brass,<br/>
Should I succeed, unless, Olympian maids,<br/>
The progeny of aegis-bearing Jove,<br/>
Ye should their names record, who came to Troy.<br/>
The chiefs, and all the ships, I now rehearse.</p>
<p>Bœotia’s troops by Peneleus were led,<br/>
And Leitus, and Prothoenor bold,<br/>
Arcesilas and Clonius: they who dwelt<br/>
In Hyria, and on Aulis’ rocky coast,<br/>
Scoenus, and Scolus, and the highland range<br/>
Of Eteonus; in Thespeia’s vale,<br/>
Graia, and Mycalessus’ wide-spread plains:<br/>
And who in Harma and Eilesium dwelt,<br/>
And in Erythrae, and in Eleon,<br/>
Hyle, and Peteon, and Ocalea,<br/>
In Copae, and in Medeon’s well-built fort,<br/>
Eutresis, Thisbe’s dove-frequented woods,<br/>
And Coronca, and the grassy meads<br/>
Of Haliartus; and Plataea’s plain,<br/>
In Glissa, and the foot of Lower Thebes,<br/>
And in Anchestus, Neptune’s sacred grove;<br/>
And who in viny-cluster’d Arne dwelt,<br/>
And in Mideia, and the lovely site<br/>
Of Nissa, and Anthedon’s utmost bounds.<br/>
With these came fifty vessels; and in each<br/>
Were six score youths, Bœotia’s noblest flow’r.</p>
<p>Who in Aspledon dwelt, and in Minyas’ realm<br/>
Orehomenus, two sons of Mars obey’d,<br/>
Ascalaphus, and bold Ialmenus;<br/>
In Actor’s house, the son of Azeus, born<br/>
Of fair Astyoche, a maiden pure,<br/>
Till in the upper chamber, where she slept,<br/>
Stout Mars by stealth her virgin bed assail’d:<br/>
Of these came thirty ships in order due.</p>
<p>By Schedius and Epistrophus, the sons<br/>
Of great Iphitus, son of Naubolus,<br/>
Were led the Phocian forces; these were they<br/>
Who dwelt in Cyparissus, and the rock<br/>
Of Python, and on Crissa’s lovely plain;<br/>
And who in Daulis, and in Panope,<br/>
Anemorea and IIyampolis,<br/>
And by Cephisus’ sacred waters dwelt,<br/>
Or in Lilaea, by Cephisus’ springs.<br/>
In their command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.<br/>
These were the leaders of the Phocian bands,<br/>
And on Bœotia’s left their camp was pitch’d.</p>
<p>Ajax, Oileus’ son, the Locrians led;<br/>
Swift-footed, less than Ajax Telamon,<br/>
Of stature low, with linen breastplate arm’d:<br/>
But skill’d to throw the spear o’er all who dwell<br/>
In Hellas or Achaia: these were they<br/>
From Cynos, Opus, and Calliarus,<br/>
Bessa, and Scarpha, and Augaea fair,<br/>
Tarpha, and Thronium, by Boagrius’ stream.<br/>
Him from beyond Euboea’s sacred isle,<br/>
Of Locrians follow’d forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Breathing firm courage high, th’ Abantian host,<br/>
Who from Euboea and from Chalcis came,<br/>
Or who in vine-clad Histiaea dwelt,<br/>
Eretria, and Cerinthus maritime,<br/>
And who the lofty fort of Dium held,<br/>
And in Carystus and in Styra dwelt:<br/>
These Elephenor led, true plant of Mars,<br/>
Chalcodon’s son, the brave Abantian chief.<br/>
Him, all conspicuous with their long black hair,<br/>
The bold Abantians follow’d: spearmen skill’d,<br/>
Who through the foemen’s breastplates knew full well,<br/>
Held in firm grasp, to drive the ashen spear.<br/>
In his command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Those who in Athens’ well-built city dwelt,<br/>
The noble-soul’d Erectheus’ heritage;<br/>
Child of the fertile soil, by Pallas rear’d,<br/>
Daughter of Jove, who him in Athens plac’d<br/>
In her own wealthy temple; there with blood<br/>
Of bulls and lambs, at each revolving year,<br/>
The youths of Athens do him sacrifice;<br/>
These by Menestheus, Peteus’ son, were led.<br/>
With him might none of mortal men compare,<br/>
In order due of battle to array<br/>
Chariots and buckler’d men; Nestor alone<br/>
Perchance might rival him, his elder far.<br/>
In his command came fifty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Twelve ships from Salamis with Ajax came,<br/>
And they beside th’ Athenian troops were rang’d.</p>
<p>Those who from Argos, and the well-wall’d town<br/>
Of Tyrins came, and from Hermione,<br/>
And Asine, deep-bosom’d in the bay;<br/>
And from Troezene and Eione,<br/>
And vine-clad Epidaurus; and the youths<br/>
Who dwelt in Mases, and Ægina’s isle;<br/>
O’er all of these the valiant Diomed<br/>
Held rule; and Sthenelus, th’ illustrious son<br/>
Of far-fam’d Capaneus; with these, the third,<br/>
A godlike warrior came, Euryalus,<br/>
Son of Mecistheus, Talaus’ royal son.<br/>
Supreme o’er all was valiant Diomed.<br/>
In their command came eighty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Who in Mycenæ’s well-built fortress dwelt,<br/>
And wealthy Corinth, and Cleone fair,<br/>
Orneia, and divine Araethure,<br/>
And Sicyon, where Adrastus reign’d of old,<br/>
And Gonoessa’s promontory steep,<br/>
And Hyperesia, and Pellene’s rock;<br/>
Ægina, and the scatter’d towns that lie<br/>
Along the beach, and wide-spread Helice;<br/>
Of these a hundred ships obey’d the rule<br/>
Of mighty Agamemnon, Atreus’ son.<br/>
The largest and the bravest host was his;<br/>
And he himself, in dazzling armour clad,<br/>
O’er all the heroes proudly eminent,<br/>
Went forth exulting in his high estate,<br/>
Lord of the largest host, and chief of chiefs.</p>
<p>Those who in Lacedaemon’s lowland plains,<br/>
And who in Sparta and in Phare dwelt,<br/>
And who on Messa’s dove-frequented cliffs,<br/>
Bryseia, and Ægaea’s lovely vale,<br/>
And in Amyclae, and the sea-bathed fort<br/>
Of Helos, Œtylus and Laas dwelt;<br/>
His valiant brother Menelaus led,<br/>
With sixty ships; but ranged apart they lay.<br/>
Their chief, himself in martial ardour bold,<br/>
Inspiring others, fill’d with fierce desire<br/>
The rape of Helen and his wrongs to avenge.</p>
<p>They who in Pylos and Arene dwelt,<br/>
And Thyrum, by the ford of Alpheus’ stream,<br/>
In Cyparissus and Amphigene,<br/>
Pteleon, and lofty Œpus’ well-built fort,<br/>
Helos, and Dorium, where the Muses met,<br/>
And put to silence Thracian Thamyris,<br/>
As from Œchalia, from the royal house<br/>
Of Eurytus he came; he, over-bold,<br/>
Boasted himself pre-eminent in song,<br/>
Ev’n though the daughters of Olympian Jove,<br/>
The Muses, were his rivals: they in wrath<br/>
Him of his sight at once and powr’r of song<br/>
Amerc’d, and bade his hand forget the lyre.<br/>
These by Gerenian Nestor all were led,<br/>
In fourscore ships and ten in order due.</p>
<p>They of Arcadia, and the realm that lies<br/>
Beneath Cyllene’s mountain high, around<br/>
The tomb of Æpytus, a warrior race;<br/>
The men of Pheneus and Orchomenus<br/>
In flocks abounding; who in Ripa dwelt,<br/>
In Stratia, and Enispe’s breezy height,<br/>
Or Tegea held, and sweet Mantinea,<br/>
Stymphalus and Parrhasia; these were led<br/>
By Agapenor brave, Anchaeus’ son,<br/>
In sixty ships; in each a num’rous crew<br/>
Of stout Arcadian youths, to war inur’d.<br/>
The ships, wherewith they crossed the dark-blue sea,<br/>
Were giv’n by Agamemnon, King of men,<br/>
The son of Atreus; for th’ Arcadian youth<br/>
Had ne’er to maritime pursuits been train’d.</p>
<p>Who in Buprasium and in Elis dwelt,<br/>
Far as Hyrmine, and th’ extremest bounds<br/>
Of Myrsinus; and all the realm that lies<br/>
Between Aleisium and the Olenian rock;<br/>
These by four chiefs were led; and ten swift ships,<br/>
By bold Epeians mann’d, each chief obey’d.<br/>
Amphimachus and Thalpius were the first,<br/>
Sons of two brothers, Cteatus the one,<br/>
The other Eurytus, to Actor born;<br/>
Next Amarynceus’ son, Diores bold;<br/>
The fourth Polyxenus, the godlike son<br/>
Of Augeas’ royal heir, Agasthenes.</p>
<p>They of Dulichium, and the sacred isles,<br/>
Th’ Echinades, which face, from o’er the sea,<br/>
The coast of Elis, were by Meges led,<br/>
The son of Phyleus, dear to Jove, in arms<br/>
Valiant as Mars; who, with his sire at feud,<br/>
Had left his home, and to Dulichium come:<br/>
In his command were forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Those who from warlike Cephalonia came,<br/>
And Ithaca, and leafy Neritus,<br/>
And Crocyleium; rugged Ægilips,<br/>
And Samos, and Zacynthus, and the coast<br/>
Of the mainland with its opposing isles;<br/>
These in twelve ships, with scarlet-painted bows,<br/>
Ulysses led, in council sage as Jove.</p>
<p>Thoas, Andraemon’s son, th’ Ætolians led;<br/>
From Pleuron, and Pylone, Olenus,<br/>
Chalcis-by-sea, and rocky Calydon:<br/>
The race of Œneus was no more; himself,<br/>
And fair-hair’d Meleager, both were dead:<br/>
Whence all Ætolia’s rule on him was laid.<br/>
In his command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>The King Idomeneus the Cretans led,<br/>
From Cnossus, and Gortyna’s well-wall’d town,<br/>
Miletus, and Lycastus’ white-stone cliffs,<br/>
Lyctus, and Phaestus, Rhytium, and the rest<br/>
Whom Crete from all her hundred cities sent:<br/>
These all Idomeneus, a spearman skill’d,<br/>
Their King, commanded; and Meriones,<br/>
In battle terrible as blood-stain’d Mars.<br/>
In their command came fourscore dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Valiant and tall, the son of Hercules,<br/>
Tlepolemus, nine vessels brought from Rhodes,<br/>
By gallant Rhodians mann’d, who tripartite<br/>
Were settled, and in Ialyssus dwelt,<br/>
In Lindus, and Cameirus’ white-stone hills.<br/>
These all renown’d Tlepolemus obey’d,<br/>
Who to the might of Hercules was born<br/>
Of fair Astyoche; his captive she,<br/>
When many a goodly town his arms had raz’d,<br/>
Was brought from Ephyra, by Selles’ stream.<br/>
Rear’d in the royal house, Tlepolemus,<br/>
In early youth, his father’s uncle slew,<br/>
A warrior once, but now in life’s decline,<br/>
Lycimnius; then in haste a fleet he built,<br/>
Muster’d a num’rous host; and fled, by sea,<br/>
The threaten’d vengeance of the other sons<br/>
And grandsons of the might of Hercules.<br/>
Long wand’rings past, and toils and perils borne,<br/>
To Rhodes he came; his followers, by their tribes,<br/>
Three districts form’d; and so divided, dwelt,<br/>
Belov’d of Jove, the King of Gods and men,<br/>
Who show’r’d upon them boundless store of wealth.</p>
<p>Nireus three well-trimm’d ships from Syme brought;<br/>
Nireus, to Charops whom Aglaia bore;<br/>
Nireus, the goodliest man of all the Greeks,<br/>
Who came to Troy, save Peleus’ matchless son:<br/>
But scant his fame, and few the troops he led.</p>
<p>Who in Nisyrus dwelt, and Carpathus,<br/>
And Cos, the fortress of Eurypylus,<br/>
And in the Casian and Calydnian Isles,<br/>
Were by Phidippus led, and Antiphus,<br/>
Two sons of Thessalus, Alcides’ son;<br/>
With them came thirty ships in order due.</p>
<p>Next those who in Pelasgian Argos dwelt,<br/>
And who in Alos, and in Alope,<br/>
Trachys, and Phthia, and in Hellas fam’d<br/>
For women fair; of these, by various names,<br/>
Achaians, Myrmidons, Hellenes, known,<br/>
In fifty ships, Achilles was the chief.<br/>
But from the battle-strife these all abstain’d,<br/>
Since none there was to marshal their array.<br/>
For Peleus’ godlike son, the swift of foot,<br/>
Lay idly in his tent, the loss resenting<br/>
Of Brises’ fair-hair’d daughter; whom himself<br/>
Had chosen, prize of all his warlike toil,<br/>
When he Lyrnessus and the walls of Thebes<br/>
O’erthrew, and Mynes and Epistrophus<br/>
Struck down, bold warriors both, Evenus’ sons,<br/>
Selepius’ royal heir; for her in wrath,<br/>
He held aloof, but soon again to appear.</p>
<p>Those in the flow’ry plain of Pyrrhasus,<br/>
To Ceres dear, who dwelt; in Phylace,<br/>
In Iton, rich in flocks, and, by the sea,<br/>
In Antron, and in Pteleon’s grass-clad meads;<br/>
These led Protesilaus, famed in arms,<br/>
While yet he liv’d; now laid beneath the sod.<br/>
In Phylace were left his weeping wife,<br/>
And half-built house; him, springing to the shore,<br/>
First of the Greeks, a Dardan warrior slew.<br/>
Nor were his troops, their leader though they mourn’d,<br/>
Left leaderless; the post of high command<br/>
Podarces claim’d of right, true plant of Mars,<br/>
Iphiclus’ son, the rich Phylacides;<br/>
The brother of Protesilaus he,<br/>
Younger in years, nor equal in renown;<br/>
Yet of a chief no want the forces felt,<br/>
Though much they mourn’d their valiant leader slain.<br/>
In his command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Those who from Pherae came, beside the lake<br/>
Boebeis, and who dwelt in Glaphyrae,<br/>
In Boebe, and Iolcos’ well-built fort,<br/>
These in eleven ships Eumelus led,<br/>
Whom Pelias’ daughter, fairest of her race,<br/>
Divine Alcestis to Admetus bore.</p>
<p>Who in Methone and Thaumacia dwelt,<br/>
In Meliboea and Olizon’s rock;<br/>
These Philoctetes, skilful archer, led.<br/>
Sev’n ships were theirs, and ev’ry ship was mann’d<br/>
By fifty rowers, skilful archers all.<br/>
But he, their chief, was lying, rack’d with pain,<br/>
On Lemnos’ sacred isle; there left perforce<br/>
In torture from a venomous serpent’s wound:<br/>
There he in anguish lay: nor long, ere Greeks<br/>
Of royal Philoctetes felt their need.<br/>
Yet were his troops, their leader though they mourn’d,<br/>
Not leaderless: Oileus’ bastard son,<br/>
Medon, of Rhene born, their ranks array’d.</p>
<p>Who in Œchalia, Eurytus’ domain,<br/>
In Tricca, and in rough Ithome dwelt,<br/>
These Podalirius and Machaon led,<br/>
Two skilful leeches, Æsculapius’ sons.<br/>
Of these came thirty ships in order due.</p>
<p>Who in Ormenium and Asterium dwelt,<br/>
By Hypereia’s fount, and on the heights<br/>
Of Titanum’s white peaks, of these was chief<br/>
Eurypylus, Euaemon’s gallant son;<br/>
In his command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>Who in Argissa and Gyrtona dwelt,<br/>
Ortha, Elone, and the white-wall’d town<br/>
Of Oloosson, Polypoetes led;<br/>
Son of Pirithous, progeny of Jove,<br/>
A warrior bold; Hippodamia fair<br/>
Him to Pirithous bore, what time he slew<br/>
The shaggy Centaurs, and from Pelion’s heights<br/>
For refuge ’mid the rude Æthices drove.<br/>
Nor he alone; with him to Troy there came<br/>
A scion true of Mars, Leonteus, heir<br/>
Of nobly-born Coronus, Caeneus’ son.<br/>
In their command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>With two and twenty vessels Gouneus came<br/>
From Cythus; he the Enienes led,<br/>
And the Peraebians’ warlike tribes, and those<br/>
Who dwelt around Dodona’s wintry heights,<br/>
Or till’d the soil upon the lovely banks<br/>
Of Titaresius, who to Peneus pours<br/>
The tribute of his clearly-flowing stream;<br/>
Yet mingles not with Peneus’ silver waves,<br/>
But on the surface floats like oil, his source<br/>
From Styx deriving, in whose awful name<br/>
Both Gods and men by holiest oaths are bound.</p>
<p>Magnesia’s troops, who dwelt by Peneus’ stream,<br/>
Or beneath Pelion’s leafy-quiv’ring shades,<br/>
Swift-footed Prothous led, Tenthredon’s son;<br/>
In his command came forty dark-ribb’d ships.</p>
<p>These were the leaders and the chiefs of Greece:<br/>
Say, Muse, of these, who with th’ Atridae came,<br/>
Horses and men, who claim’d the highest praise.<br/>
Of steeds, the bravest and the noblest far<br/>
Were those Eumelus drove, Admetus’ son:<br/>
Both swift as birds, in age and colour match’d,<br/>
Alike in height, as measur’d o’er the back;<br/>
Both mares, by Phoebus of the silver bow<br/>
Rear’d in Pieria, thunderbolts of war.<br/>
Of men, while yet Achilles held his wrath,<br/>
The mightiest far was Ajax Telamon.<br/>
For with Achilles, and the steeds that bore<br/>
The matchless son of Peleus, none might vie:<br/>
But ’mid his beaked ocean-going ships<br/>
He lay, with Agamemnon, Atreus’ son,<br/>
Indignant; while his troops upon the beach<br/>
With quoits and jav’lins whil’d away the day,<br/>
And feats of archery; their steeds the while<br/>
The lotus-grass and marsh-grown parsley cropp’d,<br/>
Each standing near their car; the well-wrought cars<br/>
Lay all unheeded in the warriors’ tents;<br/>
They, inly pining for their godlike chief,<br/>
Roam’d listless up and down, nor join’d the fray.</p>
<p>Such was the host, which, like devouring fire,<br/>
O’erspread the land; the earth beneath them groan’d:<br/>
As when the Lord of thunder, in his wrath,<br/>
The earth’s foundations shakes, in Arimi,<br/>
Where, buried deep, ’tis said, Typhoeus lies;<br/>
So at their coming, groan’d beneath their feet<br/>
The earth, as quickly o’er the plain they spread.</p>
<p>To Troy, sent down by aegis-bearing Jove,<br/>
With direful tidings storm-swift Iris came.<br/>
At Priam’s gate, in solemn conclave met,<br/>
Were gather’d all the Trojans, young and old:<br/>
Swift Iris stood amidst them, and, the voice<br/>
Assuming of Polites, Priam’s son,<br/>
The Trojan scout, who, trusting to his speed,<br/>
Was posted on the summit of the mound<br/>
Of ancient Æsuetes, there to watch<br/>
Till from their ships the Grecian troops should march;<br/>
His voice assuming, thus the Goddess spoke:<br/>
“Old man, as erst in peace, so still thou lov’st<br/>
The strife of words; but fearful war is nigh.<br/>
Full many a host in line of battle rang’d<br/>
My eyes have seen; but such a force as this,<br/>
So mighty and so vast, I ne’er beheld:<br/>
In number as the leaves, or as the sand,<br/>
Against the city o’er the plain they come.<br/>
Then, Hector, for to thee I chiefly speak,<br/>
This do; thou know’st how various our allies,<br/>
Of diff’rent nations and discordant tongues:<br/>
Let each then those command o’er whom he reigns,<br/>
And his own countrymen in arms array.”<br/>
She said; and Hector knew the voice divine,<br/>
And all, dissolv’d the council, flew to arms,<br/>
The gates were open’d wide; forth pour’d the crowd,<br/>
Both foot and horse; and loud the tumult rose.</p>
<p>Before the city stands a lofty mound,<br/>
In the mid plain, by open space enclos’d;<br/>
Men call it Batiaea; but the Gods<br/>
The tomb of swift Myrinna; muster’d there<br/>
The Trojans and Allies their troops array’d.</p>
<p>The mighty Hector of the glancing helm,<br/>
The son of Priam, led the Trojan host:<br/>
The largest and the bravest band were they,<br/>
Bold spearmen all, who follow’d him in arms.</p>
<p>Anchises’ valiant son, Æneas, led<br/>
The Dardans; him, ’mid Ida’s jutting peaks,<br/>
Immortal Venus to Anchises bore,<br/>
A Goddess yielding to a mortal’s love:<br/>
With him, well skill’d in war, Archilochus<br/>
And Acamas, Antenor’s gallant sons.</p>
<p>Who in Zeleia dwelt, at Ida’s foot,<br/>
Of Trojan race, a wealthy tribe, who drank<br/>
Of dark Æsepus’ waters, these were led<br/>
By Pandarus, Lycaon’s noble son,<br/>
Taught by Apollo’s self to draw the bow.</p>
<p>Who from Adraste, and Apaesus’ realm,<br/>
From Pityeia, and the lofty hill<br/>
Tereian came, with linen corslets girt,<br/>
Adrastus and Amphius led; two sons<br/>
Of Merops of Percote; deeply vers’d<br/>
Was he in prophecy; and from the war<br/>
Would fain have kept his sons; but they, by fate,<br/>
Doom’d to impending death, his caution scorn’d.</p>
<p>Those who from Practium and Percote came,<br/>
And who in Sestos and Abydos dwelt,<br/>
And in Arisba fair; those Asius led,<br/>
The son of Hyrtacus, of heroes chief;<br/>
Asius the son of Hyrtacus, who came<br/>
From fair Arisba, borne by fiery steeds<br/>
Of matchless size and strength, from Selles’ stream.</p>
<p>Hippothous led the bold Pelasgian tribes,<br/>
Who dwell in rich Larissa’s fertile soil,<br/>
Hippothous and Pylaeus, Lethus’ sons,<br/>
The son of Teutamus, Pelasgian chief.</p>
<p>The Thracians, by fast-flowing Hellespont<br/>
Encompass’d, Acamas and Peirous brave;<br/>
The spear-skill’d Cicones Euphemus led,<br/>
Son of Troezenus, Ceus’ highborn son.</p>
<p>From distant Amydon Pyraecmes brought<br/>
The Paeon archers from broad Axius’ banks;<br/>
Axius, the brightest stream on earth that flows.</p>
<p>The hairy strength of great Pylaemenes<br/>
The Paphlagonians led from Eneti<br/>
(Whence first appear’d the stubborn race of mules),<br/>
Who in Cytorus and in Sesamum,<br/>
And round Parthenius’ waters had their home;<br/>
Who dwelt in Cromne, and Ægialus,<br/>
And on the lofty Erythinian rock.</p>
<p>By Hodius and Epistrophus were brought<br/>
From distant Alybe, the wealthy source<br/>
Of silver ore, the Alizonian bands.</p>
<p>Chromis the Mysians led, and Ennomus;<br/>
A skilful augur, but his augury<br/>
From gloomy death to save him nought avail’d;<br/>
Slain by the son of Peleus, in the stream,<br/>
Where many another Trojan felt his arm.</p>
<p>From far Ascania’s lake, with Phorcys join’d,<br/>
The godlike presence of Ascanius brought<br/>
The Phrygians, dauntless in the standing fight.</p>
<p>From Lydia came Pylaemenes’ two sons,<br/>
Born of the lake Gygeian; Antiphus,<br/>
And Mesthles; these Maeonia’s forces led,<br/>
Who dwelt around the foot of Tmolus’ hill.</p>
<p>In charge of Nastes came the Carian troops,<br/>
Of barbarous speech; who in Miletus dwelt,<br/>
And in the dense entangled forest shade<br/>
Of Phthira’s hill, and on the lofty ridge<br/>
Of Mycale, and by Maeander’s stream;<br/>
These came with Nastes and Amphimacus;<br/>
Amphimacus and Nastes, Nomion’s sons;<br/>
With childish folly to the war he came,<br/>
Laden with store of gold; yet nought avail’d<br/>
His gold to save him from the doom of death;<br/>
Slain by the son of Peleus in the stream;<br/>
And all his wealth Achilles bore away.</p>
<p>Sarpedon last, and valiant Glaucus led<br/>
The Lycian bands, from distant Lycia’s shore,<br/>
Beside the banks of Xanthus’ eddying stream.</p>
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