<p>As near the champions drew, Patroclus first<br/>
His weapon hurl’d, and Thrasymedes brave,<br/>
The faithful follower of Sarpedon, struck<br/>
Below the waist, and slack’d his limbs in death.<br/>
Thrown in his turn, Sarpedon’s glitt’ring spear<br/>
Flew wide; and Pedasus, the gallant horse,<br/>
Through the right shoulder wounded; with a scream<br/>
He fell, and in the dust breath’d forth his life,<br/>
As, shrieking loud, his noble spirit fled.<br/>
This way and that his two companions swerv’d;<br/>
Creak’d the strong yoke, and tangled were the reins,<br/>
As in the dust the prostrate courser lay.<br/>
Automedon the means of safety saw;<br/>
And drawing from beside his brawny thigh<br/>
His keen-edg’d sword, with no uncertain blow<br/>
Cut loose the fallen horse; again set straight,<br/>
The two, extended, stretch’d the tightened rein.<br/>
Again in mortal strife the warriors clos’d:<br/>
Once more Sarpedon hurl’d his glitt’ring spear<br/>
In vain; above Patroclus’ shoulder flew<br/>
The point, innocuous; from his hand in turn<br/>
The spear not vainly thrown, Sarpedon struck<br/>
Where lies the diaphragm, below the heart.<br/>
He fell; as falls an oak, or poplar tall,<br/>
Or lofty pine, which on the mountain top<br/>
For some proud ship the woodman’s axe hath hewn:<br/>
So he, with death-cry sharp, before his car<br/>
Extended lay, and clutch’d the blood-stain’d soil.<br/>
As when a lion on the herd has sprung,<br/>
And, ’mid the heifers seiz’d, the lordly bull<br/>
Lies bellowing, crush’d between the lion’s jaws;<br/>
So by Patroclus slain, the Lycian chief,<br/>
Undaunted still, his faithful comrade call’d:<br/>
“Good Glaucus, warrior tried, behoves thee now<br/>
Thy spearmanship to prove, and warlike might.<br/>
Welcome the fray; put forth thine utmost speed;<br/>
Call on the Lycian chiefs, on ev’ry side,<br/>
To press around, and for Sarpedon fight;<br/>
Thou too thine arms for my protection wield;<br/>
For I to thee, through all thy future days,<br/>
Shall be a ceaseless scandal and reproach,<br/>
If me, thus slain before the Grecian ships,<br/>
The Greeks be suffer’d of my arms to spoil:<br/>
But stand thou fast, and others’ courage raise.”</p>
<p>Thus as he spoke, the shades of death o’erspread<br/>
His eyes and nostrils; then with foot firm-set<br/>
Upon his chest, Patroclus from the corpse<br/>
Drew, by main force, the fast-adhering spear;<br/>
The life forth issuing with the weapon’s point.<br/>
Loos’d from the royal car, the snorting steeds,<br/>
Eager for flight, the Myrmidons detain’d.<br/>
Deep-grieving, Glaucus heard his voice: and chafed<br/>
His spirit within him, that he lacked the power<br/>
To aid his comrade; with his hand he grasp’d<br/>
His wounded arm, in torture from the shaft<br/>
By Teucer shot, to save the Greeks from death,<br/>
As on he pressed to scale the lofty wall:<br/>
Then to Apollo thus address’d his pray’r:</p>
<p>“Hear me, great King, who, as on Lycia’s plains,<br/>
Art here in Troy; and hear’st in ev’ry place<br/>
Their voice who suffer, as I suffer now.<br/>
A grievous wound I bear, and sharpest pangs<br/>
My arm assail, nor may the blood he stanch’d:<br/>
The pain weighs down my shoulder; and my hand<br/>
Hath lost its pow’r to fight, or grasp my spear.<br/>
Sarpedon, bravest of the brave, is slain,<br/>
The son of Jove; yet Jove preserv’d him not.<br/>
But thou, O King, this grievous wound relieve;<br/>
Assuage the pain, and give me strength to urge<br/>
My Lycian comrades to maintain the war,<br/>
And fight myself to guard the noble dead.”</p>
<p>Thus as he pray’d, his pray’r Apollo heard,<br/>
Assuag’d his pains, and from the grievous wound<br/>
Stanch’ d the dark blood, and fill’d his soul with strength.<br/>
Glaucus within himself perceiv’d, and knew,<br/>
Rejoicing, that the God had heard his pray’r.<br/>
The Lycian leaders first on ev’ry side<br/>
He urg’d to hasten for their King to fight:<br/>
Then ’mid the Trojans went with lofty step,<br/>
And first to Panthous’ son, Polydamas,<br/>
To brave Agenor and Æneas next;<br/>
Then Hector of the brazen helm himself<br/>
Approaching, thus with winged words address’d:</p>
<p>“Hector, forgett’st thou quite thy brave allies,<br/>
Who freely in thy cause pour forth their lives,<br/>
Far from their home and friends? but they from thee<br/>
No aid receive; Sarpedon lies in death,<br/>
The leader of the buckler’d Lycian bands,<br/>
Whose justice and whose pow’r were Lycia’s shield;<br/>
Him by Patroclus’ hand hath Mars subdued.<br/>
But, friends, stand by me now! with just revenge<br/>
Inspir’d, determine that the Myrmidons<br/>
Shall not, how griev’d soe’er for all the Greeks<br/>
Who by our spears beside the ships have fall’n,<br/>
Our dead dishonour, and his arms obtain.”</p>
<p>He said; and through the Trojans thrill’d the sense<br/>
Of grief intolerable, unrestrain’d;<br/>
For he, though stranger-born, was of the State<br/>
A mighty pillar; and his followers<br/>
A num’rous host; and he himself in fight<br/>
Among the foremost; so, against the Greeks,<br/>
With fiery zeal they rush’d, by Hector led,<br/>
Griev’d for Sarpedon’s loss; on th’ other side<br/>
Patroclus’ manly heart the Greeks arous’d,<br/>
And to th’ Ajaces first, themselves inflamed<br/>
With warlike zeal, he thus address’d his speech:</p>
<p>“Ye sons of Ajax, now is come the time<br/>
Your former fame to rival, or surpass:<br/>
The man hath fall’n, who first o’erleap’d our wall,<br/>
Sarpedon; now remains, that, having slain,<br/>
We should his corpse dishonour, and his arms<br/>
Strip off; and should some comrade dare attempt<br/>
His rescue, him too with our spears subdue.”</p>
<p>He said; and they, with martial ardour fir’d,<br/>
Rush’d to the conflict. When on either side<br/>
The reinforc’d battalions were array’d,<br/>
Trojans and Lycians, Myrmidons and Greeks<br/>
Around the dead in sternest combat met,<br/>
With fearful shouts; and loud their armour rang.<br/>
Then, to enhance the horror of the strife<br/>
Around his son, with darkness Jove o’erspread<br/>
The stubborn fight: the Trojans first drove back<br/>
The keen-ey’d Greeks; for first a warrior fell,<br/>
Not of the meanest ’mid the Myrmidons,<br/>
Epegeus, son of valiant Agacles;<br/>
Who in Budaeum’s thriving state bore rule<br/>
Erewhile; but flying for a kinsman slain,<br/>
To Peleus and the silver-footed Queen<br/>
He came a suppliant; with Achilles thence<br/>
To Ilium sent, to join the war of Troy.<br/>
Him, as he stretch’d his hand to seize the dead,<br/>
Full on the forehead with a massive stone<br/>
Great Hector smote; within the pond’rous helm<br/>
The skull was split in twain; prone on the corpse<br/>
He fell, by life-destroying death subdued.<br/>
Griev’d was Patroclus for his comrade slain;<br/>
Forward he darted, as a swift-wing’d hawk,<br/>
That swoops amid the starlings and the daws;<br/>
So swift didst thou, Patroclus, car-borne chief,<br/>
Upon the Trojans and the Lycians spring,<br/>
Thy soul with anger for thy comrade fill’d.<br/>
A pond’rous stone he hurl’d at Sthenelas,<br/>
Son of Ithaemenes; the mighty mass<br/>
Fell on his neck, and all the muscles crush’d.<br/>
Back drew great Hector and the chiefs of Troy;<br/>
Far as a jav’lin’s flight, in sportive strife,<br/>
Or in the deadly battle, hurl’d by one<br/>
His utmost strength exerting; back so far<br/>
The Trojans drew, so far the Greeks pursued.<br/>
Glaucus, the leader of the Lycian spears,<br/>
First turning, slew the mighty Bathycles,<br/>
The son of Chalcon; he in Hellas dwelt,<br/>
In wealth surpassing all the Myrmidons.<br/>
Him, as he gain’d upon him in pursuit,<br/>
Quick turning, Glaucus through the breast transfix’d;<br/>
Thund’ring he fell; deep grief possess’d the Greeks<br/>
At loss of one so valiant; fiercely joy’d<br/>
The Trojans, and around him crowded thick;<br/>
Nor of their wonted valour were the Greeks<br/>
Oblivious, but still onward held their course.<br/>
Then slew Meriones a crested chief,<br/>
The bold Laogonus, Onetor’s son;<br/>
Onetor, of Idaean Jove the priest,<br/>
And by the people as a God rever’d.<br/>
Below the ear he struck him; from his limbs<br/>
The spirit fled, and darkness veil’d his eyes.</p>
<p>Then at Meriones Æneas threw<br/>
His brazen spear, in hopes beneath his shield<br/>
To find a spot unguarded; he beheld,<br/>
And downward stooping, shunn’d the brazen death;<br/>
Behind him far, deep in the soil infix’d,<br/>
The weapon stood; there Mars its impulse stay’d;<br/>
So, bootless hurl’d, though by no feeble hand,<br/>
Æneas’ spear stood quiv’ring in the ground;<br/>
Then thus in wrath he cried: “Meriones,<br/>
Had it but struck thee, nimble as thou art,<br/>
My spear had brought thy dancing to a close.”</p>
<p>To whom the spearman skill’d, Meriones:<br/>
“Brave as thou art, Æneas, ’tis too much<br/>
For thee to hope the might of all to quell,<br/>
Who dare confront thee; thou art mortal too!<br/>
And if my aim be true, and should my spear<br/>
But strike thee fair, all valiant as thou art,<br/>
And confident, yet me thy fall shall crown<br/>
With triumph, and thy soul to Hades send.”</p>
<p>He said; and him Menoetius’ noble son<br/>
Address’d with grave rebuke: “Meriones,<br/>
Brave warrior, why thus waste the time in words?<br/>
Trust me, good friend, ’tis not by vaunting speech,<br/>
Unseconded by deeds, that we may hope<br/>
To scare away the Trojans from the slain:<br/>
Hands are for battle, words for council meet;<br/>
Boots it not now to wrangle, but to fight.”</p>
<p>He said, and led the way; him follow’d straight<br/>
The godlike chief; forthwith, as loudly rings,<br/>
Amid the mountain forest’s deep recess,<br/>
The woodman’s axe, and far is heard the sound;<br/>
So from the wide-spread earth their clamour rose,<br/>
As brazen arms, and shields, and tough bull’s-hide<br/>
Encounter’d swords and double-pointed spears.<br/>
Nor might the sharpest sight Sarpedon know,<br/>
From head to foot with wounds and blood and dust<br/>
Disfigur’d; thickly round the dead they swarm’d.<br/>
As when at spring-tide in the cattle-sheds<br/>
Around the milk-cans swarm the buzzing flies,<br/>
While the warm milk is frothing in the pail;<br/>
So swarm’d they round the dead; nor Jove the while<br/>
Turn’d from the stubborn fight his piercing glance;<br/>
But still look’d down with gaze intent, and mus’d<br/>
Upon Patroclus’ coming fate, in doubt,<br/>
If he too there beside Sarpedon slain,<br/>
Should perish by illustrious Hector’s hand,<br/>
Spoil’d of his arms; or yet be spared awhile<br/>
To swell the labours of the battle-field.<br/>
He judg’d it best at length, that once again<br/>
The gallant follower of Peleus’ son<br/>
Should tow’rd the town with fearful slaughter drive<br/>
The Trojans, and their brazen-helmed chief.<br/>
First Hector’s soul with panic fear he fill’d;<br/>
Mounting his car, he fled, and urg’d to flight<br/>
The Trojans; for he saw the scales of Jove.<br/>
Then nor the valiant Lycians held their ground;<br/>
All fled in terror, as they saw their King<br/>
Pierc’d through the heart, amid a pile of dead;<br/>
For o’er his body many a warrior fell,<br/>
When Saturn’s son the conflict fierce inflam’d.<br/>
Then from Sarpedon’s breast they stripp’d his arms,<br/>
Of brass refulgent; these Menoetius’ son<br/>
Sent by his comrades to the ships of Greece.</p>
<p>To Phoebus then the Cloud-compeller thus:<br/>
“Hie thee, good Phoebus, from amid the spears<br/>
Withdraw Sarpedon, and from all his wounds<br/>
Cleanse the dark gore; then bear him far away,<br/>
And lave his body in the flowing stream;<br/>
Then with divine ambrosia all his limbs<br/>
Anointing, clothe him in immortal robes.<br/>
To two swift bearers give him then in charge,<br/>
To Sleep and Death, twin brothers, in their arms<br/>
To bear him safe to Lycia’s wide-spread plains:<br/>
There shall his brethren and his friends perform<br/>
His fun’ral rites, and mound and column raise,<br/>
The fitting tribute to the mighty dead.”</p>
<p>He said; obedient to his father’s words,<br/>
Down to the battle-field Apollo sped<br/>
From Ida’s height; and from amid the spears<br/>
Withdrawn, he bore Sarpedon far away,<br/>
And lav’d his body in the flowing stream;<br/>
Then with divine ambrosia all his limbs<br/>
Anointing, cloth’d him in immortal robes;<br/>
To two swift bearers gave him then in charge,<br/>
To Sleep and Death, twin brothers; in their arms<br/>
They bore him safe to Lycia’s wide-spread plains.</p>
<p>Then to Automedon Patroclus gave<br/>
His orders, and the flying foe pursued.<br/>
Oh much deceiv’d, insensate! had he now<br/>
But borne in mind the words of Peleus’ son,<br/>
He might have ’scap’d the bitter doom of death.<br/>
But still Jove’s will the will of man o’errules:<br/>
Who strikes with panic, and of vict’ry robs<br/>
The bravest; and anon excites to war;<br/>
Who now Patroclus’ breast with fury fill’d.<br/>
Whom then, Patroclus, first, whom slew’st thou last,<br/>
When summon’d by the Gods to meet thy doom?<br/>
Adrastus, and Autonous, Perimus<br/>
The son of Meges, and Echeclus next;<br/>
Epistor, Melanippus, Elasus,<br/>
And Mulius, and Pylartes; these he slew;<br/>
The others all in flight their safety found.</p>
<p>Then had the Greeks the lofty-gated town<br/>
Of Priam captur’d by Patroclus’ hand,<br/>
So forward and so fierce he bore his spear;<br/>
But on the well-built tow’r Apollo stood,<br/>
On his destruction bent, and Troy’s defence<br/>
The jutting angle of the lofty wall<br/>
Patroclus thrice assail’d; his onset thrice<br/>
Apollo, with his own immortal hands<br/>
Repelling, backward thrust his glitt’ring shield.<br/>
But when again, with more than mortal force<br/>
He made his fourth attempt, with awful mien<br/>
And threat’ning voice the Far-destroyer spoke:</p>
<p>“Back, Heav’n-born chief, Patroclus! not to thee<br/>
Hath fate decreed the triumph to destroy<br/>
The warlike Trojans’ city; no, nor yet<br/>
To great Achilles, mightier far than thou.”</p>
<p>Thus as he spoke, Patroclus backward stepp’d,<br/>
Shrinking before the Far-destroyer’s wrath.<br/>
Still Hector kept before the Scaean gates<br/>
His coursers; doubtful, if again to dare<br/>
The battle-throng, or summon all the host<br/>
To seek the friendly shelter of the wall.<br/>
Thus as he mus’d, beside him Phoebus stood,<br/>
In likeness of a warrior stout and brave,<br/>
Brother of Hecuba, the uncle thence<br/>
Of noble Hector, Asius, Dymas’ son;<br/>
Who dwelt in Phrygia, by Saugarius’ stream;<br/>
His form assuming, thus Apollo spoke:<br/>
“Hector, why shrink’st thou from the battle thus?<br/>
It ill beseems thee! Would to Heav’n that I<br/>
So far thy greater were, as thou art mine;<br/>
Then sorely shouldst thou rue this abstinence.<br/>
But, forward thou! against Patroclus urge<br/>
Thy fiery steeds, so haply by his death<br/>
Apollo thee with endless fame may crown.”</p>
<p>This said, the God rejoin’d the strife of men;<br/>
And noble Hector bade Cebriones<br/>
Drive ’mid the fight his car; before him mov’d<br/>
Apollo, scatt’ring terror ’mid the Greeks,<br/>
And lustre adding to the arms of Troy.<br/>
All others Hector pass’d unnotic’d by,<br/>
Nor stay’d to slay; Patroclus was the mark<br/>
At which his coursers’ clatt’ring hoofs he drove.<br/>
On th’ other side, Patroclus from his car<br/>
Leap’d to the ground: his left hand held his spear;<br/>
And in the right a pond’rous mass he bore<br/>
Of rugged stone, that fill’d his ample grasp:<br/>
The stone he hurl’d; not far it miss’d its mark,<br/>
Nor bootless flew; but Hector’s charioteer<br/>
It struck, Cebriones, a bastard son<br/>
Of royal Priam, as the reins he held.<br/>
Full on his temples fell the jagged mass,<br/>
Drove both his eyebrows in, and crush’d the bone;<br/>
Before him in the dust his eyeballs fell;<br/>
And, like a diver, from the well-wrought car<br/>
Headlong he plung’d; and life forsook his limbs.<br/>
O’er whom Patroclus thus with bitter jest:<br/>
“Heav’n! what agility! how deftly thrown<br/>
That somersault! if only in the sea<br/>
Such feats he wrought, with him might few compete,<br/>
Diving for oysters, if with such a plunge<br/>
He left his boat, how rough soe’er the waves,<br/>
As from his car he plunges to the ground:<br/>
Troy can, it seems, accomplish’d tumblers boast.”</p>
<p>Thus saying, on Cebriones he sprang,<br/>
As springs a lion, through the breast transfix’d,<br/>
In act the sheepfold to despoil, and dies<br/>
The victim of his courage; so didst thou<br/>
Upon Cebriones, Patroclus, spring.<br/>
Down from his car too Hector leap’d to earth.<br/>
So, o’er Cebriones, oppos’d they stood;<br/>
As on the mountain, o’er a slaughter’d stag,<br/>
Both hunger-pinch’d, two lions fiercely fight,<br/>
So o’er Cebriones two mighty chiefs,<br/>
Menoetius’ son and noble Hector, strove,<br/>
Each in the other bent to plunge his spear.<br/>
The head, with grasp unyielding, Hector held;<br/>
Patroclus seiz’d the foot; and, crowding round,<br/>
Trojans and Greeks in stubborn conflict clos’d.</p>
<p>As when, encount’ring in some mountain-glen,<br/>
Eurus and Notus shake the forest deep,<br/>
Of oak, or ash, or slender cornel-tree,<br/>
Whose tap’ring branches are together thrown,<br/>
With fearful din, and crash of broken boughs;<br/>
So mix’d confus’dly, Greeks and Trojans fought,<br/>
No thought of flight by either entertain’d.<br/>
Thick o’er Cebriones the jav’lins flew,<br/>
And feather’d arrows, bounding from the string;<br/>
And pond’rous stones that on the bucklers rang,<br/>
As round the dead they fought; amid the dust<br/>
That eddying rose, his art forgotten all,<br/>
A mighty warrior, mightily he lay.<br/>
While in mid Heav’n the sun pursued his course,<br/>
Thick flew the shafts, and fast the people fell<br/>
On either side; but when declining day<br/>
Brought on the hour that sees the loosen’d steers,<br/>
The Greeks were stronger far; and from the darts<br/>
And Trojan battle-cry Cebriones<br/>
They drew, and from his breast his armour stripp’d.<br/>
Fiercely Patroclus on the Trojans fell:<br/>
Thrice he assail’d them, terrible as Mars,<br/>
With fearful shouts; and thrice nine foes he slew:<br/>
But when again, with more than mortal force<br/>
His fourth assault he made, thy term of life,<br/>
Patroclus, then approach’d its final close;<br/>
For Phoebus’ awful self encounter’d thee,<br/>
Amid the battle-throng, of thee unseen,<br/>
For thickest darkness shrouded all his form:<br/>
He stood behind, and with extended palm<br/>
Dealt on Patroclus’ neck and shoulders broad<br/>
A mighty buffet; dizzy swam his eyes,<br/>
And from his head Apollo snatch’d the helm;<br/>
Clank’d, as it roll’d beneath the horses’ feet,<br/>
The visor’d helm; the horsehair plume with blood<br/>
And dust polluted; never till that day<br/>
Was that proud helmet so with dust defil’d,<br/>
That wont to deck a godlike chief, and guard<br/>
Achilles’ noble head, and graceful brow:<br/>
Now by the will of Jove to Hector giv’n.<br/>
Now death was near at hand; and in his grasp<br/>
His spear was shiver’d, pond’rous, long, and tough,<br/>
Brass-pointed; with its belt, the ample shield<br/>
Fell from his shoulders; and Apollo’s hand,<br/>
The royal son of Jove, his corslet loos’d.<br/>
Then was his mind bewilder’d; and his limbs<br/>
Gave way beneath him; all aghast he stood:<br/>
Him, from behind, a Dardan, Panthous’ son,<br/>
Euphorbus, peerless ’mid the Trojan youth,<br/>
To hurl the spear, to run, to drive the car,<br/>
Approaching close, between the shoulders stabb’d;<br/>
He, train’d to warfare, from his car, ere this<br/>
A score of Greeks had from their chariots hurl’d:<br/>
Such was the man who thee, Patroclus, first<br/>
Wounded, but not subdued; the ashen spear<br/>
He, in all haste, withdrew; nor dar’d confront<br/>
Patroclus, though disarm’d, in deadly strife.</p>
<p>Back to his comrades’ shelt’ring ranks retir’d,<br/>
From certain death, Patroclus: by the stroke<br/>
Of Phoebus vanquish’d, and Euphorbus’ spear:<br/>
But Hector, when Patroclus from the fight<br/>
He saw retreating, wounded, through the ranks<br/>
Advancing, smote him through the flank; right through<br/>
The brazen spear was driv’n; thund’ring he fell;<br/>
And deeply mourn’d his fall the Grecian host.</p>
<p>As when a lion hath in fight o’erborne<br/>
A tusked boar, when on the mountain top<br/>
They two have met, in all their pride of strength,<br/>
Both parch’d with thirst, around a scanty spring;<br/>
And vanquish’d by the lion’s force, the boar<br/>
Hath yielded, gasping; so Menoetius’ son,<br/>
Great deeds achiev’d, at length beneath the spear<br/>
Of noble Hector yielded up his life;<br/>
Who o’er the vanquish’d, thus exulting, spoke:<br/>
“Patroclus, but of late thou mad’st thy boast<br/>
To raze our city walls, and in your ships<br/>
To bear away to your far-distant land,<br/>
Their days of freedom lost, our Trojan dames:<br/>
Fool that thou wast! nor knew’st, in their defence,<br/>
That Hector’s flying coursers scour’d the plain;<br/>
From them, the bravest of the Trojans, I<br/>
Avert the day of doom; while on our shores<br/>
Thy flesh shall glut the carrion birds of Troy.<br/>
Poor wretch! though brave he be, yet Peleus’ son<br/>
Avail’d thee nought, when, hanging back himself,<br/>
With sage advice he sent thee forth to fight:<br/>
‘Come not to me, Patroclus, car-borne chief,<br/>
Nor to the ships return, until thou bear<br/>
The warrior-slayer Hector’s bloody spoils,<br/>
Torn from his body;’ such were, I suppose,<br/>
His counsels; thou, poor fool, becam’st his dupe.”<br/>
To whom Patroclus thus in accents faint:</p>
<p>“Hector, thou boastest loudly now, that Jove,<br/>
With Phoebus join’d, hath thee with vict’ry crown’d:<br/>
They wrought my death, who stripp’d me of my arms.<br/>
Had I to deal with twenty such as thee,<br/>
They all should perish, vanquish’d by my spear:<br/>
Me fate hath slain, and Phoebus; and, of men,<br/>
Euphorbus; thou wast but the third to strike.<br/>
This too I say, and bear it in thy mind;<br/>
Not long shalt thou survive me; death e’en now<br/>
And final doom hangs o’er thee, by the hand<br/>
Of great Achilles, Peleus’ matchless son.”</p>
<p>Thus as he spoke, the gloom of death his eyes<br/>
O’erspread, and to the shades his spirit fled,<br/>
Mourning his fate, his youth and strength cut off.<br/>
To whom, though dead, the noble Hector thus:<br/>
“Patroclus, why predict my coming fate?<br/>
Or who can say but fair-hair’d Thetis’ son,<br/>
Achilles, by my spear may first be slain?”</p>
<p>He said, and planting firm his foot, withdrew<br/>
The brazen spear, and backward drove the dead<br/>
From off the weapon’s point; then, spear in hand,<br/>
Intent to slay, Automedon pursued,<br/>
The godlike follower of Æacides:<br/>
But him in safety bore th’ immortal steeds,<br/>
The noble prize the Gods to Peleus gave.</p>
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