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Great is the prize demanded, I confess,
But such an abject rival makes it less;
That gift, those honours, he but hop'd to gain,
Can leave no room for Ajax to be vain;
Losing he wi..s, because his name will be
Eanobled by defeat who durst contend with me.
Were my known valour question'd, yet iny blood
Without that plea would make my title good:
My sire was Telamon, whose arms, employ'd
With Hercules, these Trojan walls destroy'd;
And who before with Jason sent from Greece,
In the first ship brought home.the golden fleece.
Great Telamon from Æacns derives

His birth (th' inquisitor of guilty lives

In shades below; where Sisyphus, whose son
This thief is thought, rolis up the restless heavy
stone)

Just Eacus, the king of gods above
Begot: thus Ajax is the third from Jove.
Nor should I seek advantage from my line,
Unless (Achilles) it was mix'd with thine:
As next of kin, Achilles' arms I claim;
This fellow would ingraft a foreign name
Upon our stock, and the Sisyphian seed
By fraud and theft asserts his father's breed:
Then must I lose these arms, because I came
To fi, ht uncall'd, a voluntary name,

Nor shunn'd the cause, but offer'd you my aid?
While he long lurking was to war betray'd:
Forc'd to the field he came, but in the rear;
And feign'd distraction to conceal his fear;
Till one more cunning caught him in the snare,
(Ill for himself) and dragg'd him into war.
Now let a hero's arms a coward vest,
And he who shunn'd all honours, gain the best:
And let me stand excluded from my right,
Robb'd of my kinsman's arms, who first appear'd
in fight.

Better for us, at home had he remain'd,
Had it been true the madness which he feign'd,
Or so believ'd; the less had been our shame,
The less his counsell'd crime, which brands the
Græcian name:

Nor Philoctetes had been left enclos'd,
In a bare isle, to wants and pains expos'd,
Where to the rocks, with solitary groans,
His suff'rings, and our basen ss be bemoans:
And wishes (so may Heav'n his wish fulfil)
The due reward to him, who caus'd his ill.
Now he, with us to Troy's destruction sworn,
Our brother of the war, by whom are borne
Alcides' arrows, pant in narrow bounds,
With cold and hunger pinch'd, and pain'd with

wounds,

To find him food and clothing, must employ

Thus fights Ulysses, thus his tame extends,
A formidable man but to his friends:
Great, for what greatness is in words, and sound,
Ev'n faithful Nestor less in both is found:
But that he might without a rival ein,
He left this faithful Nestor on the plain;
Forsook his friend ev'n at his utmost need,
Who tir'd, and tardy with his wounded steed,
Cry'd out for aid, and cal'd him by his name;
But cowardice has neither ears nor shame;
Thus fled the good old man, bereft of and,
And, for as much as lay in him, betray'd:
That this is not a fable forg'd by me,
Like one of his, an Ulyssean lye,

I vouch ev'n Diomede, who though his friend,
Cannot that act excus, mach ess defend:
He call'd him back aloud, and tax'd his fear;
And sure enough he heard, but durst not hear.
"The gods with equal eyes on mortals look,
He justly was forsaken, who forsook:
Wanted that succour, he refus'd to lend,
Found ev'ry fe low such another friend:
No wonder, if he roar'd that all might hear;
His elocution was increas'd by fear:

I heard, I ran, I found him out of breath,
Pale, trembling, and haif-dead with fear of death.
Though he had judg'd himself by his own laws,
And stood condemn'd, I help'd the common cause;
With my broad buckler hid him from the foe;
(Ev'n the shield trembled as he lay below;)
And from impending fate the coward freed:
Good Heav'n forgive me for so bad a deed!
If still he will persist, and urge the strife,
First let him give me back his forfeit lite:
Let him return to that opprobrious field;
Again creep under my protecting shield:
Let him lie wounded, lot the foe be near,
And let his quiv'ring heart confess his fear;
There put him in the very jaws of fate;
And let him plead his cause in that estate:
And yet when snatch'd from death, when from
below

My lifted shield I loos'd, and let him go;
Good Heav'ns, how light he rose, with what a
bound

66

He sprung from earth, forgetful of his wound;
How fresh, how eager then his feet to ply:
Who had not strength to stand, had speed to fly!
Hector came on, and brought the gods along;
Fear seiz'd alike the feeble and the strong:
Each Greek was an Ulysses; such a dread
Th' approach, and ev'n the sound of Hector bred:
Him, flush'd with slaughter, and with conquest
crown'd,

I met, and over-turn'd him to the ground.

Against the birds the shafts due to the fate of W en after, matchless as he deem'd in might,

Troy.

Yet still he lives, and lives from treason free,

Because he left Ulysses' company;

Poor Palamede might wish, so void of aid
Rather to have been left, than so to death be-
- tray'd.

The coward bore the man immortal spite,
Who sham'd him out of madness into fight:
Nor daring otherwise to vent his hate,
Accus'd him first of treason to the state;
And then for proof produc'd the golden store,
Himself had hidden in his tent before:
Thus of two champions he depriv'd our host,
By exile one, and one by treason lost.

He challeng'd all our host to single fight;
All eyes were fix'd on me: the lots were thrown;
But for your champion I was wish'd alone:*
Your vows were heard; we fought, and neither

yield;

Yet I return'd unvanquish'd from the field.
With Jove to friend, th' insulting Trojan came,
And menac'd us with force, our fleet with flame.
Was it the strength of this tongue-valiant lord,
In that black hour, that sav'd you from the sword?
Or was my breast expos'd alone, to brave
A thousand swords, a thousand ships to save?
The hopes of your return! And can you yield,
For a sav'd fleet, less than a single shield?

Think it no boast, O Grecians, if I deem
These arms want Ajax, more than Ajax them:
Or, I with them an equal honour share;
They honour'd to be worn, and I to wear.
Will he compare my courage with his sleight?
As well he may compare the day with night.
Night is indeed the province of his reign:
Yet all his dark exploits no more contain
Than a spy taken, and a sleeper slain;
A priest made pris'ner, Pallas made a prey:
But none of all these actions done by day:
Nor aught of these was done, and Diomede away.
If ou such petty merits you confer

So vast a prize, let each his portion share:
Make a just dividend; and if not all,
'The greater part to Diomede will fall.
But why for Ithacus such arms as those,
Who naked, and by night invades his foes?
The glitt'ring helm by moonlight will proclaim
The latent robber, and prevent his game:
Nor could he hold his tott'ring head upright
Beneath that motion, or sustain the weight;
Nor that right arm could toss the beamy lance;
Much less the left that ampler shield advance,
Pond'rous with precious weight, and rough with

cost

Since great or small, the talent I enjoy'd
Was ever in the common cause employ'd;
Nor let my wit, and wonted eloquence,
Which often has been us'd in your defence,
And in my own, this only time be brought
To bear against myself, and deem'd a fault.
Make not a crime, where nature made it none;
For ev'ry man may freely use his own.
The deeds of long-descended ancestors
Are but by grace of imputation ours,
Theirs in effect; but since he draws his line
From Jove, and seems to plead a right divine;
From Jove, like him, I claim my pedigree,
And am descended in the same degree.
My sire Laertes was Arcesius' heir,
Arcesius was the son of Jupiter:
No parricide, no banish'd man, is known
In all my line: let him excuse his own.
Hermes ennobles too my mother's side,
By both my parents to the gods ally'd.
But not because that on the female part
My blood is better, dare I claim desert,
Or that my sire from parricide is free;
But judge by merit betwixt him and me:
The prize be to the best; provided yet
That Ajax for a while his kin forget,
And his great sire, and greater uncle's name,
To fortify by them his feeble claim;
Be kindred and relation laid aside,
And honour's cause by laws of honour try'd:
For if he plead proximity of blood,
That empty title is with ease withstood.
Peleus, the hero's sire, more nigh than he,
And Pyrrhus, bis undoubted progeny,
Inherit first these trophies of the field;
To Scyros, or to Pthia, send the shield:
And Teucer has an uncle's right; yet he

Of the round world in rising gold emboss'd.
That orb would ill become his hand to wield,
And look as for the gold he stole the shield;
Which, should your errour on the wretch bestow,
It would not frighten, but allure the foe:
Why asks he, what avails him not in fight,
And would but cumber, and retard his flight,
In which his only excellence is plac'd?
You give him death, that intercept his haste.
Add, that his own is yet a maiden-shield,
Nor the least dint has suffer'd in the field;
Guiltless of fight: mine batter'd, hew'd, and Waves his pretensions, nor contends with me.

bor'd,

Worn out of service, must forsake its lord.
What farther need of words our right to scan?
My arguments are deeds, let action speak the

man.

Since from a champion's arms the strife arose,
Go cast the glorious prize amid the foes;
Then send us to redeem both arms, and shield,
And let him wear, who wins them in the field."
He said: a murmur from a multitude,
Or somewhat like a stifled shout, ensu'd:
Till from his seat arose Laertes' son,
Look'd down awhile, and paus'd ere he begun;
Then, to th' expecting audience, rais'd his look,
And not without prepar'd attention spoke:
Soft was his tone, and sober was his face;
Action his words, and words his action grace.
'If Heav'n, my lords, had heard our common
pray'r,

66

These arms had caus'd no quarrel for an heir;
Still great Achilles had his own possess'd,
And we with great Achilles had been bless'd:
But since hard fate, and Heav'n's severe decree,
Have rayish'd him away from you, and me,"
(At this be sigh'd, and wip'd his eyes, and drew,
Or seem'd to draw, some drops of kindly dew)
"Who better can succeed Achilles lost,
Than he, who gave Achilles to your host?
This only I request, that neither be
May gain, by being what he seems to be,
A stupid thing; nor I may lose the prize,
By having sense, which Heav'n to him denies :

Then since the cause on pure desert is plac'd,
Whence shall I take my rise, what reckon last!
I not presume on ev'ry act to dwell,
But take these few in order as they fell.
"Thetis, who knew the fates, apply'd her

care

To keep Achilles in disguise from war;
And till the threat'ning influence was past,
A woman's habit on the hero cast:
All eyes were cozen'd by the borrow'd vest,
And Ajax (never wiser than the rest)
Found no Pelides there. At length 1 came
With proffer'd wares to this pretended dame;
She, not discover'd by her mien, or voice,
Betray'd her manhood by her manly choice;
And while on female toys her fellows look,
Grasp'd in her warlike hand, a javelin shook:
Whom, by this act reveal'd, I thus bespoke:
"O goddess-born! resist not Heav'n's decree,
The fall of Ilium is reserv'd for thee.'
Then seiz'd him, and produc'd in open light,
Sent blushing to the field the fatal knight.
Mine then are all his actions of the war;
Great Telephus was conquer'd by my spear,
And after cur'd: to me the Thebans owe,
Lesbos, and Tenedos, their overthrow;
Scyros and Cylla. Not on all to dwell,
By me Lyrnessus, and strong Chrysa fell:
And since I sent the man who Hector slew
To me the noble Hector's death is due.
Those arms I put into his living hand,
Those arms, Pelides dead, I now demand.

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"When Greece was injur'd in the Spartan prince, | And met at Aulis to avenge th' offence, 'Twas a dead calm, or adverse blasts, that reign'd, And in the port the wind-bound fleet detain'd: Bad signs were seen, and oracles severe Were daily thunder'd in our gen'ral's ear; That by his daughter's blood we must appease Diana's kindled wrath, and free the seas. Affection, int'rest, fame, his heart assail'd: But soon the father o'er the king prevail'd: Bold, on himself he took the pious crime, As angry with the gods, as they with him. No subject could sustain their sov'reign's look, Till this hard enterprise I undertook: I only durst th' imperial pow'r control, And undermin'd the parent in his soul; Forc'd him t' exert the king for common good, And pay our ransom with his daughter's blood. Never was cause more difficult to plead, Than where the judge against himself decreed: Yet this I won by dint of argument; The wrongs his injur'd brother underwent, And his own office, sham'd him to consent. "'Twas harder yet to move the mother's mind, And to this heavy task was 1 design'd: Reasons against her love I knew were vain; I circumvented whom I could not gain: Had Ajax been employ'd, our slacken'd sails Had still at Aulis waited happy gales. "Arriv'd at Troy, your choice was fix'd on me, A fearless envoy, fit for a bold embassy: Secure, I enter'd through the hostile court, Glitt'ring with steel, and crowded with resort: There, in the midst of arms, I plead our cause, Urge the foul rape, and violated laws; Accuse the foes, as authors of the strife, Reproach the ravisher, demand the wife. Priam, Antenor, and the wiser few, I mov'd; but Paris and his lawless crew Scarce held their hands, and lifted swords; but lu act to quench their impious thirst of blood: This Menelaus knows; expos'd to share With me the rough preludium of the war.

[stood

"Endless it were to tell what I have done, In arms, or council, since the siege begun : The first encounters past, the foe repell'd, They skulk'd within the town, we kept the field. War seem'd asleep for nine long years; at length, Both sides resolv'd to push, we try'd our strength. Now what did Ajax, while our arms took breath, Vers'd only in the gross mechanic trade of death? If you require my deeds, with ambush'd arms I trapp'd the foe, or tir'd with false alarms; Secur'd the ships, drew lines along the plain, The fainting cheer'd, chastis'd the rebel-train: Provided forage, our spent arms renew'd; Employ'd at home, or sent abroad, the common cause pursu❜d.

"The king, deluded in a dream by Jove, Despair'd to take the town, and order'd to re

move.

What subject durst arraign the pow'r supreme,
Producing Jove to justify his dream?
Ajax might wish the soldiers to retain
From shameful flight, but wishes were in vain:
As wanting of effect had been his words,
Such as of course his thund'ring tongue affords.
But did this boaster threaten, did he pray,
Or by his own example urge their stay?
None, none of these; but ran himself away,

I saw him run, and was asham'd to see;
Who ply'd his feet so fast to get aboard, as he?
Then speeding through the place, I made a stand,
And loudly cry'd, 'O base degenerate band,
To leave a town already in your hand!
After so long expense of blood, for fame,
To bring home nothing, but perpetual shame!'
These words, or what I have forgotten since,
(For grief inspir'd me then with eloquence)
Reduc'd their minds; they leave the crowded
And to their late forsaken camp resort. [port,
Dismay'd the council met: this man was there,
But mute, and not recover'd of his fear:
Thersites tax'd the king, and loudly rail'd,
But his wide-opening mouth with blows I seal'd.
Then, rising, I excite their souls to fame,
And kindle sleeping virtue into flame.
From thence, whatever he perform'd in fight
Is justly mine, who drew him back from flight.
"Which of the Grecian chiefs consorts with
But Diomede desires my company,
And still communicates his praise with me.
As guided by a god, secure he goes,
Arm'd with my fellowship, amid the foes:
And sure no little merit I may boast,
Whom such a man selects from such an host;
Unforc'd by lots I went without affright,
To dare with him the dangers of the night:
On the same errand sent, we met the spy
Of Hector, double-tongu'd, and us'd to lye;
Him I dispatch'd, but not till undermin'd,
I drew him first to tell what treach'rous Troy de-
sign'd:

[thee?

My task perform'd, with praise I had retir'd,
But not content with this, to greater praise aspir'd:
Invaded Rhesus, and his Thracian crew,

And him, and his, in their own strength I slew;
Return'd a victor, all my vows complete,
With the king's chariot, in his royal seat.
Refuse me now his arms, whose fiery steeds
Were promis'd to the spy for his nocturnal deeds:
And let dull Ajax bear away my right,
When all his days out-balance this one night.
"Nor fought I darkling still: the Sun beheld
With slaughter'd Lycians when I strew'd the
field:

You saw, and counted as I pass'd along,
Alastor, Chromius, Ceranos the strong,
Alcander, Prytanis, and Halius,
Neomon, Charopes, and Ennomus ;
Coon, Chersidamas; and five beside,
Men of obscure descent, but courage try'd:
All these this hand laid breathless on the ground;
Nor want I proofs of many a manly wound:
All honest, all before. Believe not me;
Words may deceive, but credit what you see."
At this he bar'd his breast, and show'd his

scars,

As of a furrow'd field, well plough'd with wars.
"Nor is this part unexercis'd," said he;
"That giant-bulk of his from wounds is free:
Safe in his shield he fears no foe to try,
And better manages his blood, than I:
But this avails me not; our boaster strove
Not with our foes alone, but partial Jove,
To save the fleet: this I confess is true,
(Nor will I take from any man his due :)
But thus assuming all, he robs from you.
Some part of honour to your share will fall,
He did the best indeed, but did not all,

Patroclus in Achilles' arms, and thought

The chief he seem'd, with equal ardour fought;
Preserv'd the fleet, repe l'd the raging fire,
And fored the fearful Trojans to retire.

"ut Ajax boasts, that he was only thought
A match for Hector, who the combat sought:
Sure he forgets the king, the chiefs, and me:
All were as eager for the fight, as he:
He but the ninth, and not by public voice,
Or ours preferr'd, was only Fortune's choice:
They fought; nor can our hero boast th' event,
For Hector from the field unwounded went.

"Why am I fore'd to name that fatal day, That snatch'd the prop and pride of Greece away? I saw Pelides sink, with pious grief, And ran in vain, alas! to his relief; For the brave soul was fled: full of my friend 1 rush'd amid the war, his relics to defend : Nor ceas'd my toil, till I redeem'd the prey, And, oaded with Achilles, march'd away: Those arms, which on these shoulders then I bore, 'Tis just you to these shoulders should restore. You see I want not nerves, who could sustain The pond rous ruins of so great a man: Or if in others equal force you find, None is endu'd with a more grateful mind.

"Did Thetis then, ambitious in her care, These arms thus labom'd for her son prepare; That Ajax after him the heav'nly gift should wear?

For that dull soul to stare, with stupid eyes,
On the learn'd unintelligible p.ize!
What are to him the sculptures of the shield,
Heav'n's planets, earth, and ocean's watry field?
The Pelads, Hyads; ess, and greater Bear,
Undipp'd in scas; Orion's angry star;
Two difl'ring cities, grav'd on either hand;
Would he wear arms he cannot understand?
"Beside, what wise objections he prepares
Against my late accession to the wars?
Does not the fool perceive his argument
1s with more force against Achilles bent?
For if dissembling be so great a crime,
The fault is common, and the same in him:
And if he taxes both of long delay,
My guilt is less, who sooner came away.
His pious mother, anxious for his life,
Detain'd her son; and me, my pious wife.
To them the blossoms of our youth were due,
Our riper manhood we reserv'd for you.
But grant me guilty, 'tis not much my care,
When with so great a man my guilt 1 share:
My wit to war the matchless hero brought,
But by this fool I never had been caught.
"Nor need I wonder, that on me he threw
Such foul aspersions, when he spares not you;
If Palamede unjustly fell by me,

Your honour suffer'd in th' unjust decree:
I but accus'd, you doom'd: and yet he dy'd
Convine'd of treason, and was fairly try'd:
You heard not he was false; your eyes beheld
The traitor manifest, the bribe reveal'd.

"That Philoctetes is on Lemnos left, Wounded, forlorn, of human aid bereft, Is not my crime, or not my crime alone; Defend your justice, for the fact's your own: 'Tis true, th' advice was mine; that staying

there

He might his weary limbs with rest repair,
From a long voyage free, and from a longer war.

He took the counsel, and he lives at least;
Th' event declares I counsel'd for the best:
Though faith is all in ministers of state:
For who can promise to be fortunate?
Now since his arrows are the fate of Troy,
Do not my wit, or weak address employ;
Send Ajax there, with his persuasive sense,
To mollify the man, and draw him thence:
But Xanthus shall run backward; Ida stand
A leatless mountain; and the Grecian band
Shall fight for Troy; if, when my counsel fail,
The wit of heavy Ajax can prevail.

"Hard Philoctetes, exercise thy spleen
Against thy fellows, and the king of men;
Curse my devoted head, above the rest,
And wish in arms to meet me breast to breast:
Yet I the dang'rous task will undertake,
And either die myself, or bring thee back.

"Nor doubt the same success, as when before The Phrygian prophet to these tents 1 bore, Surpris'd by night, and fore'd him to declare In what was p'ac'd the fortune of the war, Heav'n's dark decrees and answers to display, And how to take the town, and where the secret lay.

Yet this I compass'd, and from Troy convey'd
The fatal image of their guardian-maid :
That work was mine; for Pallas, though our
friend,

Yet while she was in Troy, did Troy defend.
Now what has Ajax done, or what design'd?
A noisy nothing, and an empty wind.
If he be what he promises in show,
Why was I sent, and why fear'd he to go?
Our boasting champion thought the task not light
To pass the guards, com t himself to night;
Not only through a hostile town to pass,
Bat scale, with steep ascent, the sacred place;
With wand'ring steps to search the citadel,
And from the priests their patroness to steal:
Then through surrounding foes to force my way,
And bear in triumph home the heav'nly prey;
Which had I not, Ajax in vain had held,

B fore that monstrous bulk, his sev'n-fold shield.
That night to conquer Troy I might be said,
When Troy was liable to conquest made.

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Why point'st thou to my partner of the war? Tydides had indeed a worthy share

In all my toil, and praise; but when thy might
Our ships protected, didst thou singly fight?
All join'd, and thou of many wert but one;
I ask'd no friend, nor had, but him alone:
Who had he not been well assur'd, that art
And conduct were of war the better part,
And more avail'd than strength, my valiant friend
Had urg'd a better right, thau Ajax can pretend;
As good at least Eurypylus may claim,
And the more mod'rate Ajax of the name:
The Cretan king, and his brave charioteer,
And Menelaus bold with sword and spear:
All these had been my rivals in the shield,
And yet all these to my pretensions yield.
Thy boist'rous hands are then of use, when I
With this directing head those hands apply.
Brawn without brain is thine: my prudent care
Foresees, provides, administers the war:
Thy province is to fight; but when shall be
The time to fight, the king consults with me.
No dram of judgment with thy force is join'd:
Thy body is of profit, and my mind,

By how much more the ship her safety owes To him who steers, than him that only rows; By how much more the captain merits praise, Than he who fights, and fighting but obeys; By so much greater is iny worth than thine, Who canst but execute, what I design. What gain'st thou, brutal man, if I confess Thy strength superior, when thy wit is less? Mind is the man: I claim my whole desert From the mind's vigour, and th' immortal part. "But you, O Grecian chiefs, reward my care, Be grateful to your watchman of the war: For all my labours in so long a space, Sure I may plead a title to your grace. Enter the town; I then unbarr'd the gates, When I remov'd their tutelary fates. By all our common hopes, if hopes they be Which I have now reduc'd to certainty; By falling Troy, by yonder tott'ring tow'rs, And by their taken gods, which now are ours; Or if there yet a farther task remains, To be perform'd by prudence, or by pains; If yet some desp'rate action rests behind, That asks high conduct, and a dauntless mind; If aught be wanting to the Trojan doom, Which none but I can manage, and o'ercome, Award, those arms I ask, by your decree: Or give to this, what you refuse to me."

He ceas'd: and ceasing with respect he bow'd, And with his hand at once the fatal statue show'd. Heav'n, air and ocean rung, with loud applause, And by the gen'ral vote he gain'd his cause. Thus conduct won the prize, when courage fail'd, And eloquence o'er brutal force prevail'd.

THE DEATH OF AJAX.

[he,

HE who could often, and alone, withstand
The foe, the fire, and Jove's own partial hand,
Now cannot his unmaster'd grief sustain,
But yields to rage, to madness, and disdain;
Then snatching out his falchion, "Thou," said
"Art mine; Ulysses lays no claim to thee.
O often try'd, and ever-trusty sword,
Now do thy last kind office to thy lord:
'Tis Ajax who requests thy aid, to show
None but himself, himself could overthrow :"
He said, and with so good a will to die,
Did to his breast the fatal point apply:
It found his heart, a way till then unknown,
Where never weapon enter'd, but his own.
No hands could force it thence, so fix'd it stood,
Till out it rush'd, expell'd by streams of spouting
blood.

The fruitful blood produc'd a flow'r, which grew
On a green stem; and of a purple hue:
Like his, whom unaware Apollo slew:
Inscrib'd in both, the letters are the same,
But those express the grief, and these the name.

THE STORY OF POLYXENA AND HECUBA,

By Mr. Temple Stanyan.

THE victor with full sails for Lemnos stood, (Once stain'd by matrons with their husbands' Thence great Alcides' fatal shafts to bear [blood, Assign'd to Philoctetes' secret care.

These with their guardian to the Greeks convey'd, Their ten years toil with wish'd success repaid. With Troy old Priam falls: his queen survives; Till all her woes complete, transform'd she grieves

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In borrow'd sounds, nor with an human face,
Barking trem ndous o'er the plains of Thrace.
Stil Ilium's flames their pointed columns raise,
And the red Hellespont reflects the blaze.
Shed on Jove's altar are the poor remains
Of blood, which trickled from old Priam's veins.
Cassandra lifts her hands to Heav'n in vain,
Dragg'd by her sacred hair; the trembling train
Of matrons to their burning temples fly:
There to their gods for kind protection cry;
And to their statues cling till forc'd away,
The victor Greeks bear off th' invidious prey.
From those high tow'rs, Astyanax is thrown,
Whence he was wont with pleasure to look down,
When oft his mother with a fond delight
Pointed to view his father's rage in fight,
To win renown, and guard his country's right.

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The winds now call to sea; brisk northern gales
Sing in the shrouds, and court the spreading sails.
Farewell, dear Troy," the captive matrons cry;
"Yes, we must leave our long-lov'd native sky."
Then prostrate on the shore they kiss the sand,
And quit the smoking ruins of the land.
Last Hecuba on board, sad sight! appears;
Found weeping o'er her children's sepulchres:
Drag'd by Ulysses from her slaughter'd sons,
Whilst yet she graspt their tombs, and kist their
mould'ring bones.

Yet Hector's ashes from his urn she bore,
And in her bosom the sad relic wore :
Then scatter'd on his tomb her hoary hairs,
A poor oblation mingled with her tears.

Oppos'd to Ilium lie the Thracian plains,
Where Polymnestor safe in plenty reigns.
King Priam to his care commits his son,
Young Polydore, the chance of war to shun.
A wise precaution! had not gold, consign'd
For the child's use, debauch'd the tyrant's mind.
When sinking Troy to its last period drew,
With impious hands his royal charge he slew;
Then in the sea the lifeless corse is thrown,
As with the body he the guilt could drown.

The Greeks now riding on the Thracian shore,
Till kinder gales invite, their vessels moor.
Here the wide-op'ning earth to sudden view
Disclos'd Achilles, great as when he drew
The vital air, but fierce with proud disdain,
As when he sought Briseïs to regain;
When stern debate, and rash injurious strife,
Unsheath'd his sword, to reach Atrides' life.
"And will ye go?" he said: " is then the name
Of the once great Achilles lost to fame?
Yet stay, ungrateful Greeks; nor let me sue
In vain for honours to my manes due.
For this just end, Polyxena I doom
With victim-rites to grace my slighted tomb."

The phantom spoke; the ready Greeks obey'd, And to the tomb led the devoted maid Snatch'd from her mother, who with pious care Cherish'd this last relief of her despair. Superior to her sex, the fearless maid Approach'd the altar, and around survey'd The cruel rites, and consecrated knife, Which Pyrrhus pointed at her guiltless life. Then, as with stern amaze intent he stood, "Now strike," she said; "now spill my gen'rous'

blood;

Deep in my breast, or throat, your dagger sheath,

Whilst thus I stand prepar'd to meet my death.

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