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        Iliad 10 523ff (Fagles, 
        p 291) 
        With 
        that, just as Dolon reached up for his chin 
        to cling with a frantic hand and beg for life,  
        Diomedes struck him square across the neck— 
        a flashing hack of the sword—both tendons snapped  
        and the shrieking head went tumbling in the dust.  
        They tore the weasel-cap from the head, stripped  
        the wolf pelt, the reflex bow and long tough spear 
        and swinging the trophies high to Pallas queen of plunder,  
        exultant royal Odysseus shouted out this prayer:  
        "Here, Goddess, rejoice in these, they're yours!  
        You are the first of all the gods we'll call!  
        Now guide us again, Athena, guide us against  
        that Thracian camp and horses!" 
                                                          So Odysseus prayed 
        and hoisting the spoils over his head, heaved them  
        onto a tamarisk bush nearby and against it heaped  
        a good clear landmark, clumping together reeds  
        and fresh tamarisk boughs they'd never miss  
        as they ran back through the rushing dark night. 
        On they stalked through armor and black pools of blood  
        and suddenly reached their goal, the Thracian outpost.  
        The troops were sleeping, weary from pitching camp,  
        their weapons piled beside them on the ground,  
        three neat rows of the burnished well-kept arms  
        and beside each man his pair of battle-horses.  
        Right in the midst lay Rhesus dead asleep,  
        his white racers beside him, strapped by thongs  
        to his chariot's outer rail. Spotting him first  
        Odysseus quickly pointed him out to Diomedes:  
        "Look, here's our man, here are his horses.  
        The ones marked out by the rascal we just killed.  
        On with it now—show us your strength, full force.  
        Don't just stand there, useless with your weapons.  
        Loose those horses—or you go kill the men  
        and leave the team to me!" 
                                                          Athena, eyes blazing, 
        breathed fury in Diomedes and he went whirling  
        into the slaughter now, hacking left and right 
        and hideous groans broke from the dying Thracians  
        slashed by the sword-the ground ran red with blood.  
        As a lion springs on flocks unguarded, shepherd gone,  
        pouncing on goats or sheep and claw-mad for the kill,  
        so Tydeus' son went tearing into that Thracian camp  
        until he'd butchered twelve. Each man he'd stand above  
        and chop with the sword, the cool tactician Odysseus  
        grappled from behind, grabbing the fighter's heels,  
        dragging him out of the way with one thought in mind:  
        that team with their flowing manes must get through fast,  
        not quake at heart and balk, trampling over the dead,  
        those purebred horses still not used to corpses.  
        But now the son of Tydeus came upon the king,  
        the thirteenth man, and ripped away his life, 
        his sweet life as he lay there breathing hard. 
        A nightmare hovered above his head that night— 
        Diomedes himself! sped by Athena's battle-plan— 
        while staunch Odysseus loosed the stamping horses,  
        hitched them together tight with their own reins  
        and drove them through the nick,  
        lashing them with his bow: he forgot to snatch  
        the shining whip that lay in the well-wrought car.  
        He whistled shrill, his signal to rugged Diomedes  
        pausing, deep in thought . . . what was the worst,  
        most brazen thing he could do? Seize the car  
        where the handsome armor lay and pull it out  
        by the pole or prize it up, bodily, haul it off— 
        or tear the life from still more Thracian troops?  
        His mind swarming with all this, Pallas Athena  
        swept to his side and cautioned Diomedes, "Back— 
        think only of getting back, great son of Tydeus!  
        Back to the ships, quick, or you'll run for your life! 
        Some other god—who knows?—may wake the Trojans." 
        
          
        
              The goddess' 
        voice—he knew it, mounted at once 
        as Odysseus whacked the stallions smartly with his bow  
        and they made a run for Achaea's rapid ships. 
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