[The Aeneid of Virgil by Virgil]@TWC D-Link book
The Aeneid of Virgil

BOOK TEN
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Slipped in, and checked him.

Onward press the train With shouts, to shelter the retreating sire, And distant arrows on the foeman rain.
Safe-covered stands AEneas, thrilled with ire.
As when the storm-clouds in a deluge dire Pour down the hail, and all the ploughmen fly, And scattered hinds from off the fields retire, And rock or stream-side shields the passer-by, Till sunshine calls to toil, and reawakes the sky; CIX.

So, whelmed with darts, the Trojan chief defies The cloud of war, till all its storms abate, And chides and threatens Lausus.

"Fool," he cries, "Why rush to death, and dare a deed too great?
Rash youth! thy love betrays thee." 'Twas too late; Rage blinds poor Lausus, and he scorns to stay.
Then fiercer waxed the Dardan's wrath, and Fate The threads had gathered, for their forceful sway Hilt-deep within his breast the falchion urged its way.
CX.

It pierced the shield, light armour and the vest, Wrought by his mother with fine golden thread, And drenched with gore the tunic and the breast.
Sweet life, departing, left the limbs outspread, And the sad spirit to the ghost-world fled.
But when the son of great Anchises scanned The face, the pallid features of the dead, Deeply he groaned, and stretched a pitying hand.
Grief for his own dear sire his noble soul unmanned.
CXI.


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