[The Iliad by Homer]@TWC D-Link bookThe Iliad BOOK XI 11/32
These they let lie, now that they had stopped their fighting; the two heroes then went on playing havoc with the foe, like two wild boars that turn in fury and rend the hounds that hunt them.
Thus did they turn upon the Trojans and slay them, and the Achaeans were thankful to have breathing time in their flight from Hector. They then took two princes with their chariot, the two sons of Merops of Percote, who excelled all others in the arts of divination.
He had forbidden his sons to go to the war, but they would not obey him, for fate lured them to their fall.
Diomed son of Tydeus slew them both and stripped them of their armour, while Ulysses killed Hippodamus and Hypeirochus. And now the son of Saturn as he looked down from Ida ordained that neither side should have the advantage, and they kept on killing one another.
The son of Tydeus speared Agastrophus son of Paeon in the hip-joint with his spear.
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