[The Iliad by Homer]@TWC D-Link book
The Iliad

BOOK XI
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Achilles saw and took note, for he was standing on the stern of his ship watching the hard stress and struggle of the fight.

He called from the ship to his comrade Patroclus, who heard him in the tent and came out looking like Mars himself--here indeed was the beginning of the ill that presently befell him.

"Why," said he, "Achilles, do you call me?
What do you want with me ?" And Achilles answered, "Noble son of Menoetius, man after my own heart, I take it that I shall now have the Achaeans praying at my knees, for they are in great straits; go, Patroclus, and ask Nestor who it is that he is bearing away wounded from the field; from his back I should say it was Machaon son of Aesculapius, but I could not see his face for the horses went by me at full speed." Patroclus did as his dear comrade had bidden him, and set off running by the ships and tents of the Achaeans.
When Nestor and Machaon had reached the tents of the son of Neleus, they dismounted, and an esquire, Eurymedon, took the horses from the chariot.

The pair then stood in the breeze by the seaside to dry the sweat from their shirts, and when they had so done they came inside and took their seats.

Fair Hecamede, whom Nestor had had awarded to him from Tenedos when Achilles took it, mixed them a mess; she was daughter of wise Arsinous, and the Achaeans had given her to Nestor because he excelled all of them in counsel.


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