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He spake, and thrust
Peisander from his chariot to the ground, smiting him with his spear upon the breast, and backward was he hurled upon the earth. But Hippolochus leapt down, and him he slew upon the ground, and shearing off his arms with the sword, and striking off his head, sent him rolling,
98:. His two sons lord Agamemnon took, the twain being in one car, and together were they seeking to drive the swift horses, for the shining reins had slipped from their hands, and the two horses were running wild; but he rushed against them like a lion, the son of
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So with weeping the twain spake unto the king with gentle words, but all ungentle was the voice they heard: “If ye are verily the sons of wise-hearted
Antimachus, who on a time in the gathering of the Trojans, when Menelaus had come on an embassage with godlike
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like a round stone, amid the throng. These then he let be, but where chiefly the battalions were being driven in rout, there leapt he in, and with him other well-greaved
Achaeans.
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114:, bade slay him then and there, neither suffer him to return to the Achaeans, now of a surety shall ye pay the price of your father's foul outrage.”
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with an
English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924.
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for mercy and to be taken prisoner alive, saying that their rich father would pay a ransom for him. They were nevertheless slain by
Agamemnon.
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translated by Way. A. S. Loeb
Classical Library Volume 19. London: William Heinemann, 1913.
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in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford
University Press. 1920.
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Greek text available at the
Perseus Digital Library
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72:Trojan War
48:Antimachus
205:The Iliad
76:Agamemnon
66:Mythology
60:Tisiphone
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