A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers by Henry David Thoreau
page 98 of 428 (22%)
page 98 of 428 (22%)
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the shore of the resounding sea. Nestor's account of the march
of the Pylians against the Epeians is extremely lifelike:-- "Then rose up to them sweet-worded Nestor, the shrill orator of the Pylians, And words sweeter than honey flowed from his tongue." This time, however, he addresses Patroclus alone: "A certain river, Minyas by name, leaps seaward near to Arene, where we Pylians wait the dawn, both horse and foot. Thence with all haste we sped us on the morrow ere 't was noonday, accoutred for the fight, even to Alpheus's sacred source," &c. We fancy that we hear the subdued murmuring of the Minyas discharging its waters into the main the livelong night, and the hollow sound of the waves breaking on the shore,--until at length we are cheered at the close of a toilsome march by the gurgling fountains of Alpheus. There are few books which are fit to be remembered in our wisest hours, but the Iliad is brightest in the serenest days, and embodies still all the sunlight that fell on Asia Minor. No modern joy or ecstasy of ours can lower its height or dim its lustre, but there it lies in the east of literature, as it were the earliest and latest production of the mind. The ruins of Egypt oppress and stifle us with their dust, foulness preserved in cassia and pitch, and swathed in linen; the death of that which never lived. But the rays of Greek poetry struggle down to us, and mingle with the sunbeams of the recent day. The statue of Memnon is cast down, but the shaft of the Iliad still meets the sun in his rising. |
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