Tine Dailey

Friedrich von Castellum
Fraune, Kantos, Sotirios, Arsinoe, Drapetos
Diphonas
and Varias

Hermetis, Anthonis, Iphigenia, Tyndare, Minos, Memnon, Aegüe, Hali, Artemis, Danae, Demetriges, Hippodamas, Ares, Philetas, Philetus, Hypaios, Agenor, Heracles, Cassandra, Venus, Hermes, Nausea, Phallis, Terpsichore

Larissa.

Dinotis, Demodocus, Zeus, Atlas, Orestes, Gorathos, Bacchylides, Hygieia, Korai, Poseidon, Eos, Hypereia, Lychnos, Medaros, Xuthus, Polina, Maia, Arion, Diomedes, Jason, Antilochos

Patrokles, Phoebus, Demeter, Agenor, Hera, Hermes, Aphrodite, Athene, Artemis, Demeter, Pallas, Artemis, Hera, Ares, Orpheus, Triton, Penelopes, Elymus, Megalopolis, Asterion, Aglion, Cyrene, Aglophila, Aglias, Hyosander, Kleopsandros.

(Names added from an earlier manuscript.)

Iliad 7

As I draw near the city of Troy I am stopped by the shouts of my men as they chant a hymn before I enter. My head upraised and my lads scattering to the right and left as I advance I urge them to obey my command, that the town of Troy may fall into my hands.

As I draw close the walls to the gate creak on the great stone, as it is called, which stands by the gateway, and the sounds of men from within and from without which descend, the shields that line the gateway, the long spears of the veterans of war, the huge city gate itself as if it were the base of a lofty battering-ram, all speak of this country and of the city of Troy.