â Oesing, Goddess, Of The Wrath Of PÄleðsâ (tm) Son Akhilleðs, The Accursed Wrath That Caused AkhaÃ-ans Countless Woes And Hurled Headlong To HÄ á, ̄dÄs A Host Of Heroesâ (tm) Souls And Left Their Bodies Spoil For Dogs And All The Birds Of Carrion. The Will Of Zeðs Was Brought To Pass From When AgamÃ(c)mnÅ N, The Lord Of Men, Opposed The Consummate Akhilleðs. Which God Was It That Set The Two At Odds?â So Begins The à Liad, Homerâ (tm)s Epic Song About The Invasion Of Troy By A Force Of Greeks Led By AgamÃ(c)mnÅ N, King Of Myká, --nÄ. They Are Seeking Revenge For The Abduction From SpàrtÄ Of HelÃ(c)nÄ, The Most Beautiful Woman On Earth, By Pàris, Prince Of Troy. The Walls Of Troy Seem To Be Impregnable And The Fortunes Of The Greeks Are Further Set Back When Their Greatest Warrior, The Fleet-of-foot Akhilleðs, Falls Out With King AgamÃ(c)mnÅ N And Withdraws From The Battle. The à Liad Recounts What Happens In The Next Fifty Days At The Beginning Of The Tenth And Final Year Of The War. By The End Of This First Volume, The Fortunes Of The Greeks Are At A Low Ebb. The Trojans Are Storming The Argive Wall And Breach It To Pour Through And Fight Close To The Ships, Though Akhilleus Still Refuses To Join The Battle. This New Translation Adheres Closely To The Original Text, Rendering It In Iambic Pentameter, With Attention To The Dramatic Similes Characteristic Of Homer. A Detailed Introduction Is Provided Together With Notes For Books I-xii.
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