Homer (Disputed - c 850 B.C.E. / Disputed)
Poems of Homer
| 1. | The Iliad (bk I) | 1/1/2004 |
| 2. | The Iliad: Book 1 | 1/13/2003 |
| 3. | The Iliad: Book 10 | 1/13/2003 |
| 4. | The Iliad: Book 11 | 1/13/2003 |
| 5. | The Iliad: Book 12 | 1/13/2003 |
| 6. | The Iliad: Book 13 | 1/13/2003 |
| 7. | The Iliad: Book 14 | 1/13/2003 |
| 8. | The Iliad: Book 15 | 1/13/2003 |
| 9. | The Iliad: Book 16 | 1/13/2003 |
| 10. | The Iliad: Book 17 | 1/13/2003 |
| 11. | The Iliad: Book 18 | 1/13/2003 |
| 12. | The Iliad: Book 19 | 1/13/2003 |
| 13. | The Iliad: Book 2 | 1/13/2003 |
| 14. | The Iliad: Book 20 | 1/13/2003 |
| 15. | The Iliad: Book 21 | 1/13/2003 |
| 16. | The Iliad: Book 22 | 1/13/2003 |
| 17. | The Iliad: Book 23 | 1/13/2003 |
| 18. | The Iliad: Book 24 | 1/13/2003 |
| 19. | The Iliad: Book 3 | 1/13/2003 |
| 20. | The Iliad: Book 4 | 1/13/2003 |
Page :
The Iliad: Book 12
So the son of Menoetius was attending to the hurt of Eurypylus
within the tent, but the Argives and Trojans still fought desperately,
nor were the trench and the high wall above it, to keep the Trojans in
check longer. They had built it to protect their ships, and had dug
the trench all round it that it might safeguard both the ships and the
rich spoils which they had taken, but they had not offered hecatombs
to the gods. It had been built without the consent of the immortals,
and therefo
