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The Iliad 24.425–431

The Iliad 24.425–431
My child, a good thing is it in sooth e'en to give to the immortals such gifts as be due; for never did my son—as sure as ever such a one there was—forget in our halls the gods that hold Olympus; wherefore they have remembered this for him, even though he be in the doom of death. But come, take thou from me this fair goblet,and guard me myself, and guide me with the speeding of the gods, until I be come unto the hut of the son of Peleus. And again the messenger, Argeiphontes, spake to him: Thou dost make trial of me, old sire, that am younger than thou; but thou shalt not prevail upon me, seeing thou biddest me take gifts from thee while Achilles knoweth naught thereof.Of him have I fear and awe at heart, that I should defraud him, lest haply some evil befall me hereafter. Howbeit as thy guide would I go even unto glorious Argos, attending thee with kindly care in a swift ship or on foot; nor would any man make light of thy guide and set upon thee. and guard me myself, and guide me with the speeding of the gods, until I be come unto the hut of the son of Peleus.
τέκος, ῥʼ ἀγαθὸν καὶ ἐναίσιμα δῶρα διδοῦναι ἀθανάτοις, ἐπεὶ οὔ ποτʼ ἐμὸς πάϊς, εἴ ποτʼ ἔην γε, λήθετʼ ἐνὶ μεγάροισι θεῶν οἳ Ὄλυμπον ἔχουσι· τώ οἱ ἀπεμνήσαντο καὶ ἐν θανάτοιό περ αἴσῃ. ἀλλʼ ἄγε δὴ τόδε δέξαι ἐμεῦ πάρα καλὸν ἄλεισον, αὐτόν τε ῥῦσαι, πέμψον δέ με σύν γε θεοῖσιν, ὄφρά κεν ἐς κλισίην Πηληϊάδεω ἀφίκωμαι.
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