"Briseis, fair as golden Venus, saw Patroclus lying, pierced with mortal wounds, Within the tent; and with a bitter cry, She flung her down upon the corpse, and tore Her breast, her delicate neck, and beauteous cheeks; And, weeping, thus the lovely woman wailed: âPatroclus, dearly loved of this sad heart! When last I left this tent, I left thee full Of healthy life; returning now, I find Only thy lifeless corpse, thou Prince of men! So sorrow still, on sorrow heaped, I bear. The husband of my youth, to whom my sire And honoured mother gave me, I beheld Slain with the sword before the city walls: Three brothers, whom with me one mother bore, My dearly loved ones, all were doomed to death: Nor wouldst thou, when Achilles swift of foot My husband slew, and royal MynĂȘsâ town In ruin laid, allow my tears to flow; But thou wouldst make me (such was still thy speech) The wedded wife of PĂȘleusâ godlike son: Thou wouldst to Phthia bear me in thy ship, And there, thyself, amid the Myrmidons, Wouldst give my marriage feast; then, unconsoled, I weep thy death, my ever-gentle friend!â Weeping, she spoke; the women joined her wail: Patroclusâ death the pretext for their tears, But each in secret wept her private griefs."
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Lord Derby, tr., The Iliad of Homer (1864)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Briseis
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Briseis
Briseis (Ancient Greek: ÎÏÎčÏÎ·ÎŻÏ BrÄ«sÄĂs, 'daughter of Briseus'), also known as Hippodameia (áŒčÏÏÎżÎŽÎŹÎŒÎ”Îčα HippodĂĄmeia), is a significant character in the Iliad. Her role as a status symbol is at the heart of the dispute between Achilles and Agamemnon that initiates the plot of Homer's epic. She was married to Mynes, a son of the Ki
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