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The Young Astyanax, The Hope Of Troy.
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The young Astyanax, the hope of Troy.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
-- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 467
Related:
To hide their ignominious heads in Troy.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book xiv, Line 170...
Andromache! my soul's far better part.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 624...
He held his seat,--a friend to human race.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 18...
Inflaming wine, pernicious to mankind.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 330...
If yet not lost to all the sense of shame.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 350...
T is man's to fight, but Heaven's to give success.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 427...
Like strength is felt from hope and from despair.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book xv, Line 852...
Yet while my Hector still survives, I see My father, mother, brethren, all, in thee.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book vi, Line 544...
Achilles absent was Achilles still.
-- Alexander Pope (1688-1744) -- The Iliad of Homer, Book xxii, Line 418...