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his cuirass of bronze did not protect him, and the spear stuck in<br />

his belly. He fell gasping from his chariot and Antilochus great Nestor's<br />

son, drove his horses from the Trojans to the Achaeans.<br />

Deiphobus then came close up to Idomeneus to avenge Asius, and took<br />

aim at him with a spear, but Idomeneus was on the look-­‐out and avoided<br />

it, <strong>for</strong> he was covered <strong>by</strong> the round shield he always bore-­‐ a shield<br />

of oxhide and bronze with two arm-­‐rods on the inside. He crouched<br />

under cover of this, and the spear flew over him, but the shield rang<br />

out as the spear grazed it, and the weapon sped not in vain from the<br />

strong hand of Deiphobus, <strong>for</strong> it struck Hypsenor son of Hippasus,<br />

shepherd of his people, in the liver under the midriff, and his limbs<br />

failed beneath him. Deiphobus vaunted over him and cried with a loud<br />

voice saying, "Of a truth Asius has not fallen unavenied; he will<br />

be glad even while passing into the house of Hades, strong warden<br />

of the gate, that I have sent some one to escort him."<br />

Thus did he vaunt, and the Argives were stung <strong>by</strong> his saying. Noble<br />

Antilochus was more angry than any one, but grief did not make him<br />

<strong>for</strong>get his friend and comrade. He ran up to him, bestrode him, and<br />

covered him with his shield; then two of his staunch comrades, Mecisteus<br />

son of Echius, and Alastor stooped down, and bore him away groaning<br />

heavily to the ships. But Idomeneus ceased not his fury. He kept on<br />

striving continually either to enshroud some Trojan in the darkness<br />

of death, or himself to fall while warding off the evil day from the<br />

Achaeans. <strong>The</strong>n fell Alcathous son of noble Aesyetes: he was son-­‐in-­‐law<br />

to Anchises, having married his eldest daughter Hippodameia who was<br />

the darling of her father and mother, and excelled all her generation

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