Simonides: Dirges for the victims of the impetuous War-God

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Anti-war essays, poems, short stories and literary excerpts
Greek and Roman writers on war and peace
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Simonides
Remains
Translated by J.M. Edmonds
We were slain in a glen of Dirphys, and the mound of our grave is made beside Euripus at our country’s charge, and rightly so; for by abiding the onset of the cruel cloud of war we lost our lovely time of youth.
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In these men’s breasts the impetuous War-God washed the long-pointed arrow with crimson drops, and instead of javelineers this dust shrouds the living memorials of corpses without life.
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Some one rejoices that I, Theodorus, am dead; another will rejoice over him; we are all debts due to Death.
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Since the day the sea parted Europe from Asia and the impetuous War-God first haunted the cities if mankind…This bow and its arrows that lie beneath the roof of Athena’s temple their lamentable warfare done…
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Rest so, thy fine long ash, against the tall pillar, abiding ever sacred to Zeus the Diviner; for thy bronze point is grown old and thy thyself art worn out with much wielding in dreadful war.

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