Hector
My brother, quickly now, give me your spear, for mine is lost and I have failed my throw— not wholly, though. I struck his shield there, near where Death is figured, dragging men below. Give me a spear, and I’ll fend off this woe and pierce the glorious shield through even Death— Why should I tremble as if struck myself? But keep your eyes upon him—steady now. Achilles takes his aim; the spear he wields as sturdy as Zeus-Father’s oak-tree bough, him by whose will we conquer or we yield. Take cover now beneath your well-wrought shield! God smiles on us: Achilles’ spear flew wide, and now beneath his figured shield he hides. That image burns me, as a star on earth, a light that pierces when I close my eyes: The end of all things, sorrow same as mirth, an omen like the vulture as it flies, but for Achilles’ fall, or my own rise? Give me a spear, Deïphobus, now you must! Or by Death’s hand we shall be dragged in dust. Where are you, brother? Coward, have you flown? Yet all this time how strange you’ve made no noise, and in the dirt no footprints but my own. How long have I heard only my own voice? How many years the Argives will rejoice, and in Achilles’ hand again the spear that fell behind me. Oh, some god is near! Athena, by my guess. The aegis shakes, and on that shield divine Medusa’s head has stopped my blood. My heart no longer quakes. I will call no man happy ‘til he’s dead and walks no more between content and dread on either hand, and falls as gods decree. I fall today. Let there still honor be. Hear me, you gods swift-footed and fleet-winged that baffle eyes of men and daze their sense. I stand a king’s son who would yet be kinged but for your will. Grant me this recompense: Let it be known that I in Troy’s defense was ever first in battle and in fame. Let men in future songs still speak my name. But for myself, I go down to the shades. I will not fight your word. All men must die until of something else than earth we’re made. As it is now, our spirits ever fly; this I accept. But know I, Hector, I have heard you promise lies. If god deceives, he should watch out, for thieves are robbed by thieves. Know there will come a day when Zeus shall fall, and greater than Achilles’ fall is great his plummet from the heights shall shake us all. Not even gods escape the hand of fate. From Hades, then, that time I shall await when something rises greater than your might. But now I take my sword in hand and fight.



As a man aches for his evening meal when all day long his brace of wine-dark oxen have dragged the bolted plowshare down a fallow field—how welcome the setting sun to him, the going home to supper, yes, though his knees buckle, struggling home at last. – Homer
"Give me a spear, and I’ll fend off this woe
and pierce the glorious shield through even Death—"
Oh I love that image. Beautiful foreshadowing.