This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

Erynnes the Furies flagellate the minds of men because of perpetrated crimes 102.30
Eurypylus is struck by an arrow from Alexander Paris 128.50
Euchenor the Corinthian is pierced by a weapon from Paris 154.45
Eurybates 7.11
Exadius 6.10
The method of striking a treaty 34.12
Jupiter does not help those who break treaties 40.11
To mourn a funeral is a gift that can be given to the dead 261.11
Ganymedes, snatched by the gods to be the cupbearer of Jove 237.28
Genealogy of Glaucus 67.29
Glaucus is wounded by Teucer 140.55
Glaucus urges the Trojans to fight for the corpse of the faithful Sarpedon, so it does not become prey for the Myrmidons 191.7
Glaucus rebukes Hector for not being concerned with his own affairs, and for being ungrateful toward his allies 200.18
The Greeks are purified 7.4
The Greeks come to the assembly 14.1
The Greeks and Trojans strike a treaty 34.1
The Greeks engage in battle with the Trojans 46.1
The Greeks do not flee, but retreat 66.47
The Greeks pour out prayers to Jove so that Hector does not slay them 78.20
The Greeks break ranks by their own virtue 119.54
The Greeks strip all those they kill of the Trojans, but the Trojans strip none of the Greeks 137.28
The Greeks are compared to consuming fire 12.99
The Greeks receive strength while Jove is sleeping, and attack the Trojans with great force 164.47
The Greeks, seeing Hector again, are very saddened and prepare themselves for flight 172.2
The Greeks inform Achilles of the death of Patroclus, so that he may avenge his death after they cannot sustain the attack of Hector 209.10
The first meeting of the Greeks and Trojans 29.1
The affairs of the Greeks in battle are set on a razor's edge 110.32
The desperate flight of the Greeks 90.1, 94.10
Equestrian battle of the Greeks 267.16 and following
A great plague invaded the Greeks, and for what cause 1.2
Homer indeed raises the Greeks to the heavens with praises for how bravely they fought against the Trojans, but at last flight closes their bravery 201.40
Haliartos, grassy 22.6
Harpalion attacks Menelaus, and is killed by Meriones 154.26
No one besides Achilles himself could move the spear of Achilles 230.22
Hecabe prays to Hector by the breasts which she suckled that he should retreat to safety, but she accomplishes nothing 253.30
The miserable mourning and lamentation of Hecabe and Andromache, the wife of Hector, for Hector killed 259.50
Hecamede, daughter of Arsinous, given to Nestor for the excellence of his counsel 129.37
Description of the hecatombs performed at the priest Chrysa 9.28
Hector rebukes Alexander 30.1
Hector is rebuked by Sarpedon 56.37
Hector kills Menesthes and Anchialus 59.10
Hector slaughters many of the Greeks 60.30
Hector again incites the fleeing Trojans to war 66.50
Hector urges his mother to sacrifice to Minerva for the turning away of Diomedes 69.38
Hector foresaw his own fate, recounting to his wife all that was about to happen 73.1
Hector is mourned while still living in his own house 73.54 (90.12)
Hector has gorgon-like eyes
Hector, anxious about his own affairs, sends Dolon to scout what is happening in the camp of the Greeks 112.48
Hector is laid low by Diomedes 124.44
Hector fights with Nestor and Idomeneus 127.26
Hector gains possession of the Greek fortification 141.50
Hector is compared to a stone carried by a torrent 145.14
Hector, against the will of all the Greeks, tears and breaks through their fortifications, and penetrates to the ships to throw fire 155.6
Wherever Hector steps, there is victory and the defense of his own 157.8
Hector indeed threw a weapon at Ajax, but Homer weakened it so that it harmed him very little 165.30
Hector pursues the fleeing Greeks all the way to the ships 174.14
Hector forces the Greeks into such desperation of salvation that they stretch out their hands to the gods as suppliants 174.45
Hector again attacks Ajax, and they fight most bitterly around a certain ship 175.28
Hector urges his men to fight strenuously, even if they must die, nor is any kind of death more honorable than to die for the fatherland 176.42
Hector cuts the spear of Ajax with his sword, and forces this Barbarian into flight 183.45
Hector puts on the armor of Achilles, and warns all his men to rush with him into the enemies, to bring back glory or death 201.20
Hector, in strength and impetus, is like a flame and is compared to a lion 414.37
Hector looks with a stern gaze at Polydamas, who is persuading the Trojans to retreat into the city 217.2
Hector's [catchword]