        item: #1 of 8
          id: 10096
      author: Euripides
       title: The Trojan women of Euripides
        date: None
       words: 18945
      flesch: 91
     summary: Zeus shall send rain, long rain and flaw of driven Hail, and a whirling darkness blown from heaven; To me his levin-light he promiseth O'er ships and men, for scourging and hot death: Do thou make wild the roads of the sea, and steep With war of waves and yawning of the deep, Till dead men choke Euboea's curling bay. They were great things to thee!...
    keywords: andromache; child; dead; death; fire; god; greek; hand; hath; heart; hecuba; helen; king; love; men; talthybius; thee; thou; thy; troy; war; woe; woman
       cache: 10096.txt
  plain text: 10096.txt

        item: #2 of 8
          id: 1973
      author: Lang, Andrew
       title: Tales of Troy: Ulysses, the Sacker of Cities
        date: None
       words: 32301
      flesch: 78
     summary: I am very angry with many men and women in the world, said Autolycus, so let the child's name be _A Man of Wrath_, which, in Greek, was Odysseus. The horses of Achilles cleared the ditch, and Patroclus drove them between the Trojans and the wall of their own town, slaying many men, and, chief of all, Sarpedon, king of the Lycians; and round the body of Sarpedon the Trojans rallied under Hector, and the fight swayed this way and that, and there was such a noise of spears and swords smiting shields and helmets as when many woodcutters fell trees in a glen of the hills.
    keywords: achilles; agamemnon; aias; armour; battle; dead; diomede; fight; great; greeks; hector; helen; king; man; men; menelaus; paris; patroclus; ships; spear; trojans; troy; ulysses
       cache: 1973.txt
  plain text: 1973.txt

        item: #3 of 8
          id: 257
      author: Chaucer, Geoffrey
       title: Troilus and Criseyde
        date: None
       words: 69930
      flesch: 91
     summary: Ful dredfully tho gan she stonde stille, And took it nought, but al hir humble chere Gan for to chaunge, and seyde, `Scrit ne bille, 1130 Eleyne, in al hir goodly softe wyse, Gan him saluwe, and womanly to pleye, And seyde, `Ywis, ye moste alweyes aryse!
    keywords: al hir; al myn; al thy; allas; alle; alwey; anoon; ben; beste; bet; bothe; cause; chere; come; criseyde; day; deeth; dere; doon; doun; drede; eek; faste; fere; folk; forth; fro; ful; gan; gan hir; god; good; goon; grace; hadde; hath; hem; herte; hir; hir herte; ioye; lady; lat; leve; list; longe; lord; love; lyf; man; men; mighte; myn; myn herte; nece; newe; nought; ofte; outen; owene; pandare; pandarus; peyne; quod; right; self; seyde; seyn; shal; sholde; sin; som; sone; sorwe; swich; telle; thee; ther; thing; thou; thoughte; thy; thyn; til; toun; troilus; trouthe; troye; tyme; wel; wente; whan; wher; wis; wol; wolde; woot; word; wordes; wyse; yow
       cache: 257.txt
  plain text: 257.txt

        item: #4 of 8
          id: 32326
      author: Lang, Andrew
       title: Tales of Troy and Greece
        date: None
       words: 94131
      flesch: 82
     summary: To other men, no doubt, they would have offered other pleasures. 'I am very angry with many men and women in the world,' said Autolycus, 'so let the child's name be _A Man of Wrath_,' which, in Greek, was Odysseus.
    keywords: achilles; agamemnon; beautiful; day; dead; father; gods; gold; great; greeks; hand; head; heart; hector; helen; home; house; king; left; man; men; menelaus; mother; night; paris; people; perseus; round; saw; sea; set; ship; son; spear; sword; telemachus; theseus; thought; trojans; troy; ulysses; water; way
       cache: 32326.txt
  plain text: 32326.txt

        item: #5 of 8
          id: 35171
      author: Euripides
       title: The Trojan Women of Euripides
        date: None
       words: 18835
      flesch: 92
     summary: Zeus shall send rain, long rain and flaw of driven Hail, and a whirling darkness blown from heaven; To me his levin-light he promiseth O'er ships and men, for scourging and hot death: Do thou make wild the roads of the sea, and steep With war of waves and yawning of the deep, Till dead men choke Euboea's curling bay. [_He moves as though to go, but turns to_ HECUBA, _and speaks more gently_.
    keywords: andromache; child; dead; death; god; greek; hand; hath; heart; hecuba; helen; king; love; men; talthybius; thee; thou; thy; troy; war; woe; woman
       cache: 35171.txt
  plain text: 35171.txt

        item: #6 of 8
          id: 60871
      author: Farmer, Philip José
       title: Heel
        date: None
       words: 5582
      flesch: 92
     summary: * * It was then Apollo projected fury into Hector so that he turned to battle the man he thought was Achilles. Apollo, invisible behind him, would shoot the arrow that would strike Achilles' foot if Paris' arrow bounced off the force field.
    keywords: achilles; apollo; director; patroclos; script; thetis; trojans
       cache: 60871.txt
  plain text: 60871.txt

        item: #7 of 8
          id: 658
      author: Quintus, Smyrnaeus, active 4th century
       title: The Fall of Troy
        date: None
       words: 81426
      flesch: 79
     summary: Still clashed the grappling hosts, Man slaying man: aye bloodier waxed the fray As rained the blows: corpse upon corpse was flung Confusedly, like thunder-drops, or flakes Of snow, or hailstones, by the wintry blast At Zeus' behest strewn over the long hills And forest-boughs; so by a pitiless doom Slain, friends with foes in heaps on heaps were strown. So man slew man in fight; but more than all Eurypylus hurled doom on many a foe.
    keywords: achilles; aias; argives; arms; battle; blood; child; day; dead; death; doom; dust; earth; fair; father; feet; fell; fight; fire; foes; forth; gods; great; grief; hands; hath; heart; heaven; high; host; king; lay; life; long; lord; man; men; mid; mighty; o'er; priam; round; sea; ships; slain; slew; son; sons; soul; spake; spear; strength; strife; swift; thee; thou; thy; trojans; troy; war; wild; wrath; yea; zeus
       cache: 658.txt
  plain text: 658.txt

        item: #8 of 8
          id: 806
      author: Sophocles
       title: Philoktetes
        date: None
       words: 13357
      flesch: 94
     summary: He gathered no grain sown in holy earth, nor the food that living men enjoy, except when he shot his feathered arrows and filled his stomach with what he took. I will have no part of their company, where the worse is stronger than the better, where noble men die while cowards rule.
    keywords: bow; boy; chorus; gods; man; men; neoptolemos; odysseus; philoktetes; son; things; troy; words
       cache: 806.txt
  plain text: 806.txt

