Iliad 17: 256-261

From the Venetus A MS

ὡς ἔφατ'. ὀξὺ δ' ἄκουσεν Ὀϊλῆος ταχὺς Αἴας.

πρῶτος δ' ἀντίος ἦλθε θέων ἀνα δηϊοτῆτα:

τὸν δὲ μέτ' Ἰ̈δομενεὺς καὶ ὀπάων Ἰ̈δομενῆος

Μηριόνης. ἀτάλαντος Ἐνυαλίῳ ἀνδρειφόντῃ.

τῶν δ' ἄλλων τίς κεν ᾗσι φρεσὶν οὐνόματ' εἴποι.

ὅσσοι δὴ. μετ' όπισθε μάχην ἤγειραν. Ἀχαιῶν.

So spake he, and swift Aias, son of Oileus, heard him clearly, and was first to come running to meet him amid the battle, and after him Idomeneus and Idomeneus' comrade, Meriones, the peer of Enyalius, slayer of men. But of the rest, what man of his own wit could name the names—of all that came after these and aroused the battle of the Achaeans?

A. T. Murray (1924)