Axylus
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Axylus (Ancient Greek: Ἄξυλος) is mentioned in Book VI of Homer's Iliad.
- Diomedes, expert in war cries, killed Axylus,
- son of Teuthranus, a rich man, from well-built Arisbe.
- People really loved him, for he lived beside a road,
- welcomed all passers-by into his home.
- But not one of those men he'd entertained now stood
- in front of him, protecting him from wretched death.
- Diomedes took the lives of two men--Axylus,
- and his attendant Calesius, his charioteer.
- So both men went down into the underworld.
Sources[edit]
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