<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg003.perseus-eng2:1266-1300</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg003.perseus-eng2:1266-1300</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg003.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><sp n="Teucer"><l n="1266">My, how quickly gratitude to the dead seeps away from men and is found to have turned to betrayal, since this man no longer offers even the slightest praise in remembrance of you, Ajax, even though it was for his sake</l><l n="1270">you toiled so often in battle, offering your own life to the spear!  No, your assistance is dead and gone, all flung aside!
<milestone unit="para" resp="ed"/>Full and foolish talker, do you no longer remember anything of the time when you were trapped inside your defenses,</l><l n="1275">when you were all but destroyed in the turn of the battle and he, he alone came and
                        saved you at the moment when the flames were already blazing around the
                        decks at your ships’ sterns and Hector was leaping high over the trench
                        towards the vessels?</l><l n="1280">Who averted that? Was it not Ajax who did it, the one who, you say, nowhere set foot
                        where you were not? Well, do you grant that he did his duty to you there?
                        And what about when another time, all alone, he confronted Hector in single
                        combat according to the fall of the lots, and not at anyone’s command?</l><l n="1285">The lot which he cast in was not the kind to flee the challenge;  it was no lump of moist earth, but one which would be the first to leap lightly from the crested helmet!  It was this man who did those deeds, and I, the slave, the son of the barbarian mother, was at his side.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="1290"/><sp><l n="1290">Pitiful creature, how can you be so blind as to argue the way you do? Are you not aware
                        of the fact that your father’s father Pelops long ago was a barbarian, a
                        Phrygian? That Atreus, your own begetter, set before his brother a most
                        unholy feast made from the flesh of his brother’s children?</l><l n="1295">And you yourself were born from a Cretan mother, whose father found a stranger straddling her and who was consigned by him to be prey for the mute fish.  So being of such a kind, can you reproach a man like me for my lineage?  I am the son of Telamon,</l><l n="1300">who won my mother for his consort as prize for valor supreme in the army. And she was
                        the daughter of Laomedon, of royal blood, and it was as the flower of the
                        spoil that Alcmena’s son gave her to Telamon. Thus nobly born as I am from
                        two noble parents,</l></sp></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>