What Is Tydeus's Attitude To Death In The Odyssey

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There follows both the shout of the men the hissing of the cables; suddenly the clouds snatch away both the sky and the (light of the) day out of the eyes of the Trojans; night broods over the dark sea; heavens roared and the sky flashes with frequent lightning and everything threaten present(imminent) death to the men.
Immediately, the limbs of Aeneas are loosened with chill; he groans, and extending his two palms to the stars said such things with his voice: “O both three and four times blessed, who befell to meet death against the faces of the fathers under high walls of Troy! O bravest of the Greek race, son of Tydeus(Diomedes)! Could I not fall (in death) on the Trojan battlefield and pour out this soul with your right hand, where savage

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