The Olympian and Pythian Odes |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page v
... Greek words into English I have tried to approximate to what I conclude will be the method of the future ; but I have not marked the quan- tity of long i and u nor of capitals , and seldom of final syllables . Besides these sacrifices ...
... Greek words into English I have tried to approximate to what I conclude will be the method of the future ; but I have not marked the quan- tity of long i and u nor of capitals , and seldom of final syllables . Besides these sacrifices ...
Page vi
... Greek Verb , by Prof. W. W. Goodwin , Sixth Ed . , London , 1875 ; and to Syntax of the Greek Language , by Dr J. N. Madvig , Edited by T. Kerchever Arnold , Sec . Ed . , 1873 . In the occasional translations I have only aimed at ...
... Greek Verb , by Prof. W. W. Goodwin , Sixth Ed . , London , 1875 ; and to Syntax of the Greek Language , by Dr J. N. Madvig , Edited by T. Kerchever Arnold , Sec . Ed . , 1873 . In the occasional translations I have only aimed at ...
Page xix
... Greek art , that sundry epithets ' and amplifications , which seem at first sight needless and without point , may have been due to the faithful representation of some object of art , and have therefore impressed the poet's original ...
... Greek art , that sundry epithets ' and amplifications , which seem at first sight needless and without point , may have been due to the faithful representation of some object of art , and have therefore impressed the poet's original ...
Page xxiii
... Greek and Latin authors . Witness the interviews between Pelias and Jason , Pyth . iv . 94—119 , 135–167 , and between Apollo and Cheiron , Pyth . IX . 30-65 . He seems to have cherished a deeper love of nature , especially of trees and ...
... Greek and Latin authors . Witness the interviews between Pelias and Jason , Pyth . iv . 94—119 , 135–167 , and between Apollo and Cheiron , Pyth . IX . 30-65 . He seems to have cherished a deeper love of nature , especially of trees and ...
Page xxviii
... Greeks even in the times of Pindar . ' In the opening of Olympian XI . where avayıyvwσкw first occurs , the poet's heart is likened to an ává @ nua , on which the victory is indelibly recorded , and by which the memory thereof is ...
... Greeks even in the times of Pindar . ' In the opening of Olympian XI . where avayıyvwσкw first occurs , the poet's heart is likened to an ává @ nua , on which the victory is indelibly recorded , and by which the memory thereof is ...