Translations of Homer: The OdysseyMethuen, 1967 - Epic poetry, Greek |
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Page 21
... appear in all sort of En- counters . Thus Æneas acting with great Piety and Mildness in the first part of the Æneid , which requires no other Character ; and afterwards appearing illustrious in Heroic valour in the wars of the second ...
... appear in all sort of En- counters . Thus Æneas acting with great Piety and Mildness in the first part of the Æneid , which requires no other Character ; and afterwards appearing illustrious in Heroic valour in the wars of the second ...
Page 173
... appear❜d to me very necessary , to take off an objection made upon a follow- ing passage in this book : the Critics have thought it incredible that Ulysses should without any assistance build such a vessel , as Homer describes ; but if ...
... appear❜d to me very necessary , to take off an objection made upon a follow- ing passage in this book : the Critics have thought it incredible that Ulysses should without any assistance build such a vessel , as Homer describes ; but if ...
Page 274
... appear'd openly in favour of Ulysses , this would have been greatly advantagious to him , and the Phæacians must have highly reverenc'd a person who was so remarkably honour'd by a Goddess : but it is not evident that the Phæacians , or ...
... appear'd openly in favour of Ulysses , this would have been greatly advantagious to him , and the Phæacians must have highly reverenc'd a person who was so remarkably honour'd by a Goddess : but it is not evident that the Phæacians , or ...
Contents
Telemachus and Penelope Ulysses among | 36 |
Juno deceives Jupiter by the Girdle of Venus | 156 |
The Fight of Ulysses and Irus | 166 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles action Ægyptus Æneas Agamemnon Alcinous Ancients appears arms ask'd Atrides beauty call'd Calypso character Circe coast companions crown'd Cyclops Dacier Dæmon death Deity Demodocus descends describ'd dire divine dreadful Epic Epic Poetry Eurylochus Eurymachus Eustathius observes Ev'n ev'ry eyes fable fame fate father feast gives Goddess Gods Grecian Greeks heav'n Heroe Homer honour Iliad Island Ithaca Jove Jupiter King Laestrygones Laodamas Leucothea Menelaus Minerva moral nature Nausicaa Neptune Nestor night nymph o'er Odyssey Palace Pallas passage passion Penelope person Phæacians Plutarch Poem Poet Poetry Pope's pow'r Prince Pylos Queen relation rock royal sacred sails says Eustathius Scaliger Scylla shade shews ship shore sire skies soul speaks Spondanus storms story Strabo stranger Suitors swift tears Telemachus thee thou thro toils Troy Ulysses verse vessel Virgil voyage waves whole winds wine wisdom wise woes words youth καὶ