Translations of Homer: The OdysseyMethuen, 1967 - Epic poetry, Greek |
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Page xvi
... Tradition : A Critical Study of the Iliad ( Yale University Press , 1951 ) . LA MOTTE = Houdart de La Motte , Oeuvres ( 4 vols . , Paris , 1754 ) . ( The specific works usually cited from this collection are his Discours sur Homère ...
... Tradition : A Critical Study of the Iliad ( Yale University Press , 1951 ) . LA MOTTE = Houdart de La Motte , Oeuvres ( 4 vols . , Paris , 1754 ) . ( The specific works usually cited from this collection are his Discours sur Homère ...
Page 34
... tradition which makes Atlas the same person with Enoch , and represents him as a great Astro- nomer , who prophecy'd of the universal deluge , and exhorted mankind to repentance ? Therefore he nam'd his son Methuselah , to show that ...
... tradition which makes Atlas the same person with Enoch , and represents him as a great Astro- nomer , who prophecy'd of the universal deluge , and exhorted mankind to repentance ? Therefore he nam'd his son Methuselah , to show that ...
Page 142
... tradition that Ulysses and Diomedes slew him , and turn'd a stately monument he had rais'd for himself into a public place for the reception of strangers . 479. - The Pharian Isle . ] This description of Pharos has given great trouble ...
... tradition that Ulysses and Diomedes slew him , and turn'd a stately monument he had rais'd for himself into a public place for the reception of strangers . 479. - The Pharian Isle . ] This description of Pharos has given great trouble ...
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 Alcinous Ancients appears arms attend bear beauty beginning calls Calypso cause character chief consequently Dacier death deep descends divine Eustathius expression eyes Fable fate father feast gives Goddess Gods Greeks ground hand happy heav'n Heroe Homer honour Iliad Island Ithaca Jove kind King land manner mean Menelaus mind Minerva nature necessary Nestor never night o'er objection observes Odyssey opinion passage Penelope person Poem Poet Poetry pow'r Prince probable Queen race Reader reason relation remarkable rest rise royal says shade shews shore soul speaks story sufferings Suitors tears Telemachus tells thee thing thou thought thro train Troy true truth Ulysses verse vessel Virgil voyage whole winds wine wisdom wise woes youth