Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 39
Seite 59
Nostalgia is satisfied as the critic impersonates the bard to tell us " what Homer regards as important " , and commends " Homer's ability " ( p . 16 ) . His readers are faced with a difficult challenge to the imagination : " What would ...
Nostalgia is satisfied as the critic impersonates the bard to tell us " what Homer regards as important " , and commends " Homer's ability " ( p . 16 ) . His readers are faced with a difficult challenge to the imagination : " What would ...
Seite 120
594-600 Homer says : At Dorion , where the Muses encountering Thamyris the Thracian stopped him from singing as he came from Oichalia and Oichalian Eurytos : for he boasted that he would surpass , if the very Muses , daughters of Zeus ...
594-600 Homer says : At Dorion , where the Muses encountering Thamyris the Thracian stopped him from singing as he came from Oichalia and Oichalian Eurytos : for he boasted that he would surpass , if the very Muses , daughters of Zeus ...
Seite 140
Virgil did not presume to measure himself by the yardstick of Homer . The great Harrovian advised letting ' the clever ones learn Latin as an honour and Greek as a treat ' . Now the proportion of clever to stupid boys and girls may not ...
Virgil did not presume to measure himself by the yardstick of Homer . The great Harrovian advised letting ' the clever ones learn Latin as an honour and Greek as a treat ' . Now the proportion of clever to stupid boys and girls may not ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted Aeschylus ancient appears bears beginning believe called Cambridge Catullus century cited claims Classical clear College comedy commentary consider context Copyright course criticism described discussion early edition Editor English epigram evidence example expression fact further give given Greek Homer important interest interpretation Italy kind known language later Latin least less letters literary literature Liverpool London look meaning mention Muses myth nature once original Ovid Oxford passage perhaps period person Plautus play poem poet poetry political possible present problem Professor published question readers reason reference remains Roman Rome scholars seems sense similar story suggest Thucydides tradition translation turn University Virgil volume writing καὶ