Homer and His InfluenceLongmans, Green and Company, 1931 - 169 Seiten |
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Seite 7
... poem , the Margites . The hero of this poem was a stupid youth who " knew many things , and knew them all badly . " This poem was probably a bit of farce and may well have been a youthful caricature drawn by the same hand which later ...
... poem , the Margites . The hero of this poem was a stupid youth who " knew many things , and knew them all badly . " This poem was probably a bit of farce and may well have been a youthful caricature drawn by the same hand which later ...
Seite 59
... poem began ; even Athena who set in motion the forces which started the poem and brought the hero to his home is the last to act and to speak . In setting and in structure these two poems are quite different , however similar they may ...
... poem began ; even Athena who set in motion the forces which started the poem and brought the hero to his home is the last to act and to speak . In setting and in structure these two poems are quite different , however similar they may ...
Seite 111
... poems is evident in all parts of the poem , even if the first six books roughly correspond to the Odyssey , the last six books to the Iliad . Some of the structural similarities with the Odyssey are the following : several years of the ...
... poems is evident in all parts of the poem , even if the first six books roughly correspond to the Odyssey , the last six books to the Iliad . Some of the structural similarities with the Odyssey are the following : several years of the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles actors Aeneas Aeneid Agamemnon Ajax ancient Andromache anger archer Aristotle armor artist Athena beauty Briseis century Chapman characters Cicero Circe civilization companions Comus contest creation criticism dactyls death Diomede divine Dryden early English Ennius epic cycle epic poetry familiar famous father fire genius glory gods Greece Greek Hector Helen Hellas hence Hephaestus hero heroic Hesiod hexameter Homeric poems Homeric poetry Homeric verse honor Horace Iliad influence of Homer Italy JOHN knowledge of Homer language Latin literary literature Maeonides melody Menelaus meter Milton native Nestor never Odyssey Olympus original Paradise Lost Paris passages Patroclus Petrarch poet poetic poetry of Homer Pope Pope's prose Proteus quotations quoted referred regarding Roman Rome scene scholars seems Shakespeare single Sirens song Sophocles speech story tells Tennyson theme theology things thou tion tradition translation Trojans Troy Ulysses University Virgil Walter Leaf WILLIAM words wrath writings wrote Zeus