Homer and His InfluenceCooper Square Publishers, 1963 - 164 Seiten |
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Seite 16
... poet or upon that poet as the creator of both the Iliad and the Odyssey . All the early Greeks took him as much for granted and as familiar as their own mountains and streams , so that they seemed to feel no mystery concerning him and ...
... poet or upon that poet as the creator of both the Iliad and the Odyssey . All the early Greeks took him as much for granted and as familiar as their own mountains and streams , so that they seemed to feel no mystery concerning him and ...
Seite 19
... poet himself is as remote and elusive as ever . Many attempts have been made to explain the name Homer as that of some trait or char- acter and not the proper name of an individual , asserting that it was a common noun and meant a ...
... poet himself is as remote and elusive as ever . Many attempts have been made to explain the name Homer as that of some trait or char- acter and not the proper name of an individual , asserting that it was a common noun and meant a ...
Seite 23
... poet had such free play it is clearly impossible to reconstruct from the poems themselves the traditions from which he drew . Homer plunges at once into the midst of his story , as if he assumed that the plot and the actors were known ...
... poet had such free play it is clearly impossible to reconstruct from the poems themselves the traditions from which he drew . Homer plunges at once into the midst of his story , as if he assumed that the plot and the actors were known ...
Inhalt
HOMERIC POETRY AND ITS PRESER | 3 |
HOMER AND TRADITIONS IN HOMER | 23 |
TRANSLATIONS OF HOMER | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles actors Aeneas Aeneid Agamemnon Ajax ancient Andromache anger Aristotle assumed Athena beauty CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Calypso century Chapman characters Cicero Circe companions Comus contest creation criticism CRUZ The University dactyls death divine Dryden early English Ennius epic epic cycle epic poetry fairyland 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 knowledge of Homer language Latin literary literature melody Menelaus meter Milton native Nestor never Odyssey Olympus original Paradise Lost Paris Patroclus Petrarch Phaeacians poet poetic poetry of Homer Pope Pope's prose Proteus quotations quoted refers Roman scene scholars seems Shakespeare ship Sirens song Sophocles speech story tells Tennyson theme Thersites things tion told tradition translation Trojans Troy Ulysses UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA Virgil Walter Leaf words writings wrote Zeus
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Does the New Testament Imitate Homer?: Four Cases from the Acts of the Apostles Dennis R. MacDonald Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2008 |
Homer's Original Genius: Eighteenth-Century Notions of the Early Greek Epic ... Kirsti Simonsuuri Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1979 |