Homer and His Influence, Band 1 |
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Seite 32
In English we can scarcely produce more than this prose paraphrase , while the music and the magic inhere only in the original words of the poet . Many phrases which cannot be brought into English without becoming the flattest prose or ...
In English we can scarcely produce more than this prose paraphrase , while the music and the magic inhere only in the original words of the poet . Many phrases which cannot be brought into English without becoming the flattest prose or ...
Seite 33
the worst metrical drivel are expressed in the original by words of melody and of majesty , e.g. Homer refers to kine as “ eilipodas helikas bous , " a peculiarly charming group of sounds , yet the English thereof “ cattle with crumpled ...
the worst metrical drivel are expressed in the original by words of melody and of majesty , e.g. Homer refers to kine as “ eilipodas helikas bous , " a peculiarly charming group of sounds , yet the English thereof “ cattle with crumpled ...
Seite 69
Goethe refers to this one speech by Thersites as : das herrlichste Original einer sansculottischen Demagogenrede . a Helen , Andromache , Hecuba , and Penelope were all wives and mothers , but the poet has so pictured them that each ...
Goethe refers to this one speech by Thersites as : das herrlichste Original einer sansculottischen Demagogenrede . a Helen , Andromache , Hecuba , and Penelope were all wives and mothers , but the poet has so pictured them that each ...
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Inhalt
HOMERIC POETRY AND ITS PRESER VATION | 3 |
HOMER AND TRADITIONS IN HOMER | 16 |
TRANSLATIONS OF HOMER | 32 |
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Achilles actors Aeneas AESCHYLUS Ajax ancient anger appears Aristotle assumed beauty become beginning called century Chapman characters civilization companions created creation criticism death described early English entire epic evidence fact familiar famous father fight fire follow furnished genius give given glory gods Greece Greek hand Hector Helen hence hero Homer honor Iliad influence Italy JOHN knowledge known land language Latin less letters literature live lost manner matter meaning MICHIGAN Milton native nature Nestor never Odyssey once original Paris passages passed Patroclus poem poet poetic poetry poetry of Homer Pope present Proteus quoted reach refers regarding represent Roman says scene seems Shakespeare ship single song speech spirit story studies tells things tion told took tradition translation Trojans Troy turn Ulysses University verses Virgil writers wrote Zeus