Homer and His Influence, Band 1 |
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Seite 58
sequence , since the crews who manned the twelve ships with which he sailed from Troy were far too numerous to be ... but the adventures with Charybdis and Scylla demanded a ship and its crew , hence they came earlier than the storm ...
sequence , since the crews who manned the twelve ships with which he sailed from Troy were far too numerous to be ... but the adventures with Charybdis and Scylla demanded a ship and its crew , hence they came earlier than the storm ...
Seite 71
... to delay and to listen , even if this meant destruction , but his companions , who could not hear , bound him in yet stronger fetters , carried him out of the reach of the voice of the Sirens , and thus saved the ship and the crew .
... to delay and to listen , even if this meant destruction , but his companions , who could not hear , bound him in yet stronger fetters , carried him out of the reach of the voice of the Sirens , and thus saved the ship and the crew .
Seite 137
Homer describes the staff of the Cyclops thus : " As we gazed at his staff , we likened it to the mast of a broad merchantship , a ship with twenty oars , a ship which makes its way over the great sea , so tall and thick was it .
Homer describes the staff of the Cyclops thus : " As we gazed at his staff , we likened it to the mast of a broad merchantship , a ship with twenty oars , a ship which makes its way over the great sea , so tall and thick was it .
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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