Books 1-12Fields, Osgood, 1870 |
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الصفحة 12
... o'er you both . Refrain from violence ; let not thy hand Unsheathe the sword , but utter with thy tongue Reproaches , as occasion may arise , For I declare what time shall bring to pass ; Threefold amends shall yet be offered thee , In ...
... o'er you both . Refrain from violence ; let not thy hand Unsheathe the sword , but utter with thy tongue Reproaches , as occasion may arise , For I declare what time shall bring to pass ; Threefold amends shall yet be offered thee , In ...
الصفحة 25
... O'er all the aged priest poured dark red wine , And burned them on dry wood . A band of youths With five - pronged spits , beside him , thrust these through The entrails , which they laid among the flames . And when the thighs were all ...
... O'er all the aged priest poured dark red wine , And burned them on dry wood . A band of youths With five - pronged spits , beside him , thrust these through The entrails , which they laid among the flames . And when the thighs were all ...
الصفحة 26
... themselves among the tents and ships . The goddess - born Achilles , swift of foot , Beside his ships still brooded o'er his wrath , 595 600 605 610 615 Nor came to council with the illustrious chiefs , Nor 26 The Iliad .
... themselves among the tents and ships . The goddess - born Achilles , swift of foot , Beside his ships still brooded o'er his wrath , 595 600 605 610 615 Nor came to council with the illustrious chiefs , Nor 26 The Iliad .
الصفحة 32
... o'er The battlements of heaven . All day I fell , And with the setting sun I struck the earth In Lemnos . Little life was left in me , What time the Sintians took me from the ground . " He spake , and Juno , the white - shouldered ...
... o'er The battlements of heaven . All day I fell , And with the setting sun I struck the earth In Lemnos . Little life was left in me , What time the Sintians took me from the ground . " He spake , and Juno , the white - shouldered ...
الصفحة 35
... the city of Troy 35 With all its spacious streets . The powers that dwell 40 In the celestial mansions are no more At variance ; Juno's prayers have moved them all , And o'er the Trojans hangs a fearful doom , Decreed Book II . 35.
... the city of Troy 35 With all its spacious streets . The powers that dwell 40 In the celestial mansions are no more At variance ; Juno's prayers have moved them all , And o'er the Trojans hangs a fearful doom , Decreed Book II . 35.
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Achaians Achilles ægis-bearing Æneas Agamemnon Ajax Apollo Argive armor arms arrow Atreus Atrides bade battle bear beheld beside blue-eyed Pallas bore brass brave bravest brazen breast chariot chief combat counsel coursers daughter dear death Diomed dost drew earth Epeians Eurypylus father fear fell fight fleet friends galleys gave Gerenian knight goddess godlike gods Grecian Greeks hand hath heart heaven Hector Helen hero honor host Idomeneus Ilium immortal Jove Juno Jupiter king long-haired Greeks Lycian Mars Menelaus mighty Minerva Nestor night noble o'er obeyed Olympus Pallas Paris Patroclus Peleus perish Phœbus pierced Priam princes rushed Saturn seized shalt shield ships slain slew smote son of Saturn sons of Greece sons of Troy spake spear spoil steeds Sthenelus stood swift Telamonian Ajax tent Teucer thee thou art thou hast took Trojan knights Trojans turn Tydeus Tydides Ulysses valiant valor wall warlike warriors words wounded wrath
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 204 - Ashamed before the men and long-robed dames Of Troy, were I to keep aloof and shun The conflict, coward-like. Not thus my heart Prompts me, for greatly have I learned to dare And strike among the foremost sons of Troy, 57°
الصفحة 205 - Grieve me so much as thine, when some mailed Greek Shall lead thee weeping hence, and take from thee Thy day of freedom. Thou in Argos then Shalt, at another's bidding, ply the loom, And from the fountain of Messeis draw
الصفحة 13 - to sprout no more,— And now the Achaian judges bear it, — they Who guard the laws received from Jupiter,— 305 Such is my oath, — the time shall - come when all The Greeks shall long to see Achilles back, While multitudes are perishing by the hand Of Hector, the man-queller; thou, meanwhile, Though thou lament,
الصفحة 207 - man can send me to the shades Before my time; no man of woman born, Coward or brave, can shun his destiny. 615 But go thou home, and tend thy labors there,— The web, the distaff, — and command thy maids To speed the work. The cares of war pertain To all men born in Troy, and most to me." Thus speaking, mighty Hector took again
الصفحة 15 - Great as they were, they listened to my words And took my counsel. Hearken also ye, And let my words persuade you for the best. Thou, powerful as thou art, take not from him The maiden; suffer him to keep the prize 35° Decreed him by the sons of Greece ; and thou,
الصفحة 132 - Saw many a Trojan slain, and many a Greek, Stretched side by side upon the bloody field. BOOK V. T^HEN Pallas to Tydides Diomed Gave strength and courage, that he might appear Among the Achaians greatly eminent, And win a glorious name. Upon his head And shield she caused a constant flame to play,
الصفحة 396 - Are held by some just woman, who maintains, By spinning wool, her household, — carefully She poises both the wool and weights, to make The balance even, that she may provide A pittance for her babes, — thus equally s»° Were matched the warring hosts, till Jupiter
الصفحة 126 - Before the western wind, and first the surge Uplifts itself, and then against the land Dashes and roars, and round the headland peaks Tosses on high and spouts its foam afar, So moved the serried phalanxes of Greece
الصفحة 89 - Gallant and tall. True, there are taller men; But of such noble form and dignity I never saw: in truth, a kingly man." And Helen, fairest among women, thus Answered: "Dear second father, whom at once «s I fear and honor, would that cruel death Had overtaken
الصفحة 80 - when both armies were arrayed for war, Each with its chiefs, the Trojan host moved on With shouts and clang of arms, as when the cry Of cranes is in the air, that, flying south From winter and its mighty breadth of rain, s Wing their way Over ocean, and at dawn Bring fearful battle to the