The National Quarterly Review, المجلد 4Edward Isidore Sears, David Allyn Gorton, Charles H. Woodman Pudney & Russell, 1862 |
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النتائج 6-10 من 43
الصفحة 5
... Homer have never been equalled by any other poet - none others , that have been attempted on their model , are so true to nature , or exhibit characteristics so various , without confounding any individ- ual , male or female , with ...
... Homer have never been equalled by any other poet - none others , that have been attempted on their model , are so true to nature , or exhibit characteristics so various , without confounding any individ- ual , male or female , with ...
الصفحة 6
... Homer , than this . No poet was more opposed to vice than the author of the Iliad . In not a single instance does he allow it to go unpunished ; and he is equally careful to reward virtue . Nothing is more improbable , therefore , than ...
... Homer , than this . No poet was more opposed to vice than the author of the Iliad . In not a single instance does he allow it to go unpunished ; and he is equally careful to reward virtue . Nothing is more improbable , therefore , than ...
الصفحة 7
... Homer more than once applies to her case the term opunuarά ( rape ) . For example , we find in the second book of the Iliad the line- τίσασθαὶ δ ' Ἑλένης ὁρμήματά τε στοναχας . In the third book she is called 410s enyɛyavia ( the child ...
... Homer more than once applies to her case the term opunuarά ( rape ) . For example , we find in the second book of the Iliad the line- τίσασθαὶ δ ' Ἑλένης ὁρμήματά τε στοναχας . In the third book she is called 410s enyɛyavia ( the child ...
الصفحة 8
... Homer ? In the first couplet of the translation the words that show most sorrow are not rendered . There is no rendering of nλaivovбa ( weep- ing ) ; Homer uses yoov in one line and yóozo in the other ; which are but poorly represented ...
... Homer ? In the first couplet of the translation the words that show most sorrow are not rendered . There is no rendering of nλaivovбa ( weep- ing ) ; Homer uses yoov in one line and yóozo in the other ; which are but poorly represented ...
الصفحة 9
... Homer as form the dramatis persona . Nothing could be more evident than that his conception of Helen was not de- rived from Homer , but from some of his most unsuccessful imitators — those who had degraded her most . Had he studied the ...
... Homer as form the dramatis persona . Nothing could be more evident than that his conception of Helen was not de- rived from Homer , but from some of his most unsuccessful imitators — those who had degraded her most . Had he studied the ...
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