Martin Classical Lectures, Volume 1; Volume 1930 |
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Page 36
... true picture of the events which have happened , and of like events which may be expected to happen hereafter in the order of human things , shall pronounce what I have written to be useful , then I shall be satisfied . My history is an ...
... true picture of the events which have happened , and of like events which may be expected to happen hereafter in the order of human things , shall pronounce what I have written to be useful , then I shall be satisfied . My history is an ...
Page 82
... true character , after momentary eclipse , shines forth again ? Lastly , not a few modern critics have found the chief charm of the play with Emerson in the beautiful descriptions of Philoctetes's communion with nature in his loneliness ...
... true character , after momentary eclipse , shines forth again ? Lastly , not a few modern critics have found the chief charm of the play with Emerson in the beautiful descriptions of Philoctetes's communion with nature in his loneliness ...
Page 165
... true to say that both in Homer and in Vergil the other gods differ in no way from human beings ex- cept in point of the supernatural powers with which they can see and move and act upon mortals . But , secondly , it is also true that ...
... true to say that both in Homer and in Vergil the other gods differ in no way from human beings ex- cept in point of the supernatural powers with which they can see and move and act upon mortals . But , secondly , it is also true that ...
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Achilles Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax ancient Antigone army Athenian Athens audience bard battle beauty Book called century Cephallenia character chorus Classical Creon critics cydides death Deianeira democracy divine Dolon Dulichium Electra Empire epic Euripides Euryalus example exile fact father feeling give gods greatest Greece hearers Hector Hellenism Hercules hero Herod Herodotus Herodotus's historian Homer human Ibid Iliad interest island Ithaca King language Latin lecture Leucas living Menelaus ment modern Nestor never Oberlin College Odysseus Oedipus oracles otus passage Peloponnesian Peloponnesian War perhaps Pericles Persian Phaeacians Philoctetes play plot poem poet poetic poetry political Professor reason religion Roman Rome says Sophocles Sparta speak spears speeches spirit story style suitors sword Telemachus tell thee Thiaki things thou thought Thucydides Thucydides's tion tradition tragedy Trojan Troy truth Turnus Vergil woman words writer Zeus