| Christopher Marlowe - 1826 - 348 pages
...Look up, and speak. JEy. Then speak, JiEneas, with Achilles' tongue ! And Dido, and you Carthaginian peers, Hear me! but yet with Myrmidons' harsh ears,...unto our ships, Troy is invincible, why stay we here V With whose outcries Atrides being appall'd, Summon'd the captains to his princely tent; Who, looking... | |
| Christopher Marlowe, Alexander Dyce - 1865 - 476 pages
...¿En. Then speak, .¿Eneas, with Achilles' tongue: And, Dido, and you Carthaginian peers, Hear mo ; but yet with Myrmidons' harsh ears, Daily inur'd to...here !" With whose outcries Atrides being appall'd, Summou'd the captains to his princely tent ; Who, looking on the scars we Trojaus gave, Seeing the... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 1876 - 474 pages
...Look up, and speak. jEn. Theu speak, JEaeta, with Achilles' tongue : And, Dido, and you Carthaginian peers, Hear me ; but yet with Myrmidons' harsh ears,...here?" With whose outcries Atrides being appall'd, Summon 'd the captains to his princely tent; Who, looking on the scam we Trojans gave, Seeing the number... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 1889 - 408 pages
...inured to broils and massacres. Lest you be moved too much with my sad tale. The Grecian soldiers, tired with ten years' war, Began to cry, " Let us unto our...stay we here ?" With whose outcries Atrides being appalled, Summoned the captains to his princely tent ; Who, looking on the scars we Trojans gave, Seeing... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - Dido (Legendary character) - 1912 - 516 pages
...Look up, and speak. /En. Then speak, ./Eneas, with Achilles' tongue: And, Dido, and you Carthaginian peers, Hear me ; but yet with Myrmidons' harsh ears,...years' war, Began to cry, " Let us unto our ships, With whose outcries Atrides being appall'd, Summon'd the captains to his princely tent; Who, looking... | |
| Thomas Stearns Eliot - Criticism - 1928 - 206 pages
...style which secures its emphasis by always hesitating \ on the edge of caricature at the right moment : The Grecian soldiers, tir'd with ten years war, Began...unto our ships, Troy is invincible, why stay we here ? " . . . By this, the camp was come unto the walls, And through the breach did march into the streets,... | |
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