Martin Classical Lectures, Volume 1; Volume 1930 |
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Page 154
Aeneid , xi , 483 : Tritonia uirgo , frange manu telum Phrygii praedonis , et ipsum pronum sterne solo portisque effunde sub altis . There need be no gate in the prayer in the Aeneid , save for the Scaean gates in the Iliad ; and manu ...
Aeneid , xi , 483 : Tritonia uirgo , frange manu telum Phrygii praedonis , et ipsum pronum sterne solo portisque effunde sub altis . There need be no gate in the prayer in the Aeneid , save for the Scaean gates in the Iliad ; and manu ...
Page 161
... Aeneid may be said to come from " a similar event in the Fourth Book of the Iliad . But in the Homeric story the truce is broken merely by a single act ; Pandarus , on the advice of Athene , who wishes to put the Trojans in the wrong ...
... Aeneid may be said to come from " a similar event in the Fourth Book of the Iliad . But in the Homeric story the truce is broken merely by a single act ; Pandarus , on the advice of Athene , who wishes to put the Trojans in the wrong ...
Page 166
... Aeneid to the Homeric pictures of wrangling between the gods is in the Book which was certainly the earliest in draft- ing , namely , the Tenth . The irony with which Jupi- ter speaks to Juno - it is irony if the lines are printed as a ...
... Aeneid to the Homeric pictures of wrangling between the gods is in the Book which was certainly the earliest in draft- ing , namely , the Tenth . The irony with which Jupi- ter speaks to Juno - it is irony if the lines are printed as a ...
Contents
Paul Shorey | 57 |
THE POETIC STRUCTURE OF THE ODYSSEY | 97 |
ANCIENT EMPIRES AND The Modern WORLD | 125 |
Copyright | |
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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 Empire epic Euripides Euryalus example exile fact father feeling give gods greatest Greece Greek literature hearers Hector Hellenism 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 Turnus Vergil woman words writer Zeus