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" How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe ! Go then ! resolve to earth, from whence ye grew, A heartless, spiritless, inglorious crew ! Be what ye seem, unanimated clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day... "
The travellers - Page 121
by Tertius T C. Kendrick - 1825
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The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope, Esq: To which is Prefixed the Life of ...

Alexander Pope - 1830 - 500 pages
...scandal of your race, Whose coward souls your manly form disgrace, 110 How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met .this noble foe ! Go then, resolve to earth, from whence yo grew, A heartless, spiritless, inglorious crew ! Be what ye seem, unanimated clay ! Myself will...
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The Poetical Works of A. Pope: Including His Translation of Homer , to which ...

Alexander Pope - English poetry - 1836 - 502 pages
...form disgrace, 110 How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this nohle hou bravest, gentlest mind, Thy country's friend,...human-kind. О born to arms ! О worth in youth app unanimuted clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day. 'Tis man's hold task the generous strife...
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The poetical works of Alexander Pope. Ed. by H.F. Cary, with a biogr. notice ...

Alexander Pope - 1839 - 510 pages
...your race, Whose coward souls your manly form disgrace. How great the shame, when every age »hall ings rejected mourn. To him alone the beauteous prize...fields The herds of Iphiclus, detaiu'd in wrong ; unnnimated clay ! Myself will dnre the danger of the day ; 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife...
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Translation of the Iliad of Homer

Homer - 1849 - 582 pages
...scandal of your race, Whose coward souls your manly forms disgrace, 110 How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe...unanimated clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day. 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife to try, But in the hand of God is victory." These words scarce...
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The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope, Esq: To which is Prefixed the Life of ...

Alexander Pope - 1850 - 510 pages
...scandal of your race, Whose coward souls your manly form disgrace, 110 How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe...heartless, spiritless, inglorious crew ! Be what ye seem, unanimatcd clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day. 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife...
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The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope

Alexander Pope - English poetry - 1859 - 504 pages
...form disgrace, How great the shame, when every age shall know Tliat not a Grecian met this noble foe I ject would devour, This taste the honey, and not wound...flower : Pleasure, or wrong or rightly understood uuanimated clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day ; 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife...
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The Iliad, tr. by Pope

Homerus - 1870 - 552 pages
...scandal of your race, Whose coward souls your manly form disgrace, 1 10 How great the shame when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe...inglorious crew ! Be what ye seem, unanimated clay ! 115 Myself will dare the danger of the day. 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife to try, But...
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The Iliad, tr. by A. Pope, with notes by T.A. Buckley

Homerus - 1874 - 494 pages
...scandal of your Iace, Whose coward souls your manly form disgrace, How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe...unanimated clay, Myself will dare the danger of the day ; Tis man's bold task the generous strife to try, But in the hands of God is victory." These words...
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Homer's Iliad

Homer - 1877 - 558 pages
...scandal of your race, Whose coward souls your manly forms disgrace, 1 10 How great the shame, when every age shall know That not a Grecian met this noble foe...unanimated clay ! Myself will dare the danger of the day. 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife to try, But in the hand of God is victory." These words scarce...
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The Iliad of Homer

Homer - Achilles (Greek mythology) - 1878 - 596 pages
...of your race, 1 Whose coward souls your manly forms disgrace, 110 ' How great the shame, when every age shall know ' That not a Grecian met this noble...inglorious crew ! ' Be what ye seem, unanimated clay ! 115 ' Myself will dare the danger of the day. ' 'Tis man's bold task the generous strife to try,...
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