The Odyssey: tr. into blank verse by G.W. Edginton, Volume 11869 |
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... waves ; in fragments thickening and lessening as you follow them further off , till they blend and become a pillar of golden light . But what is all this to Homer ? Reader ! this is the greatest work of human genius . ” DEAN ALFORD on ...
... waves ; in fragments thickening and lessening as you follow them further off , till they blend and become a pillar of golden light . But what is all this to Homer ? Reader ! this is the greatest work of human genius . ” DEAN ALFORD on ...
Page 29
... wave resounds loud round the keel , The vessel coursing on : she swiftly ran Through the blue waves , straight hast'ning on her way.
... wave resounds loud round the keel , The vessel coursing on : she swiftly ran Through the blue waves , straight hast'ning on her way.
Page 30
Homerus. Through the blue waves , straight hast'ning on her way : When they had made the swift ships tackling fast , They set the goblets , crowning them with wine ; And to the gods they pour'd libations forth : But to the blue ey'd ...
Homerus. Through the blue waves , straight hast'ning on her way : When they had made the swift ships tackling fast , They set the goblets , crowning them with wine ; And to the gods they pour'd libations forth : But to the blue ey'd ...
Page 34
... waves : And for this cause I come before thy knees , If thou will tell of his sad death , if thou Hath chanc'd to see it , or from other heard , 90 Some wanderer , for to much grief was he born ; From pity do not flatter me at all , 95 ...
... waves : And for this cause I come before thy knees , If thou will tell of his sad death , if thou Hath chanc'd to see it , or from other heard , 90 Some wanderer , for to much grief was he born ; From pity do not flatter me at all , 95 ...
Page 36
... waves , and came at night Unto Gerastus , where we oxen burnt , To Neptune ; a long sea line now work'd out . " Twas the fourth day when Tydeus ' son's seamen 180 F'en Diomed's , to anchor brought their ships ; At Argos : while to Pylos ...
... waves , and came at night Unto Gerastus , where we oxen burnt , To Neptune ; a long sea line now work'd out . " Twas the fourth day when Tydeus ' son's seamen 180 F'en Diomed's , to anchor brought their ships ; At Argos : while to Pylos ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Agamemnon Ajax Alcinous answer unto answer'd appear'd bade bear beauteous brave bright call'd Calypso cave chief Cicones Circe Circe's comrades Cyclops dark daughter dear death deeds drink e'en Euryclea Eurylochus Eurymachus eyes fair fate father feast friends gave gifts goddess gods Greeks grief griev'd guest Hades hands hast hath hear heard heart herald Hermes Icarius immortal isle Ithaca Jove Jove's king Laërtes Laodamas lofty maids meat Menelaus midst mind Minerva minstrel native land Nausicaa ne'er Neleus Neptune Nestor nymph o'er oars oxen palace Pallas perish'd Phæacian Pisistratus plac'd pour'd pray'd Pylos reach'd replied robe rock round sail sail'd sailors Scylla sheep ship shore sire sitting sleep slew spake spoke stood stranger suitors sweet swift swift ship sword tears Telemachus tell thee therein things thou thou'rt thro Tiresias Troy Ulysses vers'd vex'd wash'd waves wife wind wine words
Popular passages
Page 135 - These berries are much esteemed by the natives, who convert them into a sort of bread, by exposing them for some days to the sun, and afterwards pounding them gently in a wooden mortar, until the farinaceous part of the berry is separated from the stone. This meal is then mixed with a little water, and formed into cakes, which, when dried in the sun, resemble in colour and flavour the sweetest gingerbread. The stones...
Page 210 - ... advanced their claims ; the former depending on his pre-eminence in arms ; the latter, on the services which his inventive genius had rendered : the assembled princes awarded the splendid prize to Ulysses. Ajax was so much mortified at this, that he went mad, and in his fury attacked the herds and flocks of the camp, mistaking them for the Grecian leaders, by whom he thought himself so deeply injured. On recovering his senses, and seeing to what excesses he had been transported, he slew himself...
Page 168 - A measure employed by the ancients, equal to the length of the arm from the elbow to the tip of the middle finger.
Page 62 - His notoriety is chiefly derived from events subsequent to the close of the Iliad. At the sack of Troy he offered violence to Cassandra in the temple of Pallas. Indignant at the profanation, the goddess raised a tempest, which wrecked his vessel on its voyage home, and many others of the Grecian fleet. Ajax escaped to a rock, and might have been preserved, but that he blasphe...