ArionTrustees of Boston University, 1963 - Classical literature |
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Page 3
... things be as they are ? Gradually the student acquires a need for history in order to learn how things became what they are . At the same time he learns that they could be different . How much power over things does man have ? That is ...
... things be as they are ? Gradually the student acquires a need for history in order to learn how things became what they are . At the same time he learns that they could be different . How much power over things does man have ? That is ...
Page 81
... things in one , who brought them with her , so that everything she did , every thought of her seems to contain the whole infinity of things of which your countryside , your sky consists , and memories and days gone by you'll never know ...
... things in one , who brought them with her , so that everything she did , every thought of her seems to contain the whole infinity of things of which your countryside , your sky consists , and memories and days gone by you'll never know ...
Page 82
STRANGER : I've heard of such things . ENDYMION : And if this being were the wild beast , the savage thing , the untouchable nature that no man may name ? STRANGER : These are fearful things you speak of . ENDYMION : Yes , but there's ...
STRANGER : I've heard of such things . ENDYMION : And if this being were the wild beast , the savage thing , the untouchable nature that no man may name ? STRANGER : These are fearful things you speak of . ENDYMION : Yes , but there's ...
Contents
NATURE AND THE WORLD OF MAN | 9 |
GREEK LITERATURE | 32 |
TWO FROM ARCHILOCHUS | 54 |
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Achilles Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus Agamemnon ancient Apollo Archaic Archilochus ARIADNE ARION Aristotle Aristotle's audience BACCHANTE beauty BRITOMART CASTOR century chorus classical culture classical scholarship classical studies classicists Clytaemnestra criticism death Deianeira divine dramatic dream ENDYMION Euripides eyes fact fate feel forces girl give gods Greek tragedy Hellenic Heracles hero heroic Hesiod Homer Horace human Iliad imitation irrational language Latin LEUCOTHEA lines literary literature live look man's Mandel matter mean ment mind MNEMOSYNE modern moral natural world never Nietzsche Nietzsche's Odyssey Oedipus Oresteia Orestes ORPHEUS passage passion pattern perhaps Philoctetes philologists philology Pindar Plato play poem poet poetic poetry polis POLYDEUCES Pound Pyrrha rational Renaissance Roman SAPPHO scholars seems sense sleep song Sophocles STRANGER style suffering tell things thought Thucydides tion tradition tragic translation true understand University Virgil vision whole Wilamowitz woman word Zeus