Homer and the Iliad [tr. in verse, with notes] by J.S. Blackie, Volume 41866 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 48
Page 26
... indicated by Homer ; and a wise man in such cases will prefer to stand on the Alexandrian tradition , which shows at least how the Greeks understood the phrase . A received interpretation is always a historical fact ; an ingenious ...
... indicated by Homer ; and a wise man in such cases will prefer to stand on the Alexandrian tradition , which shows at least how the Greeks understood the phrase . A received interpretation is always a historical fact ; an ingenious ...
Page 29
... indicating that the bard considered himself as living in an age considerably removed in point of time from the heroes whose deeds he celebrated . The desire to represent the men of former ages as giants in com- parison with the puny ...
... indicating that the bard considered himself as living in an age considerably removed in point of time from the heroes whose deeds he celebrated . The desire to represent the men of former ages as giants in com- parison with the puny ...
Page 55
... indicates the wandering min- strel , who , living in the midst of popular tradition , treasured in his memory with reverential fidelity , the history , the story of all family greatness , and the symbols of that greatness , which BOOK ...
... indicates the wandering min- strel , who , living in the midst of popular tradition , treasured in his memory with reverential fidelity , the history , the story of all family greatness , and the symbols of that greatness , which BOOK ...
Page 56
... he affixed some descriptive epithet to his name , by which it might appear whether he believed him to be a European Greek or an Asiatic . As it is , his mere silence indicates nothing , 56 BOOK II . NOTES TO THE ILIAD .
... he affixed some descriptive epithet to his name , by which it might appear whether he believed him to be a European Greek or an Asiatic . As it is , his mere silence indicates nothing , 56 BOOK II . NOTES TO THE ILIAD .
Page 57
Homerus. As it is , his mere silence indicates nothing , and the main stream of classical tradition brings him as a colonist from the region of Mount Sipylus in Lydia ( Pindar , Ol . 1. 38 ; 1x . 15 ; Thucyd . I. 9 ) . Other accounts ...
Homerus. As it is , his mere silence indicates nothing , and the main stream of classical tradition brings him as a colonist from the region of Mount Sipylus in Lydia ( Pindar , Ol . 1. 38 ; 1x . 15 ; Thucyd . I. 9 ) . Other accounts ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achæan Achilles afterwards altogether ancient Apoll Apollo appears Asopus Athenians Athens beautiful belongs Boeotia called certainly character coast colour connexion curious described distinctly district divine Dodona doubt earth element epithet evidently fact famous favour Gladstone goddess gods Greece Greek Hector Hellenic Hercules Herè hero Herod Hesiod Heyne Homer honour idea Iliad island Jove Jupiter king Laomedon legend meaning mentioned minstrel modern mortal mountain Müller mythology natural Nitzsch Odyssey Orchomenus original Paus Pausanias Pelasgi Peloponnesus Pindar plain plainly Plato Plut poem poet poetical poetry popular present passage Priam prominent recognised regard remarkable river sacred says Scamander Schol scholiast seems significance Smith's Dict Sparta Strabo Theog Thessaly things Thrace Thracian Thucyd tion town tradition translation tribes Troad Trojan Trojan war Troy verse VIII Virgil Welcker well-known whole word worship XXIV καὶ
Popular passages
Page 221 - More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For what are men better than sheep or goats That nourish a blind life within the brain, If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer Both for themselves and those who call them friend? For so the whole round earth is every way Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.
Page 431 - The Tale of the Great Persian War, from the Histories of Herodotus. By GEORGE W. Cox, MA late Scholar of Trin. Coll. Oxon. Fcp. 7s. 6d. Greek History from Themistocles to Alexander, in a Series of Lives from Plutarch. Revised and arranged by AH CLOUGH. Fcp. with 44 Woodcuts, 6s. Critical History of the Language and Literature of Ancient Greece.
Page 294 - His Lordship repeated the last word several times with a calm and determinate resignation ; and, after a serious pause of some minutes, he desired to hear the Treaty read, to which he listened with great attention, and recovered spirits enough to declare the approbation of a dying statesman (I use his own words) ' on the most glorious war, and most honourable peace, this nation ever saw.
Page 293 - so languid, that I proposed postponing my business for another time ; but he insisted that I should stay, saying, it could not prolong his life to neglect his duty ; and repeating the following...
Page 131 - Now left the wars ; yet counsellors they were exceeding sage. And as in well-grown woods, on trees, cold spiny grasshoppers Sit chirping, and send voices out, that scarce can pierce our ears For softness, and their weak faint sounds ; so, talking on the tower, These seniors of the people sate ; who when they saw the power Of beauty, in the queen, ascend, even those cold-spirited peers.
Page 221 - So as we ought not to attempt to draw down or submit the mysteries of God to our reason ; but contrariwise to raise and advance our reason to the divine truth.
Page 4 - Achilles to action ; and, in the second division, to cause that action to accomplish the particular puqiose for which it was restored ; so that the end ultimately attained by the action, was the same for which the inaction was originally to be overcome. " We find, therefore, that the -will of Jupiter prescribes the rule of the action of Achilles, and is the efficient agency of the main action of the poem...
Page 397 - But when we pass from intellect to moral tone, from bidvoia to ?i#os, we certainly find in Hector one among the most touching, the most human, of all the delineations of masculine character in the Iliad. In him alone has Homer presented to us that most commanding and most moving combination, of a woman's gentleness and deep affection with warlike and heroic strength. If the hand of Hector was far weaker than that of the son of Peleus, the tempestuous griefs of Achilles do not open to us a character...
Page 416 - Buskin or a Tennyson in the contemplation of sunsets or the description of liverworts. Living forms and living motions are the grand material of the epic poet ; the broad effects of light and shade in connexion with these are the only phenomena of colour with which he has to deal. It would have been impertinence in him to have shown in his popular songs any curious attention to colour beyond what either his audience generally was able to appreciate, or the epic art of his time prepared to admit....
Page 96 - ... 51) it is not absolutely necessary in the grammatical structure of this verse to suppose that Dulichium is an island at all ; but it may represent some of the rich fat laud on the JEtolian mainland, at the mouth of the river, which in popular tradition might easily have been confounded with the closely adjacent islands. Hayman's idea (Od. i. App. D. 7,) that " lying beyond the sea, ie, the Crissean gulf, under the land, and probably flat, its form might easily blend with that of the continent,...