The Iliad, tr. by mr. Pope. [With notes partly by W. Broome. Preceded by] An essay on ... Homer [by T. Parnell].1720 |
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... herein fignified . Given at Our Court at St. James's the fixth Day of May 1715. in the first Year of Our Reign . By His Majefty's Command , JAMES STANHOPE . HOMER'S ILIA D. ΟΜΗΡΟΣ . nis . Ex marmore antiquo GEORGE R.
... herein fignified . Given at Our Court at St. James's the fixth Day of May 1715. in the first Year of Our Reign . By His Majefty's Command , JAMES STANHOPE . HOMER'S ILIA D. ΟΜΗΡΟΣ . nis . Ex marmore antiquo GEORGE R.
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... first breath'd into it by Homer ? I fhall begin with confidering him in this part , as it is naturally the first , and I speak of it both as it means the defign of a poem , and as it is taken for fiction . Fable may be divided into the ...
... first breath'd into it by Homer ? I fhall begin with confidering him in this part , as it is naturally the first , and I speak of it both as it means the defign of a poem , and as it is taken for fiction . Fable may be divided into the ...
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... first who introduc'd the deities ( as Herodotus imagines ) into the religion of Greece , he feems the first who brought them into a fyftem of Machinery for Poetry , and such an one as makes its greatest importance and dignity . For we ...
... first who introduc'd the deities ( as Herodotus imagines ) into the religion of Greece , he feems the first who brought them into a fyftem of Machinery for Poetry , and such an one as makes its greatest importance and dignity . For we ...
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... first who taught that language of the Gods to men . His expreffion is like the colouring of fome great mafters , which dif- covers itself to be laid on boldly , and executed with rapidity . It is indeed the strongest and most glow- ing ...
... first who taught that language of the Gods to men . His expreffion is like the colouring of fome great mafters , which dif- covers itself to be laid on boldly , and executed with rapidity . It is indeed the strongest and most glow- ing ...
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... first ; a confideration which whoever compares these two Poets ought to have always in his eye . Some accuse him for the fame things which they overlook or praise in the other ; as when they prefer the fable and moral of the neis to ...
... first ; a confideration which whoever compares these two Poets ought to have always in his eye . Some accuse him for the fame things which they overlook or praise in the other ; as when they prefer the fable and moral of the neis to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Æneid againſt Agamemnon alfo ancient arms army Atrides battel beauty becauſe call'd caufe Chalcis character chief Chios compariſon defcending defcription defign Euftathius expreffion fable facred faid fame fays fceptre fecond feems feen felf fenfe feveral fhall fhews fhining fhips fhore fhort fhould fide fight fimile fince fingle firft firſt flain fome fometimes fpeech fpirit ftand ftill ftory ftrength fubject fuch Goddeſs Gods Grecian Greece Greeks heav'n Hector Heroes himſelf hoft Homer honour Ibid Idomeneus Iliad Jove juft Jupiter King laft lefs Leo Allatius Madam Dacier manner Menelaus moft moſt muſt Neftor Nireus o'er obferves occafion paffage paffion Pandarus Paris perfons plain pleaſure Plutarch poem Poet poetry pow'r praiſe prefent Priam Prince reafon reft reprefented rifing ſhall ſpeak Spondanus Strab Suidas thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou thro tranflation Trojan troops Troy Ulyffes uſe verfe Virgil whofe words