Tragedies: Literally Translated Into English Prose, with Notes, Volume 71837 |
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Página 266
... death . NE . What then , dare not one even approach him ? UL . No , at least , if he entrap him not by craft , as I ad- vise . NE . And dost thou not then hold it base to utter false- hoods ? UL . No , at least if the lie brings safety ...
... death . NE . What then , dare not one even approach him ? UL . No , at least , if he entrap him not by craft , as I ad- vise . NE . And dost thou not then hold it base to utter false- hoods ? UL . No , at least if the lie brings safety ...
Página 275
... death I had least been willing to hear . Alas ! alas ! to what then must one look , when they are dead , and Ulysses yet remains even there , where in their room he ought to be spoken of as dead . ÑE . An artful combatant is he ; but ...
... death I had least been willing to hear . Alas ! alas ! to what then must one look , when they are dead , and Ulysses yet remains even there , where in their room he ought to be spoken of as dead . ÑE . An artful combatant is he ; but ...
Página 286
... death , death , why , when thus ever day after day invoked canst thou never at any time come ? My son my noble son , having taken me up , burn me on this Lemnian † upward - curling fire , thou generous youth ! I too , mark me , once ...
... death , death , why , when thus ever day after day invoked canst thou never at any time come ? My son my noble son , having taken me up , burn me on this Lemnian † upward - curling fire , thou generous youth ! I too , mark me , once ...
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Termos e frases comuns
abode Achilles Æta Agamemnon Ajax alludes Antilochus Aristophanes arms art thou Atreus Atridæ aught Barby Brunck Brunck's note Chalcodon Chorus Chryse convey deeds disease dost thou Echepolus evil father foot Fulminis give gods gone Greeks groans Hades hand haply hast thou hath hear heaven Helenus hence Hercules Hermann reads Jove king knowest thou Laertes land Lemnos lest let us begone loctetes longer look Lycomedes Minerva misery Musgrave Neoptolemus never pain persuaded Philoc Philoctetes pity Poias possessed Priam quæ quod reproach sail sayest thou Scholiast Scyros ship Sisyphus sleep Sophocles speak stranger sure tell Teucer thee at least thine thing thou art thou seest thou shalt thou shouldst Thou speakest thou wilt thy disease thyself tongue Trojan plains Troy Tydeus Ulysses undone unhappy utter vessel villain voyage weapons whither wilt thou woes words wretched δὲ καὶ