The Works of George Chapman ...Chatto and Windus, 1875 |
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Página 8
... spirit to tread upon that foot , and be lifted to the height and sweetness of her bosom , what place with the greatest doth an eternizer merit ? The foot and the back parts ? how to be accounted according to his unfashionable habit of ...
... spirit to tread upon that foot , and be lifted to the height and sweetness of her bosom , what place with the greatest doth an eternizer merit ? The foot and the back parts ? how to be accounted according to his unfashionable habit of ...
Página 11
... spirit ; not a simile he hath but is Homer's ; not an invention , person , or disposition , but is wholly or originally built upon Homerical foundations , and in many places hath the very words Homer useth ; besides , where Virgil hath ...
... spirit ; not a simile he hath but is Homer's ; not an invention , person , or disposition , but is wholly or originally built upon Homerical foundations , and in many places hath the very words Homer useth ; besides , where Virgil hath ...
Página 12
... spirit in all thy all - countries ' - exploded filcheries , which are so grossly illiterate , that no man will vouchsafe their refutation , than in thy senseless reprehensions of Homer ; whose spirit flew as much above thy grovelling ...
... spirit in all thy all - countries ' - exploded filcheries , which are so grossly illiterate , that no man will vouchsafe their refutation , than in thy senseless reprehensions of Homer ; whose spirit flew as much above thy grovelling ...
Página 13
... spirit through a language so fit and so favour- less ; humbly presenting your Achillean virtues with Achilles ' shield ; wishing as it is much more admirable and divine , so it were as many times more rich , than the Shield the Cardinal ...
... spirit through a language so fit and so favour- less ; humbly presenting your Achillean virtues with Achilles ' shield ; wishing as it is much more admirable and divine , so it were as many times more rich , than the Shield the Cardinal ...
Página 14
... ; whose general divinity of spirit , clad in my willing labours ( envious of none nor detracting any ) I commit to your good nature and solid capacity . THE FIRST BOOK OF HOMER'S ILIADS . * " See 14 TO THE UNDERSTANDER .
... ; whose general divinity of spirit , clad in my willing labours ( envious of none nor detracting any ) I commit to your good nature and solid capacity . THE FIRST BOOK OF HOMER'S ILIADS . * " See 14 TO THE UNDERSTANDER .
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The Works of George Chapman: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, Volume 3 George Chapman Visualização completa - 1903 |
Termos e frases comuns
Achilles Agamemnon Ajax Alcinous amongst answer'd Antilochus arms Atreus Atrides bear blood brave breast breath brought call'd cast charge chariot command counsels dame darts death Deiphobus Deity Diomed divine doth drave earth Eumæus Eurymachus Eurypylus eyes fair fame fate father fear feast fell fight fire fleet flew force friends gave give Gods grace Grecian Greeks guest hand haste hath head heart heaven Hector Homer honour honour'd horse host Idomen ILIADS Ilion Jove Jove's king labour lance lest lives Lycian Menelaus mighty mind Minerva Nestor never Pallas Patroclus Peleus Phoebus pour'd Priam Priam's prince Pylos Queen reach'd rest sacred shield ship shore sire slain sleep soul spake spirit Spondanus stand stood strength strook sweet tears Telemachus thee Thetis thine thou took Trojans Troy turn'd Tydeus Ulysses vex'd wine wooers words wound
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Página 89 - The spirit I first did breathe Did never teach me that; much less, since the contempt of death Was settled in me, and my mind knew what a worthy was, Whose office is to lead, in fight, and give no danger pass Without improvement. In this fire must Hector's trial shine: Here must his country, father, friends, be in him made divine.
Página 25 - Though truth in her very nakedness sits in so deep a pit, that from Gades to Aurora and Ganges few eyes can sound her, I hope yet those few here will so discover and confirm that, the date being out of her darkness in this morning of our poet, he shall now gird his temples with the sun," — we pronounce that such a prose is intolerable.
Página 47 - 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...
Página 148 - O friend, if keeping back Would keep back age from us, and death, and that we might not wrack* In this life's human sea at all, but that deferring now We...
Página 237 - Thus, since Achilles spake As if his awed steeds understood, 'twas Juno's will to make Vocal the palate of the one, who shaking his fair head (Which, in his mane, let fall to earth, he almost buried), Thus Xanthus spake : "Ablest Achilles, now, at least, our care Shall bring thee off ; but not far hence the fatal minutes are Of thy grave ruin.
Página 47 - And justly suffer for her sake, with all our progenies, Labour and ruin, let her go ; the profit of our land Must pass the beauty.' Thus, though these could bear so fit a hand On their affections, yet, when all their gravest powers were used, They could not choose but welcome her, and rather they accused The gods than beauty.
Página 454 - A curious measure, and confer the rates 310 Of our two pow'rs and theirs, to try if we Alone may propagate to victory Our bold encounters of them all, or prove The kind assistance of some others
Página 220 - ... his head, Smear'd all his lovely face ; his weeds, divinely fashioned, All filed and mangled ; and himself he threw upon the shore, Lay, as laid out for funeral, then tumbled round, and tore His gracious curls. His ecstasy he did so far extend, That all the ladies won by him and his now slaughter'd friend, Afflicted strangely for his plight, came shrieking from the tents, And fell about him, beat their breasts, their tender lineaments Dissolved with sorrow.
Página 352 - And still she stood him, as resolved to know What man he was ; or out of what should grow His strange repair to them. And here was he Put to his wisdom ; if her virgin knee He should be bold, but kneeling, to embrace ; Or keep aloof, and try with words of grace, In humblest suppliance, if he might obtain Some cover for his nakedness, and gain Her grace to show and guide him to the town. The last he best thought, to be worth his own, In weighing both well ; to keep still aloof, And give with soft...