To Homer Through Pope: An Introduction to Homer's Iliad and Pope's TranslationChatto and Windus, 1972 - 216 Seiten |
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Seite 2
... hope at the same time to be exhuming and releasing the imperishable current of ideas that once ran freely in the great world about Homer's epics and in England about Pope's translations . The first question I should like to ask is ...
... hope at the same time to be exhuming and releasing the imperishable current of ideas that once ran freely in the great world about Homer's epics and in England about Pope's translations . The first question I should like to ask is ...
Seite 11
... hope to relish Homer's true greatness unless we place him alongside ' the five or six supreme poets of the world ' . But how can we do this effectively ? People who try to balance and play off the world's greatest poems usually end in ...
... hope to relish Homer's true greatness unless we place him alongside ' the five or six supreme poets of the world ' . But how can we do this effectively ? People who try to balance and play off the world's greatest poems usually end in ...
Seite 20
... hope to be . If we measure how slow to come actual enlightenment is on the central question : what is Man ? when we use every channel of access , we know before we start that any introduction to the revelations in the Iliad is going to ...
... hope to be . If we measure how slow to come actual enlightenment is on the central question : what is Man ? when we use every channel of access , we know before we start that any introduction to the revelations in the Iliad is going to ...
Inhalt
Acknowledgments page | 1 |
the Iliad | 19 |
THREE Popes and Drydens Translations | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles admired Aeneid Agamemnon Alexander Pope Andromache answer Apollo Arnold Augustan beauty blood Book bring classic conception critical D. H. Lawrence Dante dead death Dryden E. V. Rieu Elpenor English epic Eurylochus eyes feel fighting Fitzgerald force give goddess gods Greek ground heart heaven Hector Helen Hell Hera hero heroic human Iliad imagination immortal language lines live look Matthew Arnold mean Menelaos mind modern Nature never noble o'er Odyssey once ourselves Paris passage Patroclus Perimedes phrase plain poem Poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's translation Pope's version Pow'r prose question reader Sarpedon scene seems sense Shakespeare ship simile simplicity soul speak speech spirit St Mawr style tell thee things thou thought translating Homer translation of Homer Trojan turn Ulysses verse Virgil whole wind wish word Zeus