The Odyssey of Homer, Volume 2Houghton Mifflin, 1872 |
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Página iv
... Hall by Ulysses and his Son . Interview of Penelope and Ulysses , who tells her that he has seen her Husband in Crete , describes his Person and Dress , and affirms that within a Month he will be in Ithaca . The Bath administered to ...
... Hall by Ulysses and his Son . Interview of Penelope and Ulysses , who tells her that he has seen her Husband in Crete , describes his Person and Dress , and affirms that within a Month he will be in Ithaca . The Bath administered to ...
Página v
... Hall • . 159 BOOK XXI . THE BENDING OF THE BOW OF ULYSSES . - Proposal of Penelope to the Suitors to contend for her Hand with the Bow and Arrows of Ulysses . Their ineffectual Attempts to bend the Bow . - Management of Ulysses to ...
... Hall • . 159 BOOK XXI . THE BENDING OF THE BOW OF ULYSSES . - Proposal of Penelope to the Suitors to contend for her Hand with the Bow and Arrows of Ulysses . Their ineffectual Attempts to bend the Bow . - Management of Ulysses to ...
Página 1
... halls Were silent ; all were held in mute delight . Alcinoüs then took up the word and said : " Since thou hast come , Ulysses , as a guest , To this high pile and to these brazen rooms , So long a sufferer , thou must not depart Upon ...
... halls Were silent ; all were held in mute delight . Alcinoüs then took up the word and said : " Since thou hast come , Ulysses , as a guest , To this high pile and to these brazen rooms , So long a sufferer , thou must not depart Upon ...
Página 15
... once 415 Delighted to his children and his wife In his own home . But thou desirest not To ask or hear of them till thou hast put Thy consort to the trial of her truth , – Her who now sits within thy halls and waits In Book XIII . 15.
... once 415 Delighted to his children and his wife In his own home . But thou desirest not To ask or hear of them till thou hast put Thy consort to the trial of her truth , – Her who now sits within thy halls and waits In Book XIII . 15.
Página 16
Homer. Her who now sits within thy halls and waits In vain for thee , and in perpetual grief And weeping wears her nights and days away . I never doubted - well , in truth , I knew That thou , with all thy comrades lost , wouldst reach ...
Homer. Her who now sits within thy halls and waits In vain for thee , and in perpetual grief And weeping wears her nights and days away . I never doubted - well , in truth , I knew That thou , with all thy comrades lost , wouldst reach ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Achaians Amphinomus answered Antinoüs arms Atreus Atrides Autolycus avenged bade banquet bark bear beheld beside bespake blue-eyed Pallas bore brass bring brought chief Ulysses cloak Crete crew Ctesippus dear death discreet Telemachus replied Dulichium dwell Epeians Eumæus Eupeithes Eurycleia Eurymachus fair father feast feet friends galley gave gifts goats goddess godlike gods guest halls hands hath hear heard heart Icarius Idomeneus isle Ithaca Jove Jupiter king Laertes land limbs lodge maids Meantime Megapenthes Melanthius Menelaus mighty mother much-enduring noble o'er once palace Peisistratus Phæacians Polybus pray Pylos queen rejoiced sagacious sage Penelope seat shalt ship slain slay sleep smote sorrow spake spear stood stranger suffered suitor-train suitors swine swineherd tears tell thee Theoclymenus Thesprotians thou art thou didst thou dost thou hast thou wilt threshold thrones thyself took town Troy tunic Ulysses wandering wife wine winged words wouldst youth