Homer: The OdysseyBlackwood, 1870 - 136 páginas |
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Página 76
... Tiresias . Ulysses goes on to describe to the king of the Phæ- acians his voyage on from the island of Ææa , under the favouring gales which Circe sends him : - " All the day long the silvery foam we clave 76 THE ODYSSEY .
... Tiresias . Ulysses goes on to describe to the king of the Phæ- acians his voyage on from the island of Ææa , under the favouring gales which Circe sends him : - " All the day long the silvery foam we clave 76 THE ODYSSEY .
Página 79
... Tiresias , the blind prophet of Thebes , who retained his art and his honours even in these regions of the dead . So he kept them off with his sword , not suffering even the phantom of his dead mother Anticleia , who came among the rest ...
... Tiresias , the blind prophet of Thebes , who retained his art and his honours even in these regions of the dead . So he kept them off with his sword , not suffering even the phantom of his dead mother Anticleia , who came among the rest ...
Página 80
The Odyssey William Lucas Collins. From the lips of Tiresias Ulysses has learnt the future which awaits him . On the coast of Sicily he should find pasturing the herds and flocks of the Sun : if he and his comrades left them uninjured ...
The Odyssey William Lucas Collins. From the lips of Tiresias Ulysses has learnt the future which awaits him . On the coast of Sicily he should find pasturing the herds and flocks of the Sun : if he and his comrades left them uninjured ...
Página 87
... Tiresias , bid them steer on and leave the land unvisited . Eu- rylochus , his lieutenant , broke out at last into some- thing like mutiny . He had some show of reason , when he complained of his chief , almost in the words of Sir ...
... Tiresias , bid them steer on and leave the land unvisited . Eu- rylochus , his lieutenant , broke out at last into some- thing like mutiny . He had some show of reason , when he complained of his chief , almost in the words of Sir ...
Página 121
... Tiresias , by which alone he could appease Neptune for the cruel injury inflicted on his son , the giant Polyphemus . He must seek out some people who had never seen the sea , and never eaten salt , and there offer sacrifice to the god ...
... Tiresias , by which alone he could appease Neptune for the cruel injury inflicted on his son , the giant Polyphemus . He must seek out some people who had never seen the sea , and never eaten salt , and there offer sacrifice to the god ...
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A. C. vol Achilles admiration ADVANCED TEXT-BOOK adventures Ægisthus Agamemnon Alcinous Ancient Classics Antinous ATLAS Author banquet beauty bids BLACKWOOD AND SONS Calypso character charms chief Circe comrades crew Crown 8vo Cyclops Dictionary disguised divine doth Edinburgh Edition ENGLISH READERS Engravings Eumæus Eurycleia Eurylochus Eurymachus fate father Fcap feast GEOLOGY goddess gods Greek guest hall hand hath heart Helen hero Homer honour Iliad immortal INTRODUCTORY TEXT-BOOK island Ithaca KEITH JOHNSTON king Laertes land LL.D maidens MANUAL Menelaus ment Minerva mortal mother Nausicaa Neoptolemus Nestor night Odyssey once palace Penelope Phæacian PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY Pisistratus poem poet poet's Polyphemus Pylos queen recognise round royal sail says ship song Sparta story stranger suitors sweet tale tears Telemachus tells thee thou Tiresias toil travellers Troy Ulysses vengeance voyage wanderings wife WILLIAM BLACKWOOD wine words young ZOOLOGY
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Página 124 - Tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off, and, sitting well in order, smite The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western stars, until I die. It may be that the gulfs will wash us down: It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles, And see the great Achilles, whom we knew. Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho...
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