The Odyssey, with the hymns, epigrams, and Battle of the frogs and mice, tr. with notes by T.A. Buckley. [Preceded by] The life of Homer, attr. to Herodotus1851 |
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Page xiii
... delight . Joyful at the reception his poems had prepared for him among the Cumæans , and at the pleasure with which they had heard him , he one day proposed to them , that if the state would maintain him , he would make the city of Cumæ ...
... delight . Joyful at the reception his poems had prepared for him among the Cumæans , and at the pleasure with which they had heard him , he one day proposed to them , that if the state would maintain him , he would make the city of Cumæ ...
Page 2
... delighted with a feast ; but the other [ gods ] were assembled together in the palace of Olympian Jove . And unto them the father of men and of gods began discourse ; for he remem- bered in his mind the noble Ægisthus , whom far - famed ...
... delighted with a feast ; but the other [ gods ] were assembled together in the palace of Olympian Jove . And unto them the father of men and of gods began discourse ; for he remem- bered in his mind the noble Ægisthus , whom far - famed ...
Page 10
... delighted thy kind heart , thou mayest go to thy ship , rejoicing in thy mind , hav- ing a present , precious [ and ] very beautiful , which will be 41 It is a mistake to render öσoav " an oracle , " as is shown by Butt- mann , Lexil ...
... delighted thy kind heart , thou mayest go to thy ship , rejoicing in thy mind , hav- ing a present , precious [ and ] very beautiful , which will be 41 It is a mistake to render öσoav " an oracle , " as is shown by Butt- mann , Lexil ...
Page 12
... delight in what way his mind incites him ; the bards are not the cause , but Jove is sometimes the cause , who suggests to ingenious men , as he chooses to each . There is no blame for him to sing the evil fate of the Grecians . For men ...
... delight in what way his mind incites him ; the bards are not the cause , but Jove is sometimes the cause , who suggests to ingenious men , as he chooses to each . There is no blame for him to sing the evil fate of the Grecians . For men ...
Page 14
... delighted ; and awaited till evening came on . And dark evening came upon them whilst they were being delighted . They then went each to his home to sleep ; but Telemachus , where the lofty chamber of the most beautiful palace was built ...
... delighted ; and awaited till evening came on . And dark evening came upon them whilst they were being delighted . They then went each to his home to sleep ; but Telemachus , where the lofty chamber of the most beautiful palace was built ...
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The Odyssey, with the Hymns, Epigrams, and Battle of the Frogs and Mice, Tr ... Homerus No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
addressed in answer addressed in turn Alcinous amongst Amphinomus answered in turn answering addressed Antinous Apollo Atreus beautiful behold black ship blue-eyed breast Circe companions Cyclops daughter dear deeds deity delighted dwelling earth Ernesti Eumæus Euryclea Eurymachus Eustathius evil far-darting fate father feast garments glorious goddess godlike Grecians grief handmaidens hands heart Hermann Hesych hither Homer honour illustrious Ithaca Jove king Laertes Lexil Loewe lofty Melanthius Menelaus Mercury mighty Minerva mortal mother much-planning Ulysses Neleus Neptune Nestor palace paternal land perished Phæacians possess prudent Penelope prudent Telemachus answered Pylos quickly rejoiced Ruhnken sailed Saturn sheep sitting sleep son of Saturn spear spoke winged words stranger suitors sweet swift ship swineherd Telemachus tell thee Theoclymenus thine things thou art thou hast thou mayest thou wilt thou wouldst thy mind thyself Ulysses addressed unto wandering wife wine καὶ
Popular passages
Page 124 - His spear, — to equal which, the tallest pine Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast Of some great ammiral, were but a wand...
Page 144 - Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage. Far off from these, a slow and silent stream, Lethe, the river of oblivion, rolls Her watery labyrinth, whereof who drinks, Forthwith his former state and being forgets — Forgets both joy and grief, pleasure and pain.
Page 161 - Thus I spoke ; but he answered me not at all, but went to Erebus amongst the other souls of the deceased dead. There however, although angry, he would have spoken to me, or I to him, but my mind in my breast wished to behold the souls of the other dead. There then I beheld Minos, the illustrious son of Jove, having a golden sceptre, giving laws to the dead, sitting down ; but the others around him, the king, pleaded their causes, sitting and standing through the wide-gated house of Pluto. After him...
Page 158 - O Jove-born son of Laertes, much-contriving Ulysses, wretched one, why dost thou meditate a still greater work in thy mind ? how didst thou dare to descend to Orcus, where dwell the witless dead, the images of deceased mortals...
Page 376 - An ox-stealer should be both tall and strong, And I am but a little newborn thing, Who, yet at least, can think of nothing wrong: My business is to suck, and sleep, and fling The cradle-clothes about me all day long, Or, half asleep, hear my sweet mother sing, And to be washed in water clean and warm, And hushed and kissed and kept secure from harm.
Page 101 - And Tiresias and Phineus, prophets old: Then feed on thoughts, that voluntary move Harmonious numbers ; as the wakeful bird Sings darkling, and in shadiest covert hid Tunes her nocturnal note. Thus with the year...
Page 160 - Cetean companions were slain around him, on account of gifts to a woman : him certainly I beheld as the most beautiful, after divine Memnon. But when we, the chieftains of the Grecians, ascended into the horse which Epeus made, and all things were committed to me, both to open the thick ambush and to shut it, there the other leaders and rulers of the Greeks both wiped away their tears, and the limbs of each trembled under them ; but him I never saw at all with my eyes, either turning pale as to his...
Page 68 - ... the web, wove with a golden shuttle. But a flourishing wood sprung up around her grot, alder and poplar, and sweet-smelling cypress. There also birds with spreading wings slept, owls and hawks, and widetongued crows of the ocean, to which maritime employments are a care. There a vine in its prime was spread about the hollow grot, and it flourished with clusters. But four fountains flowed in succession with white water, turned near one another, each in different ways; but around there flourished...
Page 147 - ... turns back again from heaven to earth ; but pernicious night is spread over hapless mortals. Having come there, we drew up our ship ; and we took out the sheep ; and we ourselves went again to the stream of the ocean, until we came to the place which Circe mentioned. There Perimedes and...
Page 157 - ... having contrived death and Fate for me, slew me, conspiring with my pernicious wife, having invited me to his house, entertaining me at a feast, as any one has slain an ox at the stall. Thus I died by a most piteous death ; and my other companions were cruelly slain around me, as swine with white tusks, which are slain either at the marriage, or collation, or splendid banquet of a wealthy, very powerful man.