The Story of the IliadMacmillan, 1891 - 314 páginas |
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Página 9
... wilt take away ! Now am I resolved to go home . I have no mind to heap up goods and gold for thee , and be myself dishonoured . " And King Agamemnon answered : " Go , and thy Myrmidons with thee ! I have other chief- tains as good as ...
... wilt take away ! Now am I resolved to go home . I have no mind to heap up goods and gold for thee , and be myself dishonoured . " And King Agamemnon answered : " Go , and thy Myrmidons with thee ! I have other chief- tains as good as ...
Página 10
... wilt hear me ; white - armed Hera sent me , for she loveth and cherisheth you both alike . Draw not thy sword ; but use bitter words , even as thou wilt . Of a truth , I tell thee that for this insolence of to - day he will bring thee ...
... wilt hear me ; white - armed Hera sent me , for she loveth and cherisheth you both alike . Draw not thy sword ; but use bitter words , even as thou wilt . Of a truth , I tell thee that for this insolence of to - day he will bring thee ...
Página 10
... wilt hear me ; white - armed Hera sent me , for she loveth and cherisheth you both alike . Draw not thy sword ; but use bitter words , even as thou wilt . Of a truth , I tell thee that for this insolence of to - day he will bring thee ...
... wilt hear me ; white - armed Hera sent me , for she loveth and cherisheth you both alike . Draw not thy sword ; but use bitter words , even as thou wilt . Of a truth , I tell thee that for this insolence of to - day he will bring thee ...
Página 20
... wilt set me at strife with Hera , and she will upbraid me with bitter words . Even now she is ever reproach- ing me , saying that I favour the men of Troy in the battle . Therefore do thou get thee away , that she know not of thy coming ...
... wilt set me at strife with Hera , and she will upbraid me with bitter words . Even now she is ever reproach- ing me , saying that I favour the men of Troy in the battle . Therefore do thou get thee away , that she know not of thy coming ...
Página 21
... wilt . And now I sorely fear that Thetis of the silver feet hath prevailed with thee . At dawn of day I saw her kneel- ing before thee ; thou hast granted , I doubt not , that Achilles shall have honour , and that many of the Greeks ...
... wilt . And now I sorely fear that Thetis of the silver feet hath prevailed with thee . At dawn of day I saw her kneel- ing before thee ; thou hast granted , I doubt not , that Achilles shall have honour , and that many of the Greeks ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Achilles Æneas Ajax the Greater aloud Andromaché answered Antilochus Aphrodité Apollo arms arrow Asius Athené Atreus bade battle bravest breast bronze brother cast his spear chariot chiefs city of Troy comrades counsel cried daughter dead death Deïphobus Diomed Edition fair Father Zeus fear feast fell fight fire fled gates gave gifts give Glaucus goddess gold Greeks hand hath heart Hector Helen helmet Hephæstus Hera herald honour horses host Idomeneus Illustrations immortal gods King Agamemnon King Priam leapt lest Lycians men of Troy Menelaüs mighty mother Myrmidons Nestor Olympus Pandarus Paris Patroclus Peleus perish prayed ransom rushed Sarpedon saying shield ships slain slay slew smote sons of Troy sore spake spoil Sthenelus stood Story Surely sword tent Teucer thee Thetis thou art thou hast thou wilt took Trojans Tydeus Ulysses Verily wall wife wounded wrath wroth Zeus
Pasajes populares
Página 313 - Bound in extra cloth, 4s. 6d. ; morocco plain, 7s. 6d. • morocco extra, 10s. 6d. each volume. The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language. Selected and arranged, with Notes, by FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE.
Página 311 - A FLAT IRON FOR A FARTHING; or, Some Passages in the Life of an Only Son.
Página 310 - THE FAIRY BOOK ; the Best Popular Fairy Stories. Selected and rendered anew by the Author of
Página 13 - And as he spake he laid his heavy hand upon the hilt, and thrust back the sword into the scabbard, and Athene went her way to Olympus. Then he turned him to King Agamemnon, and spake again, " Drunkard, with the eyes of a dog and the heart of a deer!
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Página 312 - Never has Mrs. Ewing published a more charming volume of stories, and that is saying a very great deal. From the first to the last the book overflows with the strange knowledge of child-nature which so rarely survives childhood ; and, moreover, with inexhaustible quiet humour, which is never anything but innocent and well-bred, never priggish, and never clumsy.
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Página 255 - Thrice, great Achilles, hast thou pursued me round the walls of Troy, and I dared not stand up against thee ; but now I fear thee no more. Only let us make this covenant between us : if Zeus give me the victory, I will do no dishonor to thy body ; thy arms and- armor will I take, and give back thy body to the Greeks ; and do thou promise to do likewise.