The Quarterly Review, Volume 226John Murray, 1916 |
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Pagina 10
... forces in the Second Book . He is able to show that the geography of the Catalogue is in accordance with the rest of the Iliad , and that it implies conditions completely different from those which prevailed when the Iliad assumed its ...
... forces in the Second Book . He is able to show that the geography of the Catalogue is in accordance with the rest of the Iliad , and that it implies conditions completely different from those which prevailed when the Iliad assumed its ...
Pagina 14
... forces of the unitarians will never rehabilitate the Catalogue as a document of significance for the Mycenæan age . It was composed by a Boeotian in the interests of Boeotia , which had taken no part in the Trojan War . Probably it was ...
... forces of the unitarians will never rehabilitate the Catalogue as a document of significance for the Mycenæan age . It was composed by a Boeotian in the interests of Boeotia , which had taken no part in the Trojan War . Probably it was ...
Pagina 20
... force to those who believe in the unity of the poem and those who hold that it was a compilation or a growth . His results indeed will inevitably influence Homeric controversy in the future . In the meantime he has definitely restored ...
... force to those who believe in the unity of the poem and those who hold that it was a compilation or a growth . His results indeed will inevitably influence Homeric controversy in the future . In the meantime he has definitely restored ...
Pagina 49
... force was moved to Syhedra , a small and obscure seaport not far from Selinus ( Selindi ) in Cilicia . Here was held the fateful council to which the narrative of Lucan gives the pro- minence it deserves ; and , allowing for some ...
... force was moved to Syhedra , a small and obscure seaport not far from Selinus ( Selindi ) in Cilicia . Here was held the fateful council to which the narrative of Lucan gives the pro- minence it deserves ; and , allowing for some ...
Pagina 50
... force the steeps of duty call . ' Numidia is allowed a little longer argument ( 283-288 ) . But Juba , it is urged , comes of the treacherous race of Africa ; in his veins runs the blood of Hannibal , the arch enemy of Rome ; * and he ...
... force the steeps of duty call . ' Numidia is allowed a little longer argument ( 283-288 ) . But Juba , it is urged , comes of the treacherous race of Africa ; in his veins runs the blood of Hannibal , the arch enemy of Rome ; * and he ...
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Achæans advance agricultural Allies army attack Austrian banks battle battleships Britain British Canal capital century China colonies connexion course Danube defence Disraeli Disraeli's Dobrudja Dominions East Eastern Egypt Empire enemy England English fact favour fighting fleet force foreign policy France French front Georgian Poetry German Government Greek guns hand harbour Heligoland Homer House Hughes Iliad Imperial important increased India industry interest Ireland Irish Volunteers Kiel Kiel Canal labour land less Lord Lucan ment miles natural naval never North Sea occupied Office opinion organisation Palestine Parliament passed peasant poet poetry political Pompey position possession present produce question railway realised reason recognised regard resolution result Rumanian Russian Senate Serbian Serbs ships small holdings South success Thiepval tion to-day trade Treitschke Trojan Trojan War troops Troy Turkish Volhynia whole Wilhelmshaven Wordsworth wounds Yuan Shih-kai