The Great Poets and Their TheologyAmerican Baptist Publication Society, 1897 - 531 páginas |
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Página 4
... seem artificial and self - conscious beside Homer . Virgil has always for his underlying motive the exalta- tion of ... seems free from subjective motive . antipathy of race or of religion moves him . self absorbed , and he absorbs us ...
... seem artificial and self - conscious beside Homer . Virgil has always for his underlying motive the exalta- tion of ... seems free from subjective motive . antipathy of race or of religion moves him . self absorbed , and he absorbs us ...
Página 7
... seems to me , why this latter question should be answered in the affirmative : the " Iliad " and the " Odyssey " are by the same hand . argue this mainly upon the ground that the two poems exhibit a similarity of structure impossible to ...
... seems to me , why this latter question should be answered in the affirmative : the " Iliad " and the " Odyssey " are by the same hand . argue this mainly upon the ground that the two poems exhibit a similarity of structure impossible to ...
Página 22
... seem to indicate . We have been adducing the evidence of inscriptions upon stone or metal . But these imply the long - continued previous ANTIQUITY OF GREEK LETTERS 23 existence of the easier writing 22 THE HOMERIC QUESTION.
... seem to indicate . We have been adducing the evidence of inscriptions upon stone or metal . But these imply the long - continued previous ANTIQUITY OF GREEK LETTERS 23 existence of the easier writing 22 THE HOMERIC QUESTION.
Página 23
... seems difficult to believe that any mere signs or picture - writing can be meant . Yet this is the clearest allusion to writing in the Homeric poems , and of itself it would be far from proving that the poems . themselves were written ...
... seems difficult to believe that any mere signs or picture - writing can be meant . Yet this is the clearest allusion to writing in the Homeric poems , and of itself it would be far from proving that the poems . themselves were written ...
Página 27
... seems to us , is to attribute to the Greeks a physical inertia , as well as a mental incapacity to appre- hend and to appropriate , which are the precise opposites of all we know of that eager , curious , colonizing race . We find it ...
... seems to us , is to attribute to the Greeks a physical inertia , as well as a mental incapacity to appre- hend and to appropriate , which are the precise opposites of all we know of that eager , curious , colonizing race . We find it ...
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Æneid Alfred Tennyson beauty believe Browning's called character Christ Christian church Coleridge conscience Dante Dante's dark death declared Divine Comedy doctrine dramatic earth Eclogues element epic eternal evil expression eyes fact faith Faust feeling freedom genius Georgics give God's gods Goethe Goethe's greatest Greek guilt heart heaven hell holiness Homer hope human nature ideal Iliad imagination immortal Italy John Milton King knowledge learned light literary literature live lost Macbeth man's means Milton mind Monist moral never Odyssey pantheistic Paradise Paradise Lost passion Peisistratus philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry punishment purgatory Puritan regard religion religious Robert Browning Roman Rome Satan Scripture seems sense Shakespeare song sorrow soul sphere spirit star story sublime sweet Tennyson thee theology things thou thought tion true truth universe verse Virgil voice whole words Wordsworth writing youth Zeus