The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, 第 35 卷Samuel Johnson C. Bathurst, 1779 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 60 筆
第 37 頁
... Suppliant the venerable father stands , Apollo's awful enfigns grace his hands : By these he begs ; and lowly bending down , Extends the fceptre and the laurel crown . D3 15 He fued to all , but chief implor'd for grace [ 37 ]
... Suppliant the venerable father stands , Apollo's awful enfigns grace his hands : By these he begs ; and lowly bending down , Extends the fceptre and the laurel crown . D3 15 He fued to all , but chief implor'd for grace [ 37 ]
第 39 頁
... Bent was his bow , the Grecian hearts to wound ; Fierce as he mov'd , his filver shafts refound . Breathing revenge , a fudden night he spread , And gloomy darkness roll'd about his head . The fleet in view , he twang'd his deadly bow ...
... Bent was his bow , the Grecian hearts to wound ; Fierce as he mov'd , his filver shafts refound . Breathing revenge , a fudden night he spread , And gloomy darkness roll'd about his head . The fleet in view , he twang'd his deadly bow ...
第 39 頁
... Suppliant the venerable father stands , Apollo's awful enfigns grace his hands : By these he begs ; and lowly bending down , Extends the fceptre and the laurel crown . 15 He fued to all , but chief implor'd for grace D 3 H [ 37 ]
... Suppliant the venerable father stands , Apollo's awful enfigns grace his hands : By these he begs ; and lowly bending down , Extends the fceptre and the laurel crown . 15 He fued to all , but chief implor'd for grace D 3 H [ 37 ]
第 39 頁
... Bent was his bow , the Grecian hearts to wound ; Fierce as he mov'd , his filver shafts refound . Breathing revenge , a fudden night he spread , And gloomy darkness roll'd about his head . The fleet in view , he twang'd his deadly bow ...
... Bent was his bow , the Grecian hearts to wound ; Fierce as he mov'd , his filver shafts refound . Breathing revenge , a fudden night he spread , And gloomy darkness roll'd about his head . The fleet in view , he twang'd his deadly bow ...
第 40 頁
... bends his fatal bow ? First give thy faith , and plight a prince's word Of fure protection , by thy power and sword . For I must speak what wisdom would conceal , And truths , invidious to the great , reveal . Bold is the task , when ...
... bends his fatal bow ? First give thy faith , and plight a prince's word Of fure protection , by thy power and sword . For I must speak what wisdom would conceal , And truths , invidious to the great , reveal . Bold is the task , when ...
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熱門章節
第 1 頁 - Thus his measures, instead of being fetters to his sense, were always in readiness to run along with the warmth of his rapture, and even to give a farther representation of his notions, in the correspondence of their sounds to what they signified.
第 149 頁 - Like leaves on trees the race of man is found, Now green in youth, now withering on the ground ; Another race the following spring supplies, They fall successive, and successive rise: So generations in their course decay, So flourish these, when those are past away.
第 9 頁 - I doubt not many have been led into that error by the shortness of it, which proceeds not from his following the original line by line, but from the contractions above mentioned.
第 8 頁 - I must confess myself utterly incapable of doing justice to Homer. I attempt him in no other hope, but that which one may entertain without much vanity, of giving a more tolerable copy of him than any entire...
第 17 頁 - Tis ours the chance of fighting fields to try, Thine to look on, and bid the valiant die. So much 'tis safer through the camp to go, And rob a subject, than despoil a foe.
第 123 頁 - So spoke the god who darts celestial fires: He dreads his fury, and some steps retires. Then Phoebus bore the chief of Venus...
第 6 頁 - When we read Homer, we ought to reflect that we are reading the...
第 3 頁 - We ought to have a certain knowledge of the principal character and distinguishing excellence of each: it is in that we are to consider him, and in proportion to his degree in that we are to admire him. No author or man...
第 7 頁 - Homer, and which, though it might be accommodated (as has been already shewn) to the ear of those times, is by no means so to ours: but one may wait for opportunities of placing them, where they derive an additional beauty from the occasions on which they are employed ; and in doing this properly, a translator may at once shew his fancy and his judgment.