For this is the Great Story of the North, which should be to all our race what the Tale of Troy was to the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been — a... The Quarterly Review - 第 496 頁由 編輯 - 1899完整檢視 - 關於此書
| Peter Faulkner, Peter Preston, William Morris Society - 1999 - 328 頁
...to the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been —...after us no less than the Tale of Troy has been to us.9 At first sight this seems quite to contradict Hegel, and certainly in its valuation of the Nordic... | |
| San Diego Bakhtin Circle - 2000 - 204 頁
...to the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been —...after us no less than the Tale of Troy has been to us.IS Morris is here adopting, with some characteristic modifications, exactly the association of epic... | |
| Simon Dentith - 2006 - 10 頁
...to the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been —...after us no less than the Tale of Troy has been to us. 13 Morris offers here a characteristically straightforward assertion of epic primitivism and with it... | |
| Raymond Wilson Chambers - 1912 - 286 頁
...to the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been —...us no less than the Tale of Troy has been to us'." And thus Gundahari has been sung by the poets of fourteen centuries : but on the other hand the historians... | |
| 1920 - 564 頁
...the Greeks — to all our race first, and afterwards, when the change 152 of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been —...us no less than the Tale of Troy has been to us." It was in this spirit that Morris wrote Sigurd the Volsung. It is evident that had he felt upon its... | |
| Edward Everett Hale - 1870 - 814 頁
...to the Greeks, — to all our race first; and afterwards, when the change of the world has made our race nothing more than a name of what has been. — a story too, — then should it be to tho* that come after us no less than the tale of Troy has been to us." With these noble words, the... | |
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