Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his flock, and the other who drives forth answers the call. There might a sleepless man have earned a double wage, the one as neat-herd, the other shepherding white flocks : so near are the outgoings... Publications - Página 119por Folklore Society (Great Britain) - 1908Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Homerus - 1879 - 518 páginas
...continually, and on the seventh we came to the steep stronghold of Lamos, Telepylos of the Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day. Thither when we had come to the fair haven, whereabout on both sides goes one steep cliff... | |
| Homer - 1879 - 422 páginas
...the Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herds. j man as he drives in his flock, and the other who drive forth answers the call. There might a sleepless man...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day. Thither when we had come to the fair haven, whereabout on both sides goes one steep cliff... | |
| S. H. Butcher, A. Lang - 1883 - 470 páginas
...continually, and on the seventh we came to the steep stronghold of Lamos, Telepylos of the Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day. Thither when we had come to the fair haven, whereabout on both sides goes one steep cliff... | |
| William Richard Lethaby - 1892 - 292 páginas
...the horizon.' It is the precise moment of the double action at sunrise, as given by Homer and Hesiod, 'where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his...flocks ; so near are the outgoings of the night and the day.' Next to Helios, the mountain god reclines, and next again the Hours. ' Self-moving ground,... | |
| Henry Fanshawe Tozer - 1897 - 448 páginas
...city of the Laestrygones, which he reached in the course of his wanderings, describes it as a place, "where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day1." The meaning of the last clause, which at first sight is somewhat enigmatical, becomes... | |
| Henry Fanshawe Tozer - 1897 - 450 páginas
...city of the Laestrygones, which he reached in the course of his wanderings, describes it as a place, "where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day1." The meaning of the last clause, which at first sight is somewhat enigmatical, becomes... | |
| Griffith Hartwell Jones - 1903 - 590 páginas
...continually, and on the seventh we came to the steep stronghold of Lamos, Telepylos of the Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his flock, and the other who driveth forth answers the call. There might a sleepless man have earned a double wage, the one as a... | |
| Cornelius Tacitus - 1909 - 152 páginas
...subjunctive in a consecutive clause. Homer says of his land of the Laestrygones, Odyssey, 10. 82-86: "There might a sleepless man have earned a double...flocks — so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day." 13. occidere et exsurgere: supply solem. It is noteworthy that Tacitus says nothing of... | |
| Cornelius Tacitus - 1909 - 160 páginas
...subjunctive in a consecutive clause. Homer says of his land of the Laestrygones, Odyssey, 10. 82-86: "There might a sleepless man have earned a double...flocks — so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day." 13. occidere et exsurgere: supply solem. It is noteworthy that Tacitus says nothing of... | |
| W. Dinan - 1911 - 376 páginas
...the Laestrygons, where herdsman hails herdsman as he drives in his flock, and his fellow- herdsman who drives forth answers the call. There might a sleepless...flocks : so near are the outgoings of the night and of the day. HECATAEUS OF MILETUS In the Iliad l we find mention of Miletus, a Greek city situated near... | |
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