Homer — "Beauty, terrible beauty! A deathless goddess — so she strikes our eyes!"
Beauty, terrible beauty! A deathless goddess — so she strikes our eyes!
Beauty, terrible beauty! A deathless goddess — so she strikes our eyes!
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"And nature is of mortals once deceased. For they nor muscle have, nor flesh, nor bone; All those (the spirit from the body once. Divorced) the violence of fire consumes, And, like a dream, the soul fl…"
"Peneleus, hits a Trojan in the face. He then cuts off the head and lifts it into the air at the end of a spear, causing the other Trojans to tremble in fear."
"It is not for us to judge."
"The dogs bark at the stranger."
"There is nothing more wretched than a man who wanders all over the earth."
Greek epic poet traditionally credited with the Iliad and the Odyssey, the foundational works of Western literature. Closely associated with Hesiod (near-contemporary Greek poet of Theogony and Works and Days). For an intellectual contrast, see Plato, Greek philosopher of the Republic — Republic Book X bans the poets from the ideal city, with Homer as the explicit target — Plato argued Homer's gods set immoral examples and that poetry corrupts moral education. The founding philosophy-versus-poetry quarrel of Western thought.
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