Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 47
pro vyhledávání: '"J. T. Sheppard"'
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Quarterly. 5:220-229
To explain the meaning of the Prometheus the late Dr. Walter Headlam quoted the famous lines from theAgamemnon:‘ Sing praise; ’Tis he hath guided, say, Man's feet in Wisdom's way, Stablishing fast for learning's rule That Suffering be her school
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Review. 27:185-189
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Review. 29:178-181
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Review. 29:230-233
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Quarterly. 7:73-82
This paper is an attempt to show that considerations similar to those which have been applied by the present writer to the Suppliants throw more light than is generally admitted on the construction and dramatic value ox the Septem. The criticism of D
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Quarterly. 10:72-79
Many critics have condemned, some have defended, Euripides for composing a play ‘altogether wanting in the satisfaction which nothing but a unity of ideas could produce.’ It helps us little to marvel, with Paley, at the ‘obtuseness of critics w
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 56:36-47
Tell me, Muse, of that resourceful Man who travelled far,After he had sacked the sacred walls of Troy in war,And looked on many towns of men, and learnt their mind, while heIn his own heart suffered many sorrows on the sea,To save himself from death
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
The Classical Review. 41:2-9
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard
Publikováno v:
Greece and Rome. 3:31-37
Nine years the Achaeans lay encamped beside the sea. Toll was taken of the wealth of Priam and the lives of men in forays, raids, and skirmishes, but no pitched battle fought, until a time of pestilence and disaffection in the Greek camp culminated i
Autor:
J. T. Sheppard, A. W. Verrall
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 30:249-259
The construction of the Frogs of Aristophanes is of a normal conventional type. From the appearance of Dionysus in his strange garb, appropriate to the patron of a heroic stage run mad on realism, to a Dionysus whose wine is new and his bottles old,