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Homer: Iliad VI: Greek Texts

Autor Homer J.A. Harrison, R. H. Jordan
en Limba Engleză Paperback – iun 1991
The Iliad Book VI makes ideal reading for a student approaching the epic for the first time. Amongst other episodes it includes the meeting of Diomedes and Glaukos in battle, which throws light on the ethics of epic warfare; and the touching scene of Hektor's final parting from his wife Andromache and baby son Astyanax.

This illustrated edition includes text with notes on the facing page, introduction and select bibliography of further reading. There are also short appendices introducing the forms of Homeric dialect with their Attic equivalents, prepositional usages in Homer, Homeric formulae, and scansion of the hexameter. A consolidated vocabulary and glossary of proper names follow - in sum all the basic material needed for early Greek learners to tackle their first book of Homer with confidence and understanding.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780862921491
ISBN-10: 086292149X
Pagini: 112
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bristol Classical Press
Seria Greek Texts

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Foreword
Introduction
Selection Bibliography
Text of Iliad VI with facing Notes
Appendices
1 Some Basic Homeric Forms
2 'Prepositional' Usages
3 Formulae
4 Metre and Scansion
Vocabulary
Proper Names

Caracteristici

The Commentary, as well as containing material addressed to advanced readers, is also designed to be accessible to those who are new to Homer

Notă biografică

J.A. Harrison co-edited Homer: Iliad Books I and VI with R.H. Jordan (both published by Bloomsbury).R.H. Jordan was Head of Classics and Senior Vice Principal of the Methodist College Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK; and editor of Virgil: Aeneid, Books II and X (also published by Bloomsbury).


Recenzii

This commentary is a welcome addition to the scholarly literature, and will undoubtedly serve its intended audience very well indeed.
Pulleyn's horizons are broad, his linguistic foundation impeccable, his enthusiasm and appreciation of Homer's art everywhere evident ... a great deal of hard work and hard thought has gone into this edition, which deserves to be widely used.
Pulleyn's intended readership are undergraduate students and readers who come to Homer for the first time after having been reared on Attic language and literature. These readers will certainly profit from Pulleyn's reliable translation and his thorough treatment of Homeric syntax ... the commentary offers much useful guidance in reading the original text. Readers will also profit from Pulleyn's full introduction, which addresses many of the long-standing problems of Homeric scholarship ... will be useful to readers wishing to tackle liad 1 in the original language.
Informative introduction and rich commentary.