One Hundred Best Books by John Cowper Powys
page 13 of 86 (15%)
page 13 of 86 (15%)
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2. HOMER. THE ODYSSEY. _Butcher and Lang's Prose Translation_. The Odyssey must continue to appeal to adventurous persons more powerfully than any other of the ancient stories because, blent with the classic quality of its pure Greek style, there can be found in it that magical element of thrilling romance, which belongs not to one age, but to all time. 3. THE BACCHANALS. THE BACCHÆ OF EURIPIDES. _Translated by Professor Gilbert Murray_. Euripides, the favourite poet of John Milton and Goethe, is the most modern in feeling, the most romantic in mood of all the Greek poets. One is conscious that in his work, as in the sculpture of Praxiteles, the calm beauty of the Apollonian temper is touched by the wilder rhythm of the perilous music of Dionysus. 4. HORACE. _Any selection in Latin of The Odes of Horace and complete prose translation published by Macmillan_. Flawlessly hammered out, as if from eternal bronze--"aere perennius"--The Odes of Horace are the consummate expression of the pride, the reserve, the tragic playfulness, the epicurean calm, the absolute distinction of the Imperial Roman spirit. A few lines taken |
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