| Willard Higley Durham - 1915 - 504 sayfa
...consider him, and in proportion to his Degree in that we are to admire him. No Author or Man ever excell'd all the World in more than one Faculty, and as Homer...in Judgment. Not that we are to think Homer wanted Judgment, because Virgil had it in a more eminent degree ; or that Virgil wanted Invention, because... | |
| Willard Higley Durham - 1915 - 502 sayfa
...consider him, and in proportion to his Degree in that we are to admire him. No Author or Man ever excell'd all the World in more than one Faculty, and as Homer...in Judgment. Not that we are to think Homer wanted Judgment, because Virgil had it in a more eminent degree ; or that Virgil wanted Invention, because... | |
| Henry Holt - 1917 - 486 sayfa
...formal comparison of the two ancient epics on the basis of this contrast. "No author or man," he says, "ever excelled all the world in more than one faculty;...in invention, Virgil has in judgment. Not that we think that Homer wanted judgment, because Virgil had it in a more eminent degree; or that Virgil wanted... | |
| Sylvia Adamson, Gavin Alexander, Katrin Ettenhuber - 2007 - 238 sayfa
...him, and in proportion to his degree in that we are to admire him . . . No Author or Man ever excell'd all the World in more than one Faculty, and as Homer...in Judgment. Not that we are to think Homer wanted Judgment, because Virgil had it in a more eminent degree; or that Virgil wanted Invention, because... | |
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