English translations of Homer: Difference between revisions
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This is a list of '''English translations of Homer'''—that is, of the ''Iliad'' and ''Odyssey''—chronologically ordered by date of first publication, with first lines often provided to illustrate the style of the translation. Not all translators translated both the ''[[Iliad]]'' and ''[[Odyssey]]''; in addition to the complete translations listed here are numerous partial translations, ranging from several lines to complete chapters of [[Homer]], which have appeared in a variety of publications. |
This is a list of '''English translations of Homer'''—that is, of the ''Iliad'' and ''Odyssey''—chronologically ordered by date of first publication, with first lines often provided to illustrate the style of the translation. Not all translators translated both the ''[[Iliad]]'' and ''[[Odyssey]]''; in addition to the complete translations listed here are numerous partial translations, ranging from several lines to complete chapters of [[Homer]], which have appeared in a variety of publications. |
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! [[Homer]]<br><br |
! [[Homer]]<br><br>''Yet, see '[[Homeric Question]].''' |
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| c. 8th<br>century<br>B.C. ||scope="col" | <center>[[Ionia]] |
| c. 8th<br>century<br>B.C. ||scope="col" | <center>[[Ionia]] |
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| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληϊάδεω Ἀχιλῆος |
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οὐλομένην, ἣ μυρί᾽ Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε᾽ ἔθηκε, |
οὐλομένην, ἣ μυρί᾽ Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε᾽ ἔθηκε,</poem></blockquote> |
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{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
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πολλὰς δ᾽ ἰφθίμους ψυχὰς Ἄϊδι προΐαψεν |
πολλὰς δ᾽ ἰφθίμους ψυχὰς Ἄϊδι προΐαψεν |
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!{{anchor|ChapmanIl}} [[George Chapman|Chapman,<br>George]] |
!{{anchor|ChapmanIl}} [[George Chapman|Chapman,<br>George]] |
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| 1559–1634,<br />dramatist, poet, classicist ||1611–15 || London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter<ref>{{cite book|author=Wills, Gary (Editor)|title=Chapman's Homer: The Iliad|publisher=Princeton University Press|year=1998|isbn=0-691-00236-3}}</ref> |
| 1559–1634,<br />dramatist, poet, classicist ||1611–15 || London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter<ref>{{cite book|author=Wills, Gary (Editor)|title=Chapman's Homer: The Iliad|publisher=Princeton University Press|year=1998|isbn=0-691-00236-3}}</ref> |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Achilles' baneful wrath resound, O Goddess, that imposed / Infinite sorrows on the Greeks, and many brave souls losed / From breasts heroic…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[https://archive.org/details/iliadandodyssey00homegoog The Iliad and the Odyssey : Williams, Marcia, 1945- : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[https://archive.org/details/iliadandodyssey00homegoog The Iliad and the Odyssey : Williams, Marcia, 1945- : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|HobbesIl}}[[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes,<br>Thomas]] |
! {{anchor|HobbesIl}}[[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes,<br>Thomas]] |
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| 1588–1679,<br />acclaimed philosopher, etc. || 1676 || London, W. Crook |
| 1588–1679,<br />acclaimed philosopher, etc. || 1676 || London, W. Crook |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">O goddess sing what woe the discontent / Of Thetis’ son brought to the Greeks; what souls / Of heroes down to Erebus it sent…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/773/90072 Online Library of Liberty - HOMER'S ILIADS. TRANSLATED OUT OF GREEK by THOMAS HOBBES OF MALMESBURY. - The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/773/90072 Online Library of Liberty - HOMER'S ILIADS. TRANSLATED OUT OF GREEK by THOMAS HOBBES OF MALMESBURY. - The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|PopeIl}}{{anchor|BroomeOd}}{{anchor|FentonOd}}[[Alexander Pope|Pope,<br>Alexander]] (with [[William Broome]] and [[Elijah Fenton]]) |
! {{anchor|PopeIl}}{{anchor|BroomeOd}}{{anchor|FentonOd}}[[Alexander Pope|Pope,<br>Alexander]] (with [[William Broome]] and [[Elijah Fenton]]) |
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| 1688–1744,<br />poet || 1715 || London, Bernard Lintot |
| 1688–1744,<br />poet || 1715 || London, Bernard Lintot |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Achilles' wrath, to Greece the direful spring / Of woes unnumber'd, heavenly goddess, sing! / That wrath which hurl'd to Pluto's gloomy reign / The souls of mighty chiefs untimely slain…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/6130 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/6130 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|Macpherson}}[[James Macpherson|Macpherson,<br>James]] |
! {{anchor|Macpherson}}[[James Macpherson|Macpherson,<br>James]] |
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| 1736–1796,<br />poet, compiler of Scots Gaelic poems, politician || 1773 || London, T. Becket |
| 1736–1796,<br />poet, compiler of Scots Gaelic poems, politician || 1773 || London, T. Becket |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">The wrath of the son of Peleus,—O goddess of song, unfold! The deadly wrath of Achilles: To Greece the source of many woes! Which peopled the regions of death,—with shades of heroes untimely slain…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=aU48AAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false The Iliad of Homer - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=aU48AAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false The Iliad of Homer - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|CowperIl}}[[William Cowper|Cowper,<br>William]] |
! {{anchor|CowperIl}}[[William Cowper|Cowper,<br>William]] |
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| 1731–1800,<br />poet and hymnodist || 1791 || London, J. Johnson |
| 1731–1800,<br />poet and hymnodist || 1791 || London, J. Johnson |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Achilles sing, O Goddess! Peleus' son; / His wrath pernicious, who ten thousand woes / Caused to Achaia's host, sent many a soul / Illustrious into Ades premature…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/16452 The Iliad of Homer by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/16452 The Iliad of Homer by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|Morrice}}[[James Morrice|Morrice,<br>Rev. James]] |
! {{anchor|Morrice}}[[James Morrice|Morrice,<br>Rev. James]] |
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| || 1809 || |
| || 1809 || |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, Muse, the fatal wrath of Peleus’ son, / Which to the Greeks unnumb’red evils brought, / And many heroes to the realms of night / Sent premature…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=04ZGAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false The Iliad of Homer - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=04ZGAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false The Iliad of Homer - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|BuckleyIl}}[[Theodore Alois Buckley|Buckley,<br>Theodore Alois]] |
! {{anchor|BuckleyIl}}[[Theodore Alois Buckley|Buckley,<br>Theodore Alois]] |
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| 1825–1856,<br />translator || 1851 || London, [[H. G. Bohn]] |
| 1825–1856,<br />translator || 1851 || London, [[H. G. Bohn]] |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, O goddess, the destructive wrath of Achilles, son of Peleus, which brought countless woes upon the Greeks, and hurled many valiant souls of heroes down to Hades…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/22382</ref> |
|<ref>http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/22382</ref> |
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! {{anchor|Arnold}}[[Matthew Arnold|Arnold,<br>Matthew]] |
! {{anchor|Arnold}}[[Matthew Arnold|Arnold,<br>Matthew]] |
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| 1822–1888,<br />critic, social commentator, poet |
| 1822–1888,<br />critic, social commentator, poet |
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| 1861 || style="vertical-align:bottom;" colspan="2"| — |
| 1861 || style="vertical-align:bottom;" colspan="2"| — ''In part. Also authored ''On Translating Homer'' — || |
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! {{anchor|GilesIl}}[[J. A. Giles|Giles,<br>Rev. Dr. J. A. [John Allen] ]] |
! {{anchor|GilesIl}}[[J. A. Giles|Giles,<br>Rev. Dr. J. A. [John Allen] ]] |
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! {{anchor|Dart}}[[J. Henry Dart|Dart,<br>J. [Joseph] Henry]] |
! {{anchor|Dart}}[[J. Henry Dart|Dart,<br>J. [Joseph] Henry]] |
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| 1817–1887,<br />[[East India Company]] [[barrister|counsel]]<ref>{{cite DNB|wstitle =Dart, Joseph Henry|Volume = 14|year = 1888}}</ref> |
| 1817–1887,<br />[[East India Company]] [[barrister|counsel]]<ref>{{cite DNB|wstitle =Dart, Joseph Henry|Volume = 14|year = 1888}}</ref> |
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| 1862 || London, Longmans Green || <blockquote><poem |
| 1862 || London, Longmans Green || <blockquote><poem>Sing, divine Muse, sing the implacable wrath of Achilleus! |
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Heavy with death and with woe to the banded sons of Achaia! |
Heavy with death and with woe to the banded sons of Achaia! </poem></blockquote> |
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{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the souls of the mighty, the souls of redoubtable heroes, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the souls of the mighty, the souls of redoubtable heroes, |
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Hurried by it prematurely to Hades. The vultures and wild-dogs |
Hurried by it prematurely to Hades. The vultures and wild-dogs |
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! {{anchor|Derby}}{{anchor|Smith-Stanley}}Derby,<br>14th Earl of<br>([[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Edward Smith-Stanley]]) |
! {{anchor|Derby}}{{anchor|Smith-Stanley}}Derby,<br>14th Earl of<br>([[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Edward Smith-Stanley]]) |
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| 1799–1869,<br />[[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] |
| 1799–1869,<br />[[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] |
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| 1864 || |
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| |
| <blockquote class="templatequote">Of Peleus' son, Achilles, sing, O Muse, / The vengeance, deep and deadly; whence to Greece / Unnumbered ills arose; which many a soul / Of mighty warriors to the viewless shades / Untimely sent…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/6150 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/6150 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|{{anchor|LangIl}}[[Andrew Lang|Lang, Andrew]],|{{anchor|Leaf}}[[Walter Leaf]], |and {{anchor|Myers}}[[Ernest Myers]]}} |
! {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|{{anchor|LangIl}}[[Andrew Lang|Lang, Andrew]],|{{anchor|Leaf}}[[Walter Leaf]], |and {{anchor|Myers}}[[Ernest Myers]]}} |
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| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1844–1912,<br />Scots poet, historian, critic, folk tales collector, etc. |1852–1927,<br />banker, scholar |1844–1921,<br />poet, classicist}} |
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1844–1912,<br />Scots poet, historian, critic, folk tales collector, etc. |1852–1927,<br />banker, scholar |1844–1921,<br />poet, classicist}} |
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| 1883 || London, Macmillan<ref>Macmillan (1883); Peter Smith Publisher Inc. (1966) ISBN 0-8049-0115-5.</ref> |
| 1883 || London, Macmillan<ref>Macmillan (1883); Peter Smith Publisher Inc. (1966) ISBN 0-8049-0115-5.</ref> |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, goddess, the wrath of Achilles Peleus' son, the ruinous wrath that brought on the Achaians woes innumerable, and hurled down into Hades many strong souls of heroes…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/3059 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/3059 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|ButlerIl}}[[Samuel Butler (novelist)|Butler,<br>Samuel]] |
! {{anchor|ButlerIl}}[[Samuel Butler (novelist)|Butler,<br>Samuel]] |
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| 1835–1902,<br />novelist, essayist, critic |
| 1835–1902,<br />novelist, essayist, critic |
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| 1898 || London, Longmans, Green<ref>W. J. Black (1942); AMS Press (1968)</ref> |
| 1898 || London, Longmans, Green<ref>W. J. Black (1942); AMS Press (1968)</ref> |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, O goddess, the anger of Achilles son of Peleus, that brought countless ills upon the Achaeans. Many a brave soul did it send hurrying down to Hades…</blockquote> |
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|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2199 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2199 The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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! {{anchor|AndrewOd}}[[S. O. Andrew|Andrew,<br>S. O. [Samuel Ogden] ]] |
! {{anchor|AndrewOd}}[[S. O. Andrew|Andrew,<br>S. O. [Samuel Ogden] ]] |
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| 1868–1952,<br />headmaster, classicist<br><ref>{{cite book|url = http://www.archive.org/stream/praeceptormaster00andrrich#page/n3/mode/2up|title = Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book|year = 1913|publisher = [[Clarendon Press]]}}</ref><ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Internet Archive]]|url = http://www.archive.org/details/praeceptormaster00andrrich|title = Praeceptor, a master's book (1913)|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}}}</ref> |
| 1868–1952,<br />headmaster, classicist<br><ref>{{cite book|url = http://www.archive.org/stream/praeceptormaster00andrrich#page/n3/mode/2up|title = Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book|year = 1913|publisher = [[Clarendon Press]]}}</ref><ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Internet Archive]]|url = http://www.archive.org/details/praeceptormaster00andrrich|title = Praeceptor, a master's book (1913)|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}}}</ref> |
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| || colspan="3" style="vertical-align:bottom; background:lightgrey;"| — |
| || colspan="3" style="vertical-align:bottom; background:lightgrey;"| — ''Collaboration with Oakley listed below'' — |
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! {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|{{anchor|Chase}}[[Alsten Hurd Chase|Chase,<br>Alsten Hurd]] |and {{anchor|Perry}}[[William G. Perry]]}} |
! {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|{{anchor|Chase}}[[Alsten Hurd Chase|Chase,<br>Alsten Hurd]] |and {{anchor|Perry}}[[William G. Perry]]}} |
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! {{anchor|LattimoreIl}}[[Richmond Lattimore|Lattimore,<br>Richmond]] |
! {{anchor|LattimoreIl}}[[Richmond Lattimore|Lattimore,<br>Richmond]] |
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| 1906–1984,<br />poet, translator |
| 1906–1984,<br />poet, translator |
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| 1951 || Chicago, University Chicago Press<ref>University Of Chicago Press (1961) ISBN 0-226-46940-9</ref> |
| 1951 || Chicago, University Chicago Press<ref>University Of Chicago Press (1961) ISBN 0-226-46940-9</ref> |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, goddess, the anger of Peleus’ son Achilleus / and its devastation, which put pains thousandfold upon the Achians, / hurled in their multitudes to the house of Hades...</blockquote> |
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! {{anchor|FitzgeraldIl}}[[Robert Fitzgerald|Fitzgerald,<br>Robert]] |
! {{anchor|FitzgeraldIl}}[[Robert Fitzgerald|Fitzgerald,<br>Robert]] |
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| 1910–1985,<br />American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
| 1910–1985,<br />American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
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| 1974 || New York, Doubleday |
| 1974 || New York, Doubleday |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Anger be now your song, immortal one, / Akhilleus' anger, doomed and ruinous, / that caused the Akhaians loss on bitter loss / and crowded brave souls into the undergloom…</blockquote> |
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| born 1944,<br />Headmaster, classicist |
| born 1944,<br />Headmaster, classicist |
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| 1987 || Harmondsworth Middlesex, Penguin<ref>Penguin Classics (1988) ISBN 0-14-044444-0</ref> |
| 1987 || Harmondsworth Middlesex, Penguin<ref>Penguin Classics (1988) ISBN 0-14-044444-0</ref> |
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|<blockquote |
|<blockquote>Sing, goddess, of the anger of Achilleus, son of Peleus, the</blockquote> |
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{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>accursed anger which brought uncounted anguish on the Achaians and hurled down to Hades many mighty souls of heroes, making their bodies the prey to dogs and the birds' feasting: and this was the working of Zeus' will. Sing from the time of the first quarrel which divided Atreus' son, the lord of men, and godlike Achilleus.</blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>accursed anger which brought uncounted anguish on the Achaians and hurled down to Hades many mighty souls of heroes, making their bodies the prey to dogs and the birds' feasting: and this was the working of Zeus' will. Sing from the time of the first quarrel which divided Atreus' son, the lord of men, and godlike Achilleus.</blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
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|<ref>{{cite book|author1=Homer|author2=Martin Hammond (translator)|authorlink1=Homer|authorlink2=Martin Hammond|title=The Iliad|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=FVEXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22sing+goddess+of+the+anger%22|year=1987|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=978-0-14-044444-5}}</ref> |
|<ref>{{cite book|author1=Homer|author2=Martin Hammond (translator)|authorlink1=Homer|authorlink2=Martin Hammond|title=The Iliad|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=FVEXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22sing+goddess+of+the+anger%22|year=1987|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=978-0-14-044444-5}}</ref> |
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! {{anchor|Reck}}[[Michael Reck|Reck,<br>Michael]] |
! {{anchor|Reck}}[[Michael Reck|Reck,<br>Michael]] |
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| 1928–1993,<br />Poet, classicist, [[Oriental studies|orientalist]]<ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Powell's Books]]|url = http://www.powells.com/biblio?show=9780064303989|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}|title = Homer the Iliad (English): Description}}</ref> |
| 1928–1993,<br />Poet, classicist, [[Oriental studies|orientalist]]<ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Powell's Books]]|url = http://www.powells.com/biblio?show=9780064303989|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}|title = Homer the Iliad (English): Description}}</ref> |
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| 1990 || New York, Harper Collins |
| 1990 || New York, Harper Collins |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, Goddess, Achilles' maniac rage: / ruinous thing! it roused a thousand sorrows / and hurled many souls of mighty warriors / to Hades, made their bodies food for dogs / and carrion birds...</blockquote> |
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! {{anchor|FaglesIl}}[[Robert Fagles|Fagles,<br>Robert]] |
! {{anchor|FaglesIl}}[[Robert Fagles|Fagles,<br>Robert]] |
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| 1933–2008,<br />American professor of English, poet |
| 1933–2008,<br />American professor of English, poet |
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| 1990 || New York, Viking/Penguin |
| 1990 || New York, Viking/Penguin |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Rage—Goddess, sing the rage of Peleus' son Achilles, / murderous, doomed, that cost the Achaeans countless losses, / hurling down to the House of Death so many sturdy souls…</blockquote> |
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| born 1943,<br />American Professor of Classics |
| born 1943,<br />American Professor of Classics |
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| 1997 || Indianapolis, Hackett |
| 1997 || Indianapolis, Hackett |
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| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Rage: |
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Sing, Goddess, Achilles' rage, Black and murderous, that cost the Greeks Incalculable pain, |
Sing, Goddess, Achilles' rage, Black and murderous, that cost the Greeks Incalculable pain,</poem></blockquote> |
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{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
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pitched countless souls Of heroes into Hades' dark, And left their bodies to rot as feasts For dogs and birds, as Zeus' will was done. Begin with the clash between Agamemnon— The Greek warlord—and godlike Achilles.</poem></blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
pitched countless souls Of heroes into Hades' dark, And left their bodies to rot as feasts For dogs and birds, as Zeus' will was done. Begin with the clash between Agamemnon— The Greek warlord—and godlike Achilles.</poem></blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
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! {{anchor|JohnstonIl}}[[Ian Johnston (translator)|Johnston,<br>Ian]]<ref name="johnston-home">[http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/index.htm johnstonia home page] (home page of Ian Johnston)</ref> |
! {{anchor|JohnstonIl}}[[Ian Johnston (translator)|Johnston,<br>Ian]]<ref name="johnston-home">[http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/index.htm johnstonia home page] (home page of Ian Johnston)</ref> |
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| Canadian academic |
| Canadian academic |
||
| 2002<ref>2006 (2nd ed.), Richer Resources Publications, ISBN 978-0-9776269-0-8</ref> || |
| 2002<ref>2006 (2nd ed.), Richer Resources Publications, ISBN 978-0-9776269-0-8</ref> || |
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| <blockquote class="templatequote">Sing, Goddess, sing of the rage of Achilles, son of Peleus— / that murderous anger which condemned Achaeans / to countless agonies and threw many warrior souls / deep into Hades…</blockquote> |
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| [http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/homer/iliad_title.htm] |
| [http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/homer/iliad_title.htm] |
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| born 1938,<br />American lawyer, translator<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.iliadtranslation.com/Translator.html|publisher = IliadTranslation.com|title=The Iliad of Homer Translated by Herbert Jordan: About the Translator|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-04}}|first = Herbert|last = Jordan}}</ref> |
| born 1938,<br />American lawyer, translator<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.iliadtranslation.com/Translator.html|publisher = IliadTranslation.com|title=The Iliad of Homer Translated by Herbert Jordan: About the Translator|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-04}}|first = Herbert|last = Jordan}}</ref> |
||
| 2008 || University of Oklahoma Press |
| 2008 || University of Oklahoma Press |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Sing, goddess, of Peleus' son Achilles' anger, |
||
ruinous, that caused the Greeks untold ordeals, |
ruinous, that caused the Greeks untold ordeals,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>consigned to Hades countless valiant souls, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>consigned to Hades countless valiant souls, |
||
heroes, and left their bodies prey for dogs |
heroes, and left their bodies prey for dogs |
||
Line 591: | Line 605: | ||
! {{anchor|PowellIl}}[[Barry B. Powell|Powell,<br>Barry B.]] |
! {{anchor|PowellIl}}[[Barry B. Powell|Powell,<br>Barry B.]] |
||
| born 1942,<br />American poet, classicist, translator |
| born 1942,<br />American poet, classicist, translator |
||
| 2013 || Oxford University Press |
| 2013 || Oxford University Press |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
|<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/The-Iliad-Homer/dp/019932610X]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/The-Iliad-Homer/dp/019932610X]</ref> |
||
|} |
|} |
||
Line 610: | Line 621: | ||
! scope="col"| Link |
! scope="col"| Link |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
! [[Homer]]<br><br |
! [[Homer]]<br><br>''Yet, see '[[Homeric Question]].''' |
||
| c. 8th<br>century<br>B.C. |
| c. 8th<br>century<br>B.C. |
||
| scope="col" | <center>[[Ionia]] |
| scope="col" | <center>[[Ionia]] |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Ἄνδρα μοι ἔννεπε, Μοῦσα, πολύτροπον, ὃς μάλα πολλὰ |
||
πλάγχθη, ἐπεὶ Τροίης ἱερὸν πτολίεθρον ἔπερσε· |
πλάγχθη, ἐπεὶ Τροίης ἱερὸν πτολίεθρον ἔπερσε· </poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>πολλῶν δ’ ἀνθρώπων ἴδεν ἄστεα καὶ νόον ἔγνω, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>πολλῶν δ’ ἀνθρώπων ἴδεν ἄστεα καὶ νόον ἔγνω, |
||
πολλὰ δ’ ὅ γ’ ἐν πόντῳ πάθεν ἄλγεα ὃν κατὰ θυμόν, |
πολλὰ δ’ ὅ γ’ ἐν πόντῳ πάθεν ἄλγεα ὃν κατὰ θυμόν, |
||
Line 649: | Line 660: | ||
| 1559–1634,<br />dramatist, poet, classicist |
| 1559–1634,<br />dramatist, poet, classicist |
||
| 1615 || London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter |
| 1615 || London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap|<blockquote><poem |
| style=white-space:nowrap|<blockquote><poem>The man, O Muse, inform, that many a way |
||
Wound with his wisdom to his wished stay; |
Wound with his wisdom to his wished stay;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>That wandered wondrous far, when he the town |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>That wandered wondrous far, when he the town |
||
Of sacred Troy had sack'd and shivered down; |
Of sacred Troy had sack'd and shivered down; |
||
Line 673: | Line 684: | ||
| 1665 || London, Roycroft |
| 1665 || London, Roycroft |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>That prudent Hero's wandering, Muse, rehearse, |
||
Who (Troy b'ing sack'd) coasting the Universe, |
Who (Troy b'ing sack'd) coasting the Universe,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Saw many Cities, and their various Modes; |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Saw many Cities, and their various Modes; |
||
Much suffering, tost by Storms on raging Floods, |
Much suffering, tost by Storms on raging Floods, |
||
Line 687: | Line 698: | ||
! {{anchor|HobbesOd}}[[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes,<br>Thomas]] |
! {{anchor|HobbesOd}}[[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes,<br>Thomas]] |
||
| 1588–1679,<br />acclaimed philosopher, etc. |
| 1588–1679,<br />acclaimed philosopher, etc. |
||
| 1675 || London, W. Crook || <blockquote><poem |
| 1675 || London, W. Crook || <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, th’ adventures of the man |
||
That having sack’d the sacred town of Troy, |
That having sack’d the sacred town of Troy,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Wander’d so long at sea; what course he ran |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Wander’d so long at sea; what course he ran |
||
By winds and tempests driven from his way: |
By winds and tempests driven from his way: |
||
Line 715: | Line 726: | ||
| 1725 || London, Bernard Lintot<ref>The Heritage Press (1942); Easton Press (1978); Wildside Press (2002) ISBN 1-58715-674-1.</ref> | |
| 1725 || London, Bernard Lintot<ref>The Heritage Press (1942); Easton Press (1978); Wildside Press (2002) ISBN 1-58715-674-1.</ref> | |
||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>The man for wisdom’s various arts renown’d, |
||
Long exercised in woes, O Muse! resound; |
Long exercised in woes, O Muse! resound;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Who, when his arms had wrought the destined fall |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Who, when his arms had wrought the destined fall |
||
Of sacred Troy, and razed her heaven-built wall, |
Of sacred Troy, and razed her heaven-built wall, |
||
Line 746: | Line 757: | ||
| 1791 || London, J. Johnson | |
| 1791 || London, J. Johnson | |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Muse make the man thy theme, for shrewdness famed |
||
And genius versatile, who far and wide |
And genius versatile, who far and wide</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>A Wand’rer, after Ilium overthrown, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>A Wand’rer, after Ilium overthrown, |
||
Discover’d various cities, and the mind |
Discover’d various cities, and the mind |
||
Line 777: | Line 788: | ||
| 1823 || London, Whittaker |
| 1823 || London, Whittaker |
||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem> |
||
O Muse, inspire me to tell of the crafty |
O Muse, inspire me to tell of the crafty |
||
man, who wandered very much after he |
man, who wandered very much after he</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
had brought to destruction the sacred |
had brought to destruction the sacred |
||
Line 801: | Line 812: | ||
| 1834 || London, John Murray |
| 1834 || London, John Murray |
||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Muse! sing the Man by long experience tried, |
||
Who, fertile in resources, wander'd wide, |
Who, fertile in resources, wander'd wide,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And when Troy's sacred walls in dust were laid, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And when Troy's sacred walls in dust were laid, |
||
Men's varying moods and many a realm survey'd. |
Men's varying moods and many a realm survey'd. |
||
Line 818: | Line 829: | ||
| 1825–1856,<br />translator |
| 1825–1856,<br />translator |
||
| 1851 || London, H. G. Bohn |
| 1851 || London, H. G. Bohn |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem> |
||
O Muse, sing to me of the man full of |
O Muse, sing to me of the man full of |
||
resources, who wandered very much |
resources, who wandered very much </poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
after he had destroyed the sacred city |
after he had destroyed the sacred city |
||
Line 855: | Line 866: | ||
| 1862,<br>in part || London, Bell and Daldy |
| 1862,<br>in part || London, Bell and Daldy |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Sing me, O Muse, that all-experienced Man, |
||
Who, after he Troy's sacred town o'erthrew, |
Who, after he Troy's sacred town o'erthrew,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Did tossing wander much, and cities scan |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Did tossing wander much, and cities scan |
||
Of men a many, and their genius knew; |
Of men a many, and their genius knew; |
||
Line 873: | Line 884: | ||
| 1810–1871,<br />theologian, [[textual critic]], scholar, poet, hymnodist |
| 1810–1871,<br />theologian, [[textual critic]], scholar, poet, hymnodist |
||
| 1861 || London, Longman, Green, Longman, and Robert |
| 1861 || London, Longman, Green, Longman, and Robert |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell of the man, thou Muse, much versed, who widely |
||
Wandered, when he had sacked Troy’s sacred fortress; |
Wandered, when he had sacked Troy’s sacred fortress;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many men’s town he saw, and knew their manners; |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many men’s town he saw, and knew their manners; |
||
Many the woes he suffered on the ocean, |
Many the woes he suffered on the ocean, |
||
Line 913: | Line 924: | ||
| 1808–1884,<br />headmaster, scholar, prolific author, clergyman<ref name="giles-news"/> |
| 1808–1884,<br />headmaster, scholar, prolific author, clergyman<ref name="giles-news"/> |
||
| 1862–77 || |
| 1862–77 || |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem> |
||
Εννεπε declare μοιI to me, Мουσα Muse, |
Εννεπε declare μοιI to me, Мουσα Muse, |
||
ανδρα the man πολυτροπον of many |
ανδρα the man πολυτροπον of many</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>fortunes, ός whoπλαγχθη wandered μαλα |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>fortunes, ός whoπλαγχθη wandered μαλα |
||
πολλα very much, επει when επερσεν he |
πολλα very much, επει when επερσεν he |
||
Line 947: | Line 958: | ||
| 1862 || London, Williams and Margate |
| 1862 || London, Williams and Margate |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>The travelled Man of many a turn,—driven far, |
||
Far wandering, when he had sacked Troy’s sacred Town; |
Far wandering, when he had sacked Troy’s sacred Town;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, his tale; how too he conned |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, his tale; how too he conned |
||
The manners of mankind, and visited |
The manners of mankind, and visited |
||
Line 966: | Line 977: | ||
| 1798–1883,<br />clergyman, scholar, writer<ref>{{cite DNB|page = 419|wstitle = Musgrave, George Musgrave|volume = 39}}</ref> |
| 1798–1883,<br />clergyman, scholar, writer<ref>{{cite DNB|page = 419|wstitle = Musgrave, George Musgrave|volume = 39}}</ref> |
||
| 1865 || London, Bell & Daldy |
| 1865 || London, Bell & Daldy |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, declare to me that man |
||
Tost to and fro by fate, who, when his arms |
Tost to and fro by fate, who, when his arms</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Had laid Troy’s holy city in the dust, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Had laid Troy’s holy city in the dust, |
||
Far wand’ring roam’d on many a tribe of men |
Far wand’ring roam’d on many a tribe of men |
||
Line 989: | Line 1,000: | ||
| |
| |
||
| 1869 || London, James Parker and Co. |
| 1869 || London, James Parker and Co. |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, oh Muse, of-the-many-sided man, |
||
Who wandered far and wide full sore bestead, |
Who wandered far and wide full sore bestead,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>When he had razed the mighty town of Troy: |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>When he had razed the mighty town of Troy: |
||
And-of-many-a-race of human-kind he saw |
And-of-many-a-race of human-kind he saw |
||
Line 1,008: | Line 1,019: | ||
| Physician<ref>{{cite book|publisher = [[Bibliographical Society]] (Library Association of [[Reading, Berkshire|Reading]] [England]) |journal = The Library|page = 419|volume = 2|first = P. H.|last = Ditchfield|authorlink = Peter Ditchfield|year = 1890|url = http://books.google.com/books?id=7p4aAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA419#v=onepage&q&f=false|title = The Literature and Writers of Reading and the District}}</ref> |
| Physician<ref>{{cite book|publisher = [[Bibliographical Society]] (Library Association of [[Reading, Berkshire|Reading]] [England]) |journal = The Library|page = 419|volume = 2|first = P. H.|last = Ditchfield|authorlink = Peter Ditchfield|year = 1890|url = http://books.google.com/books?id=7p4aAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA419#v=onepage&q&f=false|title = The Literature and Writers of Reading and the District}}</ref> |
||
| 1869 || London, Longman, Green, Reader, and Dyer |
| 1869 || London, Longman, Green, Reader, and Dyer |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Sing, Muse, of that deep man, who wander'd much, |
||
When he had raz'd the walls of sacred Troy, |
When he had raz'd the walls of sacred Troy,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And many towns saw, many customs learnt, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And many towns saw, many customs learnt, |
||
And many griefs endur'd upon the sea; |
And many griefs endur'd upon the sea; |
||
Line 1,023: | Line 1,034: | ||
| 1794–1878,<br />American poet, ''[[New York Evening Post|Evening Post]]'' editor |
| 1794–1878,<br />American poet, ''[[New York Evening Post|Evening Post]]'' editor |
||
| 1871 || Boston, Houghton, Fields Osgood |
| 1871 || Boston, Houghton, Fields Osgood |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, 0 Muse, of that sagacious man |
||
Who, having overthrown the sacred town |
Who, having overthrown the sacred town</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Of Ilium, wandered far and visited |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Of Ilium, wandered far and visited |
||
The capitals of many notians, learned |
The capitals of many notians, learned |
||
Line 1,042: | Line 1,053: | ||
| 1833–1900,<br />civil servant, [[British Raj]]<ref name="cordery-book"/> |
| 1833–1900,<br />civil servant, [[British Raj]]<ref name="cordery-book"/> |
||
| 1897 || London, Methuen |
| 1897 || London, Methuen |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Sing through my lips, O Goddess, sing the man |
||
Resourceful, who, storm-buffeted far and wide, |
Resourceful, who, storm-buffeted far and wide,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}><blockquote><poem>After despoiling of Troy's sacred tower, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}><blockquote><poem>After despoiling of Troy's sacred tower, |
||
Beheld the cities of mankind, and knew |
Beheld the cities of mankind, and knew |
||
Line 1,073: | Line 1,084: | ||
| 1876 || London, Williams and Margate |
| 1876 || London, Williams and Margate |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Muse! tell me of the man with much resource, |
||
Who wandered far, when sacred Troy he sacked; |
Who wandered far, when sacred Troy he sacked;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Saw towns of many men, learned all they knew, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Saw towns of many men, learned all they knew, |
||
Winning his own life and his friends’ return. |
Winning his own life and his friends’ return. |
||
Line 1,087: | Line 1,098: | ||
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1835–1918,<br />Oxford classicist and clergyman |1823–1866,<br />Oxford classicist}}<ref>{{cite book|url = http://books.google.com/books?id=ZtEcAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA270#v=onepage&q&f=false|page = 270|title = Dictionary of National Biography|volume = 48|year =1896}}</ref> |
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1835–1918,<br />Oxford classicist and clergyman |1823–1866,<br />Oxford classicist}}<ref>{{cite book|url = http://books.google.com/books?id=ZtEcAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA270#v=onepage&q&f=false|page = 270|title = Dictionary of National Biography|volume = 48|year =1896}}</ref> |
||
| 1876 || Oxford, Clarendon |
| 1876 || Oxford, Clarendon |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem> — ''Note: not a translation, per se, but the'' |
||
''Greek text with commentary'' — |
''Greek text with commentary'' —</poem></blockquote> |
||
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=0KgNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false Homer's Odyssey, ed. with Engl ... - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=0KgNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA2#v=onepage&q&f=false Homer's Odyssey, ed. with Engl ... - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,094: | Line 1,105: | ||
| |
| |
||
| 1879–80 || London, James Cornish & Sons |
| 1879–80 || London, James Cornish & Sons |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>O Muse! inspire me to tell of the man, |
||
skilled in sxpedients, who wandered |
skilled in sxpedients, who wandered</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>very much after he had brought to |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>very much after he had brought to |
||
destruction the sacred city of Troy, |
destruction the sacred city of Troy, |
||
Line 1,120: | Line 1,131: | ||
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1850–1910,<br />Anglo-Irish professor of classics |1844–1912,<br />Scots poet, historian, critic, folk tales collector, etc.}} |
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1850–1910,<br />Anglo-Irish professor of classics |1844–1912,<br />Scots poet, historian, critic, folk tales collector, etc.}} |
||
| 1879 || London, Macmillan |
| 1879 || London, Macmillan |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, Muse, of that man, so ready at need, |
||
who wandered far and wide, after he had sacked |
who wandered far and wide, after he had sacked</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the sacred citadel of Troy, and many were the |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the sacred citadel of Troy, and many were the |
||
men whose towns he saw and whose mind he |
men whose towns he saw and whose mind he |
||
Line 1,139: | Line 1,150: | ||
| 1821–1907,<br />British Raj army general<ref>{{citation|url = http://www.jhse.org/book/export/article/15406|first = Cecil|last = Roth|authorlink = Cecil Roth|title = The Jews in the Defence of Britain: Thirteenth to Nineteenth Centuries|date ={{date|1940-10-27}}}}</ref> |
| 1821–1907,<br />British Raj army general<ref>{{citation|url = http://www.jhse.org/book/export/article/15406|first = Cecil|last = Roth|authorlink = Cecil Roth|title = The Jews in the Defence of Britain: Thirteenth to Nineteenth Centuries|date ={{date|1940-10-27}}}}</ref> |
||
| 1879–82 || London, J. Murray |
| 1879–82 || London, J. Murray |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Sing Muse the hero versatile, who roved |
||
So far, so long, after he overthrew |
So far, so long, after he overthrew</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Troy's holy citadel ; of many men |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Troy's holy citadel ; of many men |
||
He saw the cities, and their manners learned; |
He saw the cities, and their manners learned; |
||
Line 1,156: | Line 1,167: | ||
| 1880 || Edinburgh and London, William Blackwood and Sons |
| 1880 || Edinburgh and London, William Blackwood and Sons |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Muse! of that hero versatile indite to me the song, |
||
Doomed, when he sacred Troy had sacked, to wander far and long. |
Doomed, when he sacred Troy had sacked, to wander far and long.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Who saw the towns of many men, much knowledge did obtain |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Who saw the towns of many men, much knowledge did obtain |
||
Anent their ways, and with much woe was heart-wrung on the main, |
Anent their ways, and with much woe was heart-wrung on the main, |
||
Line 1,173: | Line 1,184: | ||
| 1880 || London, Macmillan |
| 1880 || London, Macmillan |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>The Hero of craft-renown, O Song-goddess, chant me his fame, |
||
Who, when low he had laid Troy town, unto many a far land came, |
Who, when low he had laid Troy town, unto many a far land came,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And many a city beheld he, and knew the hearts of their folk, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And many a city beheld he, and knew the hearts of their folk, |
||
And by woes of the sea was unquelled, o'er the rock of his spirit that broke, |
And by woes of the sea was unquelled, o'er the rock of his spirit that broke, |
||
Line 1,184: | Line 1,195: | ||
[(''1903 edition''): So in anger their home-coming day did the God take away for their guilt.] |
[(''1903 edition''): So in anger their home-coming day did the God take away for their guilt.] |
||
O Goddess, inspire my lay, with their tale; take it up as thou wilt.</poem></blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
O Goddess, inspire my lay, with their tale; take it up as thou wilt.</poem></blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
||
|<ref>[http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/homer/the-odyssey-of-homer-in-english-verse-hci/1-the-odyssey-of-homer-in-english-verse-hci.shtml Read the ebook The Odyssey of Homer in English verse by Homer<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=arthur%20s.%20way%20AND%20collection%3Aamericana |title=Internet Archive Search: arthur s. way |publisher=Archive.org |date={{date|2001-03-10}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
|<ref>[http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/homer/the-odyssey-of-homer-in-english-verse-hci/1-the-odyssey-of-homer-in-english-verse-hci.shtml Read the ebook The Odyssey of Homer in English verse by Homer<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><wbr><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=arthur%20s.%20way%20AND%20collection%3Aamericana |title=Internet Archive Search: arthur s. way |publisher=Archive.org |date={{date|2001-03-10}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
! {{anchor|Hayman}}[[Henry Hayman|Hayman,<br>Henry]] |
! {{anchor|Hayman}}[[Henry Hayman|Hayman,<br>Henry]] |
||
| 1823–1904,<br />translator, clergyman<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?ei=66UoTpKvHcfIgQfvm9lc&ct=result&id=XckNAQAAMAAJ&dq=%22Hayman%2C+Henry%22+homer+biography&q=%22Hayman%2C+Henry%22+#search_anchor |title=A literary atlas & gazetteer of the ... |publisher=Books.google.com |date={{date|2010-08-02}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
| 1823–1904,<br />translator, clergyman<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?ei=66UoTpKvHcfIgQfvm9lc&ct=result&id=XckNAQAAMAAJ&dq=%22Hayman%2C+Henry%22+homer+biography&q=%22Hayman%2C+Henry%22+#search_anchor |title=A literary atlas & gazetteer of the ... |publisher=Books.google.com |date={{date|2010-08-02}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
||
| 1882 || London |
| 1882 || London |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem> — ''Note: not a translation, per se, but the'' |
||
''Greek text with "marginal references, various'' |
''Greek text with "marginal references, various'' |
||
''readings, notes and appendices."'' — |
''readings, notes and appendices."'' —</poem></blockquote> |
||
|<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/odysseyedwithre00homegoog/odysseyedwithre00homegoog_djvu.txt Full text of "The Odyssey, ed. with references [&c.] by H. Hayman"<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/odysseyedwithre00homegoog/odysseyedwithre00homegoog_djvu.txt Full text of "The Odyssey, ed. with references [&c.] by H. Hayman"<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,197: | Line 1,208: | ||
| |
| |
||
| 1883 || London, Macmillan |
| 1883 || London, Macmillan |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote><poem> — ''Note: Not a translation, per se,'' |
||
''but a commentary. Edition inclusive'' |
''but a commentary. Edition inclusive'' |
||
''of Books 11 – 24'' — |
''of Books 11 – 24'' —</poem></blockquote> |
||
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?pg=PR7&dq=hamilton+sidney+first+book+odyssey&id=CYMCAAAAQAAJ#v=onepage&q&f=false Homer's Odyssey, books xxi.-xxiv ... - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?pg=PR7&dq=hamilton+sidney+first+book+odyssey&id=CYMCAAAAQAAJ#v=onepage&q&f=false Homer's Odyssey, books xxi.-xxiv ... - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,205: | Line 1,216: | ||
| 1842–1933,<br />American professor, philosopher, author |
| 1842–1933,<br />American professor, philosopher, author |
||
| 1884 || Boston & New York, Houghton Mifflin |
| 1884 || Boston & New York, Houghton Mifflin |
||
| <blockquote |
| <blockquote>Speak to me, Muse, of the adventurous man |
||
who wandered long after he sacked the sacred |
who wandered long after he sacked the sacred</blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>citadel of Troy. Many the men whose towns he |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>citadel of Troy. Many the men whose towns he |
||
saw, whose ways he proved ; and many a pang |
saw, whose ways he proved ; and many a pang |
||
Line 1,222: | Line 1,233: | ||
| 1834–1896,<br />poet, author, artist |
| 1834–1896,<br />poet, author, artist |
||
| 1887 || London, Reeves & Turner |
| 1887 || London, Reeves & Turner |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of the Shifty, the man who wandered afar. |
||
After the Holy Burg, Troy town, he had wasted with war; |
After the Holy Burg, Troy town, he had wasted with war;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>He saw the towns of menfolk, and the mind of men did he learn; |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>He saw the towns of menfolk, and the mind of men did he learn; |
||
As he warded his life in the world, and his fellow-farers' return, |
As he warded his life in the world, and his fellow-farers' return, |
||
Line 1,238: | Line 1,249: | ||
| 1824–1892,<br />American educator, author, translator<ref name="howland-book"/> |
| 1824–1892,<br />American educator, author, translator<ref name="howland-book"/> |
||
| 1891 || New York |
| 1891 || New York |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of the man of many resources, who many |
||
Ills was made to endure, when he Troy's sacred city had wasted; |
Ills was made to endure, when he Troy's sacred city had wasted;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the people whose cities he saw,and learned of their customs, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the people whose cities he saw,and learned of their customs, |
||
Many also the sorrows he suffered at sea in his spirit, |
Many also the sorrows he suffered at sea in his spirit, |
||
Line 1,253: | Line 1,264: | ||
| 1835–1902,<br />novelist, essayist, critic |
| 1835–1902,<br />novelist, essayist, critic |
||
| 1900 || London, Longmans, Green<ref>W. J. Black (1944); AMS Press (1968); IndyPublish.com (2001) ISBN 1-4043-2238-8</ref> |
| 1900 || London, Longmans, Green<ref>W. J. Black (1944); AMS Press (1968); IndyPublish.com (2001) ISBN 1-4043-2238-8</ref> |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O muse, of that ingenious hero who |
||
travelled far and wide after he had sacked the |
travelled far and wide after he had sacked the</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
famous town of Troy. Many cities did he visit, |
famous town of Troy. Many cities did he visit, |
||
Line 1,287: | Line 1,298: | ||
| 1836–1905,<br />Scots anatomy professor, Homerist |
| 1836–1905,<br />Scots anatomy professor, Homerist |
||
| 1901 || Oxford, Clarendon |
| 1901 || Oxford, Clarendon |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"|<blockquote> — ''Note: translation inclusive of Books 13–24'' —</blockquote> |
||
|<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/homersodysseybo00monrgoog#page/n8/mode/2up Homer's Odyssey, Books XIII-XXIV<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/homersodysseybo00monrgoog#page/n8/mode/2up Homer's Odyssey, Books XIII-XXIV<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,294: | Line 1,305: | ||
| 1903–10 || London, John Murray |
| 1903–10 || London, John Murray |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>O Muse, instruct me of the man who drew |
||
His changeful course through wanderings not a few |
His changeful course through wanderings not a few</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>After he sacked the holy town of Troy, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>After he sacked the holy town of Troy, |
||
And saw the cities and the counsel knew |
And saw the cities and the counsel knew |
||
Line 1,318: | Line 1,329: | ||
| 1846–1924,<br />essayist, translator<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ICInfm0JA7YC&pg=PA118 |title=Wordsworth translated: a case study ... |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?ei=2M4oTrD9BePZ0QGuitXJCg&ct=result&sqi=2&id=4JnfAAAAMAAJ&dq=%22Henry+Bernard+Cotterill%22+july+22+switzerland&q=%22Henry+Bernard+Cotterill%22+#search_anchor |title=The Periodical |publisher=Books.google.com |date={{date|2009-08-13}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
| 1846–1924,<br />essayist, translator<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ICInfm0JA7YC&pg=PA118 |title=Wordsworth translated: a case study ... |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?ei=2M4oTrD9BePZ0QGuitXJCg&ct=result&sqi=2&id=4JnfAAAAMAAJ&dq=%22Henry+Bernard+Cotterill%22+july+22+switzerland&q=%22Henry+Bernard+Cotterill%22+#search_anchor |title=The Periodical |publisher=Books.google.com |date={{date|2009-08-13}} |accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}}}}</ref> |
||
| 1911 || Boston, D. Estes/Harrap |
| 1911 || Boston, D. Estes/Harrap |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Sing, O Muse, of the man so wary and wise, who in far lands |
||
Wandered whenas he had wasted the sacred town of the Trojans. |
Wandered whenas he had wasted the sacred town of the Trojans.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many a people he saw and beheld their cities and customs, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many a people he saw and beheld their cities and customs, |
||
Many a woe he endured in his heart as he tossed on the ocean, |
Many a woe he endured in his heart as he tossed on the ocean, |
||
Line 1,333: | Line 1,344: | ||
| 1866–1940,<br />American professor of classics |
| 1866–1940,<br />American professor of classics |
||
| 1919 || Cambridge & London, Harvard & Heinemann |
| 1919 || Cambridge & London, Harvard & Heinemann |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of the man of many devices, |
||
who wandered full many ways after he had |
who wandered full many ways after he had</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>sacked the sacred citadel of Troy. Many |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>sacked the sacred citadel of Troy. Many |
||
were the men whose cities he saw and |
were the men whose cities he saw and |
||
Line 1,355: | Line 1,366: | ||
| 1921 || London, G. Bell & Sons |
| 1921 || London, G. Bell & Sons |
||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Sing me the Restless Man, O Muse, who roamed the world over, |
||
When, by his wondrous guile, he had sacked Troy's sacred fortress. |
When, by his wondrous guile, he had sacked Troy's sacred fortress.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Cities of various men he saw: their thoughts he discernéd. |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Cities of various men he saw: their thoughts he discernéd. |
||
Many a time, in the deep, his heart was melted for trouble. |
Many a time, in the deep, his heart was melted for trouble. |
||
Line 1,371: | Line 1,382: | ||
| 1873–1945,<br />governor, British Raj |
| 1873–1945,<br />governor, British Raj |
||
| 1925 || London, England, and Mysore, India, Oxford University Press |
| 1925 || London, England, and Mysore, India, Oxford University Press |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of that Great Traveller |
||
Who wandered far and wide when he had sacked |
Who wandered far and wide when he had sacked</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The sacred town of Troy. Of many men |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The sacred town of Troy. Of many men |
||
He saw the cities and he learned the mind; |
He saw the cities and he learned the mind; |
||
Line 1,403: | Line 1,414: | ||
| 1925 || Philadelphia and Chicago, etc., John C. Winston |
| 1925 || Philadelphia and Chicago, etc., John C. Winston |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of that clever hero |
||
who wandered far after capturing the |
who wandered far after capturing the</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>sacred city of Troy. For he saw the |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>sacred city of Troy. For he saw the |
||
towns and learned the ways of many |
towns and learned the ways of many |
||
Line 1,423: | Line 1,434: | ||
| 1868–1929,<br />novelist, short-story writer |
| 1868–1929,<br />novelist, short-story writer |
||
| 1929 || New York, McGraw Hill |
| 1929 || New York, McGraw Hill |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Tell me the tale, Muse, of that man |
||
Of many changes, he who went |
Of many changes, he who went</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
Wandering so far when he had plundered |
Wandering so far when he had plundered |
||
Line 1,442: | Line 1,453: | ||
| 1888–1935,<br />archaeological scholar, military strategist, author |
| 1888–1935,<br />archaeological scholar, military strategist, author |
||
| 1932 || London, Walker, Merton, Rogers; New York, Oxford University Press |
| 1932 || London, Walker, Merton, Rogers; New York, Oxford University Press |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem> |
||
Goddess-Daughter of Zeus |
Goddess-Daughter of Zeus |
||
Sustain for Me |
Sustain for Me</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
  This Song of the Various-Minded Man |
  This Song of the Various-Minded Man |
||
Line 1,474: | Line 1,485: | ||
| 1863–1950,<br />pedogogist of classic studies |
| 1863–1950,<br />pedogogist of classic studies |
||
| 1937 || London, T. Nelson & Sons<ref>Signet Classics (1999) ISBN 0-451-52736-4</ref> |
| 1937 || London, T. Nelson & Sons<ref>Signet Classics (1999) ISBN 0-451-52736-4</ref> |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>This is the story of a man, one who |
||
was never at a loss. He had travelled |
was never at a loss. He had travelled</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>far in the world, after the sack of Troy, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>far in the world, after the sack of Troy, |
||
the virgin fortress; he saw many cities |
the virgin fortress; he saw many cities |
||
Line 1,506: | Line 1,517: | ||
| 1945 || London & Baltimore, Penguin |
| 1945 || London & Baltimore, Penguin |
||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>The hero of the tale which I beg the |
||
Muse to help me tell is that resourceful |
Muse to help me tell is that resourceful</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>man who roamed the wide world after he |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>man who roamed the wide world after he |
||
had sacked the holy citadel of Troy. He |
had sacked the holy citadel of Troy. He |
||
Line 1,528: | Line 1,539: | ||
| 1868–1952,<br />headmaster, classicist<br><ref>{{cite book|url = http://www.archive.org/stream/praeceptormaster00andrrich#page/n3/mode/2up|title = Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book|year = 1913|publisher = [[Clarendon Press]]}}</ref><ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Internet Archive]]|url = http://www.archive.org/details/praeceptormaster00andrrich|title = Praeceptor, a master's book (1913)|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}}}</ref> |
| 1868–1952,<br />headmaster, classicist<br><ref>{{cite book|url = http://www.archive.org/stream/praeceptormaster00andrrich#page/n3/mode/2up|title = Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book|year = 1913|publisher = [[Clarendon Press]]}}</ref><ref>{{citation|publisher = [[Internet Archive]]|url = http://www.archive.org/details/praeceptormaster00andrrich|title = Praeceptor, a master's book (1913)|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}}}</ref> |
||
| 1948 || London, J. M. Dent & Sons |
| 1948 || London, J. M. Dent & Sons |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, O muse, of the hero fated to roam |
||
So long and so far when Ilion's keep he had sack'd, |
So long and so far when Ilion's keep he had sack'd,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And the city and mind of many a people he knew, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>And the city and mind of many a people he knew, |
||
And many a woe he endur'd on the face of the deep |
And many a woe he endur'd on the face of the deep |
||
Line 1,543: | Line 1,554: | ||
| 1906–1984,<br />poet, translator |
| 1906–1984,<br />poet, translator |
||
| 1965 || New York, Harper & Row<ref>Harper Perennial Modern Classics, reprint edition (1999) ISBN 0-06-093195-7</ref> |
| 1965 || New York, Harper & Row<ref>Harper Perennial Modern Classics, reprint edition (1999) ISBN 0-06-093195-7</ref> |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Tell me, Muse, of the man of many ways, |
||
who was driven far journeys, after he had |
who was driven far journeys, after he had</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
sacked Troy's sacred citadel. Many were |
sacked Troy's sacred citadel. Many were |
||
Line 1,565: | Line 1,576: | ||
|1925–2009,<br />American Professor of English, poet, translator<ref name="rees-web"/> |
|1925–2009,<br />American Professor of English, poet, translator<ref name="rees-web"/> |
||
| 1960 || New York, Random House |
| 1960 || New York, Random House |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Of that versatile man, O Muse, tell me the story, |
||
How he wandered both long and far after sacking |
How he wandered both long and far after sacking</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The city of holy Troy. May were the towns |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The city of holy Troy. May were the towns |
||
He saw and many the men whose minds he knew, |
He saw and many the men whose minds he knew, |
||
Line 1,582: | Line 1,593: | ||
| 1910–1985,<br />American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
| 1910–1985,<br />American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
||
| 1961 || New York, Doubleday |
| 1961 || New York, Doubleday |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story |
||
of that man skilled in all ways of contending, |
of that man skilled in all ways of contending,</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the wanderer, harried for years on end, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the wanderer, harried for years on end, |
||
after he plundered the stronghold |
after he plundered the stronghold |
||
Line 1,610: | Line 1,621: | ||
| 1967 || New York, W. W. Norton |
| 1967 || New York, W. W. Norton |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Tell me, Muse, about the man of many turns, who many |
||
Ways wandered when he had sacked Troy's holy citadel; |
Ways wandered when he had sacked Troy's holy citadel;</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>He saw the cities of many men, and he knew their thought; |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>He saw the cities of many men, and he knew their thought; |
||
On the ocean he suffered many pains within his heart, |
On the ocean he suffered many pains within his heart, |
||
Line 1,645: | Line 1,656: | ||
| 1980 || Oxford, Oxford University Press |
| 1980 || Oxford, Oxford University Press |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Goddess of song, teach me the story |
||
of a hero. |
of a hero.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> This was the man of wide-ranging |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> This was the man of wide-ranging |
||
spirit who had sacked the sacred town |
spirit who had sacked the sacred town |
||
Line 1,670: | Line 1,681: | ||
| born 1944,<br />Headmaster, classicist |
| born 1944,<br />Headmaster, classicist |
||
| 2000 || London, Duckworth<ref>Duckworth (2000) ISBN 0-7156-2958-1</ref> |
| 2000 || London, Duckworth<ref>Duckworth (2000) ISBN 0-7156-2958-1</ref> |
||
| <blockquote |
| <blockquote> Muse, tell me of a man – a man |
||
of much resource, who was made |
of much resource, who was made</blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>to wander far and long, after he had sacked the sacred city of Troy. Many were the men whose lands he saw and came to know their thinking, many too the miseries at sea which he suffered in his heart as he sought to win his own life and the safe return of his companions. They perished through their own arrant folly – the fools, they ate the cattle of Hyperion the Sun, and he took away the day of their return. Start the story where you will, goddess, daughter of Zeus, and share it now with us.</blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote>to wander far and long, after he had sacked the sacred city of Troy. Many were the men whose lands he saw and came to know their thinking, many too the miseries at sea which he suffered in his heart as he sought to win his own life and the safe return of his companions. They perished through their own arrant folly – the fools, they ate the cattle of Hyperion the Sun, and he took away the day of their return. Start the story where you will, goddess, daughter of Zeus, and share it now with us.</blockquote>{{hidden end}} |
||
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?ei=PkUsToCVOoXVgAfvpZWyCw&ct=result&id=yvdfAAAAMAAJ&dq=hammond+%22of+a+man+a+man%22&q=%22too+the+miseries%22#search_anchor The odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?ei=PkUsToCVOoXVgAfvpZWyCw&ct=result&id=yvdfAAAAMAAJ&dq=hammond+%22of+a+man+a+man%22&q=%22too+the+miseries%22#search_anchor The odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
Line 1,678: | Line 1,689: | ||
| born 1926,<br />American professor of Italian literature and of humanities, poet, translator |
| born 1926,<br />American professor of Italian literature and of humanities, poet, translator |
||
| 1990 || Berkeley, University California Press |
| 1990 || Berkeley, University California Press |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem> Muse, tell me of the man of many wiles, |
||
the man who wandered many paths of exile |
the man who wandered many paths of exile</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>after he sacked Troy's sacred citadel. |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>after he sacked Troy's sacred citadel. |
||
He saw the cities – mapped the minds – of many; |
He saw the cities – mapped the minds – of many; |
||
Line 1,698: | Line 1,709: | ||
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1887–1972,<br />classicist, publisher, poet |1916–2008,<br />Headmaster, classicist|Born 1942<br />Classicist, writer, journalist}} |
| {{ubl|item_style=padding-top:0.5em|1887–1972,<br />classicist, publisher, poet |1916–2008,<br />Headmaster, classicist|Born 1942<br />Classicist, writer, journalist}} |
||
| 1991 || London, Penguin |
| 1991 || London, Penguin |
||
|<blockquote><poem |
|<blockquote><poem>Tell me, Muse of that resourceful |
||
man who was driven to wander far |
man who was driven to wander far</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>and wide after he had sacked the |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>and wide after he had sacked the |
||
holy citadel of Troy. He saw the |
holy citadel of Troy. He saw the |
||
Line 1,723: | Line 1,734: | ||
| 1933–2008,<br />American professor of English, poet |
| 1933–2008,<br />American professor of English, poet |
||
| 1996 || New York, Viking/Penguin |
| 1996 || New York, Viking/Penguin |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem> Sing to me of the man, Muse, the |
||
man of twists and turns driven |
man of twists and turns driven</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>time and again off course, once |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>time and again off course, once |
||
he had plundered the hallowed |
he had plundered the hallowed |
||
Line 1,750: | Line 1,761: | ||
| 1993 || London, Calliope Press |
| 1993 || London, Calliope Press |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Tell me, O Muse, of a man of resourceful spirit who wandered |
||
Far, having taken by storm Troy's sacred city and sacked it. |
Far, having taken by storm Troy's sacred city and sacked it.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the men whose cities he saw, whose thoughts he discovered; |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the men whose cities he saw, whose thoughts he discovered; |
||
Many the grievous troubles he suffered at sea in his spirit, |
Many the grievous troubles he suffered at sea in his spirit, |
||
Line 1,766: | Line 1,777: | ||
| Classicist, translator<ref>{{citation|url = http://www.amazon.com/dp/product-description/0521287774|publisher = [[Amazon.com]]|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}|title = Sophocles: Oedipus Rex (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Greek Edition)}}</ref> |
| Classicist, translator<ref>{{citation|url = http://www.amazon.com/dp/product-description/0521287774|publisher = [[Amazon.com]]|accessdate ={{date|2011-08-29}}|title = Sophocles: Oedipus Rex (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Greek Edition)}}</ref> |
||
| 1993 || Sussex, The Book Guild |
| 1993 || Sussex, The Book Guild |
||
| <blockquote |
| <blockquote>Tell me, Muse, of the versatile man who |
||
was driven off course many |
was driven off course many</blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote> |
||
times after he had sacked the holy |
times after he had sacked the holy |
||
Line 1,794: | Line 1,805: | ||
| born 1943,<br />American Professor of Classics |
| born 1943,<br />American Professor of Classics |
||
| 2000 || Indianapolis, Hackett |
| 2000 || Indianapolis, Hackett |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem> Speak, Memory – |
||
Of the cunning hero |
Of the cunning hero</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The wanderer, blown off course time and again |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>The wanderer, blown off course time and again |
||
After he plundered Troy's sacred heights. |
After he plundered Troy's sacred heights. |
||
Line 1,827: | Line 1,838: | ||
| translator, poet, playwright, novelist, classicist<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iO9TmqevLmsC&pg=PA48#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
| translator, poet, playwright, novelist, classicist<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iO9TmqevLmsC&pg=PA48#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
| 2001 || New York, T. Doherty |
| 2001 || New York, T. Doherty |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"| — |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"| — ''Novel'' — |
||
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iO9TmqevLmsC&pg=PA48#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iO9TmqevLmsC&pg=PA48#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,834: | Line 1,845: | ||
| 2006 || Arlington, Richer Resources Publications |
| 2006 || Arlington, Richer Resources Publications |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Muse, speak to me now of that resourceful man |
||
who wandered far and wide after ravaging |
who wandered far and wide after ravaging</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the sacred citadel of Troy. He came to see |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>the sacred citadel of Troy. He came to see |
||
many people’s cities, where he learned their customs, |
many people’s cities, where he learned their customs, |
||
Line 1,852: | Line 1,863: | ||
| 2002 || University of Michigan Press |
| 2002 || University of Michigan Press |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Tell me, Muse, of the man versatile and resourceful, who wandered |
||
many a sea-mile after he ransacked Troy’s holy city. |
many a sea-mile after he ransacked Troy’s holy city.</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the men whose towns he observed, whose minds he discovered, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>Many the men whose towns he observed, whose minds he discovered, |
||
many the pains in his heart he suffered, traversing the seaway, |
many the pains in his heart he suffered, traversing the seaway, |
||
Line 1,868: | Line 1,879: | ||
| 2004 || Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press |
| 2004 || Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press |
||
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
| style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>The man, my Muse, resourceful, driven a long way |
||
after he sacked the holy city of Trojans: |
after he sacked the holy city of Trojans:</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>tell me all the men’s cities he saw and the men’s minds, |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem>tell me all the men’s cities he saw and the men’s minds, |
||
how often he suffered heartfelt pain on the broad sea, |
how often he suffered heartfelt pain on the broad sea, |
||
Line 1,884: | Line 1,895: | ||
| born 1963,<br />Poet, playwright, novelist |
| born 1963,<br />Poet, playwright, novelist |
||
| 2006 || London, Faber and Faber Limited |
| 2006 || London, Faber and Faber Limited |
||
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"| — |
| style="vertical-align:bottom;"| — ''Verse-like radio dramatization''<ref>{{cite news|author=Oliver Taplin |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2006/may/20/poetry.classics |title=Review: Homer's Odyssey adapted by Simon Armitage |publisher=The Guardian |date={{date|2006-05-20}}|accessdate={{date|2011-08-03}} |location=London}}</ref> — |
||
| |
| |
||
|- valign="top" |
|- valign="top" |
||
Line 1,890: | Line 1,901: | ||
| American poet, translator<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=qmW_n6XzlakC&pg=PA3#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
| American poet, translator<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=qmW_n6XzlakC&pg=PA3#v=onepage&q&f=false The Odyssey - Google Books<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
||
| 2008 || Berkeley, North Atlantic Books |
| 2008 || Berkeley, North Atlantic Books |
||
| <blockquote><poem |
| <blockquote><poem>Speak through me, O Muse, |
||
of that man of many devices |
of that man of many devices</poem></blockquote> |
||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}<blockquote><poem> |
||
who wandered much |
who wandered much |
||
Line 1,914: | Line 1,925: | ||
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
|style=white-space:nowrap| |
||
<blockquote><poem |
<blockquote><poem>Sing to me of the resourceful man, O Muse, who wandered |
||
far after he had sacked the sacred city of Troy... |
far after he had sacked the sacred city of Troy... |
||
</poem></blockquote>` |
|||
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}{{hidden end}} |
{{hidden begin|toggle=left}}{{hidden end}} |
Revision as of 22:11, 2 November 2014
This is a list of English translations of Homer—that is, of the Iliad and Odyssey—chronologically ordered by date of first publication, with first lines often provided to illustrate the style of the translation. Not all translators translated both the Iliad and Odyssey; in addition to the complete translations listed here are numerous partial translations, ranging from several lines to complete chapters of Homer, which have appeared in a variety of publications.
Homeric epic translated into English | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Click alphabet above to be redirected to translator surnames in index. Translator nationalities are English unless stated otherwise. To see entire verse, click "Show." |
Iliad
Original (c. 8th century B.C.)
Poet | Provenance | Proemic verse | Link | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Homer Yet, see 'Homeric Question.' |
c. 8th century B.C. |
|
[1] |
16th and 17th centuries (1581 – c. 1700)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hall, Arthur of Grantham |
1539–1605, M. P., courtier, translator |
1581 | London, for Ralph Newberie | ||
Rawlyns, Roger |
1587 | London, Orwin | |||
Colse, Peter |
1596 | London, H. Jackson | |||
Chapman, George |
1559–1634, dramatist, poet, classicist |
1611–15 | London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter[2] |
|
[3] |
Grantham, Thomas |
c. 1610– 1664 [4] |
1659 | London, T. Lock | ||
Ogilby, John |
1600–1676, cartographer, publisher, translator |
1660 | London, Roycroft | ||
Hobbes, Thomas |
1588–1679, acclaimed philosopher, etc. |
1676 | London, W. Crook |
|
[5] |
Early 18th century (c. 1700 – c. 1750)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dryden, John |
1631–1700, dramatist, Poet Laureate |
1700 | London, J. Tonson | ||
|
1712 | London, Bernard Lintott | |||
Pope, Alexander (with William Broome and Elijah Fenton) |
1688–1744, poet |
1715 | London, Bernard Lintot |
|
[7] |
Tickell, Thomas |
1685–1740, poet |
1715 | London, Tickell | ||
Fenton, Elijah |
1683–1730, poet, biographer, translator |
1717 | London, printed for Bernard Lintot | ||
Cooke, T. |
1729 | ||||
Fitz-Cotton, H. |
1749 | Dublin, George Faulkner | |||
Ashwick, Samuel |
1750 | London, printed for Brindley, Sheepey and Keith |
Late 18th century (c. 1750 – c. 1800)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scott, J. N. |
1755 | London, Osborne and Shipton | |||
Langley, Samuel, Rector of Checkley |
1720– 1791 [8] |
1767 | London, Dodsley | ||
Macpherson, James |
1736–1796, poet, compiler of Scots Gaelic poems, politician |
1773 | London, T. Becket |
|
[9] |
Cowper, William |
1731–1800, poet and hymnodist |
1791 | London, J. Johnson |
|
[10] |
Tremenheere, William, Chaplain to the Royal Navy | 1757– 1838 [11] |
1792 | London, Faulder? | ||
Geddes, Alexander |
1737–1802, Scots Roman Catholic theologian; scholar, poet |
1792 | London: printed for J. Debrett | ||
Bak, Joshua (T. Bridges?) |
1797 | London |
Early 19th century (c. 1800 – c. 1850)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Morrice, Rev. James |
1809 |
|
[12] | ||
Cary, H. F.? (“Graduate of Oxford”) |
1772–1844, author, translator |
1821 | London, Munday and Slatter | ||
Sotheby, William |
1757–1833, poet, translator |
1831 | London, John Murray | ||
Anonymous (“Graduate of Dublin”) |
1833 | Dublin, Gumming | |||
Munford, William |
1775–1825, American lawyer [13] |
1846 | Boston, Little Brown | ||
Brandreth, Thomas Shaw |
1788–1873, mathematician, inventor, classicist |
1846 | London, W. Pickering | ||
Buckley, Theodore Alois |
1825–1856, translator |
1851 | London, H. G. Bohn |
|
[14] |
Late middle 19th century (c. 1850 – c. 1875)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barter, William G. T., Esq. |
1808–1871, barrister [15][16] |
1854 | London, Longman, Brown, and Green | [17] | |
Hamilton, Sidney G. and Thomas Clark |
1855–58 | Philadelphia | |||
Newman, Francis William |
1807–1893, classics professor[18] |
1856 | London, Walton & Naberly | ||
Wright, Ichabod Charles |
1795–1871, translator, poet, accountant |
1858–65 | Cambridge, Macmillan | ||
Arnold, Matthew |
1822–1888, critic, social commentator, poet |
1861 | — In part. Also authored On Translating Homer — | ||
Giles, Rev. Dr. J. A. [John Allen] |
1808–1884, headmaster, scholar, prolific author, clergyman[19] |
1861–82 | |||
Dart, J. [Joseph] Henry |
1817–1887, East India Company counsel[20] |
1862 | London, Longmans Green |
|
[21] |
Norgate, T. S. [Thomas Starling, Jr.] |
1807–1893, clergyman[22] |
1864 | London, Williams and Margate | ||
Derby, 14th Earl of (Edward Smith-Stanley) |
1799–1869, Prime Minister |
1864 |
|
[23] | |
|
1865 | Edinburgh and London, William Blackwood and Sons | |||
Simcox, Edwin W. |
1865 | London, Jackson, Walford and Hodder | |||
Blackie, John Stuart |
1809–1895, Scots professor of classics |
1866 | Edinburgh, Edmonston and Douglas | ||
Herschel, Sir John |
1792–1871, scientist |
1866 | London & Cambridge, Macmillan | ||
Calverley, Charles Stuart |
1831–1884, poet, wit |
1866 | |||
Cochrane, James Inglis |
1867 | Edinburgh | |||
Merivale, Charles, Dean of Ely |
1808–1893, clergyman, historian |
1869 | London, Strahan | ||
Bryant, William Cullen |
1794–1878, American poet, Evening Post editor |
1870 | Boston, Houghton, Fields Osgood | ||
Cordery, John Graham |
1833–1900, civil servant, British Raj[24] |
1870 | London | ||
Caldcleugh, W. G. |
1812–1872, American lawyer[25][26] |
1870 | Philadelphia, Lippincott | ||
Rose, John Benson |
1874 | London, privately printed |
Late 19th century (c. 1875 – c. 1900)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barnard, Mordaunt Roger |
1828–1906, clergyman, translator |
1876 | London, Williams and Margate | ||
Cayley, C. B. [Charles Bagot] |
1823–1883, translator |
1877 | London, Longmans | ||
Mongan, Roscoe |
1879 | London, James Cornish & Sons | |||
Way, Arthur Sanders (Avia) |
1847–1930, Australian classicist, headmaster |
1886–8 | London, S. Low | ||
Hailstone, Herbert |
Cambridge classicist, poet | 1882 | London, Relfe Brothers | ||
|
1883 | London, Macmillan[27] |
|
[28] | |
Howland, G. [George] |
1824–1892, American educator, author, translator[29] |
1889 | Boston | ||
Purves, John |
1891 | London, Percival | |||
Bateman, C. W. and R. Mongan |
c. 1895 | London, J. Cornish | |||
Butler, Samuel |
1835–1902, novelist, essayist, critic |
1898 | London, Longmans, Green[30] |
|
[31] |
Early 20th century (c. 1900 – c. 1925)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tibbetts, E. A. |
1907 | Boston, R.G. Badges | |||
Blakeney, E. H. |
1869–1955, educator, classicist, poet |
1909–13 | London, G. Bell and Sons | ||
Lewis, Arthur Garner |
1911 | New York, Baker & Taylor | |||
Murray, Augustus Taber |
1866–1940, American professor of classics |
1924–5 | Cambridge & London, Harvard & Heinemann | ||
Marris, Sir William S. |
1873–1945, governor, British Raj |
1934 | Oxford |
Early middle 20th century (c. 1925 – c. 1950)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Murison, A. F. |
1847–1934, Professor of Roman Law, translator, classicist |
1933 | London, Longmans Green | ||
Rouse, William Henry Denham |
1863–1950, pedogogist of classic studies |
1938 | London, T. Nelson & Sons | ||
Smith, R. [James Robinson] |
1888–1964, Classicist, translator, poet[32] |
1938 | London, Grafton | ||
|
1944 | New York, Macmillan |
Late middle 20th century (c. 1950 – c. 1975)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rieu, Emile Victor |
1887–1972, classicist, publisher, poet |
1950 | Harmondsworth, Middlesex, Penguin | ||
Andrew, S. O. [Samuel Ogden] |
1868–1952, headmaster, classicist [33][34] |
— Collaboration with Oakley listed below — | |||
1950 | Boston, Little Brown | ||||
Lattimore, Richmond |
1906–1984, poet, translator |
1951 | Chicago, University Chicago Press[37] |
|
|
Andrew, S. O. and Michael J. Oakley |
1955 | London, J. M. Dent & Sons | |||
Graves, Robert |
1895–1985, Professor of Poetry, translator, novelist |
1959 | New York, Doubleday and London, Cassell | ||
Rees, Ennis |
1925–2009, American Professor of English, poet, translator[38] |
1963 | New York, Random House | ||
Fitzgerald, Robert |
1910–1985, American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
1974 | New York, Doubleday |
|
|
Hull, Denison Bingham |
1897–1988, American classicist[39][40] |
1982 |
Late 20th century (c. 1975 – c. 2000)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hammond, Martin |
born 1944, Headmaster, classicist |
1987 | Harmondsworth Middlesex, Penguin[41] |
|
[42] |
Reck, Michael |
1928–1993, Poet, classicist, orientalist[43] |
1990 | New York, Harper Collins |
|
|
|
|
2003 | London, Penguin | ||
Fagles, Robert |
1933–2008, American professor of English, poet |
1990 | New York, Viking/Penguin |
|
|
Lombardo, Stanley |
born 1943, American Professor of Classics |
1997 | Indianapolis, Hackett |
|
[44] |
21st century
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Johnston, Ian[45] |
Canadian academic | 2002[46] |
|
[2] | |
Merrill, Rodney |
American classicist[47] | 2007 | University of Michigan Press | ||
Jordan, Herbert |
born 1938, American lawyer, translator[48] |
2008 | University of Oklahoma Press |
|
[49] |
Mitchell, Stephen |
born 1943, American poet, translator[50] |
2011 | Simon & Schuster | ||
Oswald, Alice |
born 1966 British poet, won T. S. Eliot Prize in 2002[51] | 2012 | W. W. Norton & Company | ||
Powell, Barry B. |
born 1942, American poet, classicist, translator |
2013 | Oxford University Press |
|
[52] |
Odyssey
Original (c. 8th century B.C.)
Poet | Provenance | Proemic verse | Link | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Homer Yet, see 'Homeric Question.' |
c. 8th century B.C. |
Romanization:
|
[53] |
16th and 17th centuries (1581 – c. 1700)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chapman, George |
1559–1634, dramatist, poet, classicist |
1615 | London, Rich. Field for Nathaniell Butter |
|
[54] |
Ogilby, John |
1600–1676, cartographer, publisher, translator |
1665 | London, Roycroft |
|
[55] |
Hobbes, Thomas |
1588–1679, acclaimed philosopher, etc. |
1675 | London, W. Crook |
|
[56] |
Early 18th century (c. 1700 – c. 1750)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pope, Alexander (with William Broome and Elijah Fenton) |
1688–1744, poet |
1725 |
|
[58] |
Late 18th century (c. 1750 – c. 1800)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cowper, William |
1731–1800, poet and hymnodist |
1791 |
|
[59] |
Early 19th century (c. 1800 – c. 1850)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cary, H. F.? (“Graduate of Oxford”) |
1772–1844, author, translator |
1823 | London, Whittaker |
|
[60] |
Sotheby, William |
1757–1833, poet, translator |
1834 | London, John Murray |
|
[61] |
Buckley, Theodore Alois |
1825–1856, translator |
1851 | London, H. G. Bohn |
|
[62] |
Late middle 19th century (c. 1850 – c. 1875)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barter, William G. T., Esq. |
1808–1871, barrister [15][16] |
1862, in part |
London, Bell and Daldy |
|
[63] |
Alford, Henry |
1810–1871, theologian, textual critic, scholar, poet, hymnodist |
1861 | London, Longman, Green, Longman, and Robert |
|
[64] |
Worsley, Philip Stanhope |
1835–1866, poet |
1861–2 | Edinburgh, W. Blackwood & Sons |
|
[65] |
Giles, Rev. Dr. J. A. [John Allen] |
1808–1884, headmaster, scholar, prolific author, clergyman[19] |
1862–77 |
|
[66] | |
Norgate, T. S. [Thomas Starling, Jr.] |
1807–1893, clergyman[22] |
1862 | London, Williams and Margate |
|
[67] |
Musgrave, George |
1798–1883, clergyman, scholar, writer[68] |
1865 | London, Bell & Daldy |
|
[69] |
Bigge-Wither, Rev. Lovelace |
1869 | London, James Parker and Co. |
|
[70] | |
Edginton, G. W. [George William] |
Physician[71] | 1869 | London, Longman, Green, Reader, and Dyer |
|
[72] |
Bryant, William Cullen |
1794–1878, American poet, Evening Post editor |
1871 | Boston, Houghton, Fields Osgood |
|
[73] |
Cordery, John Graham |
1833–1900, civil servant, British Raj[24] |
1897 | London, Methuen |
>
|
[74] |
Late 19th century (c. 1875 – c. 1900)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barnard, Mordaunt Roger |
1828–1906, clergyman, translator |
1876 | London, Williams and Margate |
|
[75] |
|
1876 | Oxford, Clarendon |
|
[77] | |
Mongan, Roscoe |
1879–80 | London, James Cornish & Sons |
|
[78] | |
|
1879 | London, Macmillan |
|
[79] | |
Schomberg, G. A. |
1821–1907, British Raj army general[80] |
1879–82 | London, J. Murray |
|
[81] |
Du Cane, Sir Charles |
1825–1889, governor, M. P. |
1880 | Edinburgh and London, William Blackwood and Sons |
|
[82] |
Way, Arthur Sanders (Avia) |
1847–1930, Australian classicist, headmaster |
1880 | London, Macmillan |
|
[83] |
Hayman, Henry |
1823–1904, translator, clergyman[85] |
1882 | London |
|
[86] |
Hamilton, Sidney G. |
1883 | London, Macmillan |
|
[87] | |
Palmer, George Herbert |
1842–1933, American professor, philosopher, author |
1884 | Boston & New York, Houghton Mifflin |
|
[88] |
Morris, William |
1834–1896, poet, author, artist |
1887 | London, Reeves & Turner |
|
[89] |
Howland, G. [George] |
1824–1892, American educator, author, translator[29] |
1891 | New York |
|
[90] |
Butler, Samuel |
1835–1902, novelist, essayist, critic |
1900 | London, Longmans, Green[91] |
|
[92] |
Early 20th century (c. 1900 – c. 1925)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monro, David Binning |
1836–1905, Scots anatomy professor, Homerist |
1901 | Oxford, Clarendon |
|
[93] |
Mackail, John William |
1859–1945, Oxford Professor of Poetry |
1903–10 | London, John Murray |
|
[94] |
Cotterill, Henry Bernard |
1846–1924, essayist, translator[95][96] |
1911 | Boston, D. Estes/Harrap |
|
[97] |
Murray, Augustus Taber |
1866–1940, American professor of classics |
1919 | Cambridge & London, Harvard & Heinemann |
|
[98] |
Caulfeild, Francis |
1921 | London, G. Bell & Sons |
On page viii, Caulfeild gives the scansion in Homer's "original metre" of the third line of his translation as:
|
[100] | |
Marris, Sir William S. |
1873–1945, governor, British Raj |
1925 | London, England, and Mysore, India, Oxford University Press |
|
Early middle 20th century (c. 1925 – c. 1950)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hiller, Robert H. |
1864–1944, American professor of Greek[101][102] |
1925 | Philadelphia and Chicago, etc., John C. Winston |
|
[103] |
Bates, Herbert |
1868–1929, novelist, short-story writer |
1929 | New York, McGraw Hill |
|
[104] |
Lawrence, T. E. (T. E. Shaw) |
1888–1935, archaeological scholar, military strategist, author |
1932 | London, Walker, Merton, Rogers; New York, Oxford University Press |
|
[105] |
Rouse, William Henry Denham |
1863–1950, pedogogist of classic studies |
1937 | London, T. Nelson & Sons[106] |
|
[107] |
Late middle 20th century (c. 1950 – c. 1975)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rieu, Emile Victor |
1887–1972, classicist, publisher, poet |
1945 | London & Baltimore, Penguin |
|
[108] |
Andrew, S. O. [Samuel Ogden] |
1868–1952, headmaster, classicist [109][110] |
1948 | London, J. M. Dent & Sons |
|
[111] |
Lattimore, Richmond |
1906–1984, poet, translator |
1965 | New York, Harper & Row[112] |
|
[113] |
Rees, Ennis |
1925–2009, American Professor of English, poet, translator[38] |
1960 | New York, Random House |
|
[114] [115] |
Fitzgerald, Robert |
1910–1985, American Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, poet, critic, translator |
1961 | New York, Doubleday |
|
[116] |
Epps, Preston H. |
1888–1982, American classics professor, translator[117][118] |
1965 | New York, Macmillan | ||
Cook, Albert |
1925–1998, Professor of Comparative Literature, English and Classics[119] |
1967 | New York, W. W. Norton |
|
[120] |
Hull, Denison Bingham |
1897–1988, American classicist[39][40] |
1979 | Ohio University Press |
Late 20th century (c. 1975 – c. 2000)
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shewring, Walter |
1906–1990, Professor of classics, poet[121] |
1980 | Oxford, Oxford University Press |
|
[122] |
Hammond, Martin |
born 1944, Headmaster, classicist |
2000 | London, Duckworth[123] |
|
[124] |
Mandelbaum, Allen |
born 1926, American professor of Italian literature and of humanities, poet, translator |
1990 | Berkeley, University California Press |
|
[125] |
|
|
1991 | London, Penguin |
|
[126] |
Fagles, Robert |
1933–2008, American professor of English, poet |
1996 | New York, Viking/Penguin |
|
[127] |
Kemball-Cook, Brian |
1912–2002, Headmaster, classicist[128] |
1993 | London, Calliope Press |
|
[129] |
Dawe, R. D. |
Classicist, translator[130] | 1993 | Sussex, The Book Guild |
|
[131] |
Reading, Peter |
born 1946, Poet |
1994 | |||
Lombardo, Stanley |
born 1943, American Professor of Classics |
2000 | Indianapolis, Hackett |
|
[132] |
21st century
Translator | Publishing details | Proemic verse | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eickhoff, R. L. |
translator, poet, playwright, novelist, classicist[133] | 2001 | New York, T. Doherty | — Novel — | [134] |
Johnston, Ian[45] |
Canadian academic | 2006 | Arlington, Richer Resources Publications |
|
[135] |
Merrill, Rodney |
American classicist[47] | 2002 | University of Michigan Press |
|
[136] |
McCrorie, Edward |
American professor of English, classicist | 2004 | Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press |
|
[137] |
Armitage, Simon |
born 1963, Poet, playwright, novelist |
2006 | London, Faber and Faber Limited | — Verse-like radio dramatization[138] — | |
Stein, Charles |
American poet, translator[139] | 2008 | Berkeley, North Atlantic Books |
|
[140] |
Powell, Barry B. |
born 1942, American poet, classicist, translator |
2014 | Oxford University Press |
` |
[141] |
Translators
A | Andrew | Iliad | Odyssey | Armitage | Odyssey | Ashwick | Iliad | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alford | Odyssey | Arnold | Iliad | Avia | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
B | Bak | Iliad | Bigge-Wither | Odyssey | Bryant | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
Barnard | Iliad | Odyssey | Blackie | Iliad | Buckley | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
Barter | Iliad | Odyssey | Blkeney | Iliad | Butcher | Odyssey | |||
Bateman | Iliad | Brandreth | Iliad | Butler | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
Bates | Odyssey | Bridges | Iliad | ||||||
Benjamin | Iliad | Broome | Iliad | Odyssey | |||||
C | Caldcleugh | Iliad | Chase | Iliad | Cooke | Iliad | |||
Calverley | Iliad | Clark | Iliad | Cordery | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
Cary | Iliad | Odyssey | Cochrane | Iliad | Cotterill | Odyssey | |||
Caulfeild | Odyssey | Colse | Iliad | Cowper | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
Cayley | Iliad | Conington | Iliad | ||||||
Chapman | Iliad | Odyssey | Cook | Odyssey | |||||
D | Dart | Iliad | Derby | Iliad | Du Cane | Odyssey | |||
Dawe | Odyssey | Dryden | Iliad | 'Dublin, graduate of' | Iliad | ||||
E | Edginton | Odyssey | Eickhoff | Odyssey | Epps | Odyssey | |||
F | Fagles | Iliad | Odyssey | Fitz-Cotton | Iliad | ||||
Fenton | Iliad | Odyssey | Fitzgerald | Iliad | Odyssey | ||||
G | Geddes | Iliad | Grantham | Iliad | |||||
Giles | Iliad | Odyssey | Graves | Iliad | |||||
H | Hailstone | Iliad | Hayman | Odyssey | Howland | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
Hall | Iliad | Herschel | Iliad | Hull | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
Hamilton | Iliad | Odyssey | Hiller | Odyssey | Hurd | Iliad | |||
Hammond | Iliad | Odyssey | Hobbes | Iliad | Odyssey | ||||
J | Johnston | Iliad | Odyssey | Jones | Iliad | Odyssey | Jordan | Iliad | |
K | Kemball-Cook | Odyssey | |||||||
L | Lang | Iliad | Odyssey | Lawrence | Odyssey | Lombardo | Iliad | Odyssey | |
Langley | Iliad | Leaf | Iliad | ||||||
Lattimore | Iliad | Odyssey | Lewis | Iliad | |||||
M | Mackail | Odyssey | Merry | Odyssey | Munford | Iliad | |||
Macpherson | Iliad | Miller | Iliad | Murison | Iliad | ||||
Mandelbaum | Odyssey | Mitchell | Iliad | Murray | Iliad | Odyssey | |||
Marris | Iliad | Odyssey | Mongan | Iliad | Odyssey | Musgrave | Odyssey | ||
McCrorie | Odyssey | Monro | Odyssey | Myers | Iliad | ||||
Merivale | Iliad | Morrice | Iliad | ||||||
Merrill | Iliad | Odyssey | Morris | Odyssey | |||||
N | Newman | Iliad | Norgate | Iliad | Odyssey | ||||
O | Oakley | Iliad | Oswald | Iliad | Oldisworth | Iliad | |||
Ogilby | Iliad | Odyssey | Ozell | Iliad | 'Oxford, graduate of' | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
P | Palmer | Odyssey | Pope | Iliad | Odyssey | Purves | Iliad | ||
Perry | Iliad | Powell | Iliad | Odyssey | |||||
R | Rawlyns | Iliad | Rees | Iliad | Odyssey | Rieu, D. | Iliad | Odyssey | |
Reading | Odyssey | Riddell | Odyssey | Rose | Iliad | ||||
Reck | Iliad | Rieu | Iliad | Odyssey | Rouse | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
S | Schomberg | Odyssey | Simcox | Iliad | Sotheby | Iliad | Odyssey | ||
Scott | Iliad | Smith, R. | Iliad | Stein | Odyssey | ||||
Shaw | Odyssey | Smith, Wm. | Iliad | ||||||
Shewring | Odyssey | Smith-Stanley | Iliad | ||||||
T | Tibbetts | Iliad | Tickell | Iliad | Tremenheere | Iliad | |||
W | Way | Iliad | Odyssey | Worsley | Iliad | Odyssey | Wright | Iliad |
This literature-related list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
Notes
- ^ Homer, Iliad, Book 1, line 1
- ^ Wills, Gary (Editor) (1998). Chapman's Homer: The Iliad. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00236-3.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ The Iliad and the Odyssey : Williams, Marcia, 1945- : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive
- ^ "Thomas Grantham". Oxforddnb.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Online Library of Liberty - HOMER'S ILIADS. TRANSLATED OUT OF GREEK by THOMAS HOBBES OF MALMESBURY. - The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey)
- ^ "William Oldisworth". Oxforddnb.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ Bibliotheca staffordiensis. Books.google.com. 14 October 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Iliad of Homer - Google Books
- ^ The Iliad of Homer by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ "Tremenheere, William". Thesaurus.cerl.org. 9 February 2004. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Iliad of Homer - Google Books
- ^ "Munford, William". Myweb.wvnet.edu. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/22382
- ^ a b Mid-Victorian poetry, 1860-1879. Books.google.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ a b Modern English Biography. Books.google.com. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ Ridpath, John Clark, ed. (1898). The Ridpath Library of Universal Literature. Vol. 17. p. 422.
- ^ a b "OBITUARY. - THE REV. JOHN ALLEN GILES". New York Times. 26 September 1884. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1888.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: Unknown parameter|Volume=
ignored (|volume=
suggested) (help) . - ^ The Iliad, in Engl. hexameter verse by J.H. Dart
- ^ a b Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 41. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 111.
- ^ The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ a b Dictionary of Indian biography. Books.google.com. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Biographical catalogue of the ... Books.google.com. 22 September 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ History of the Friendly Sons of St ... Books.google.com. 20 July 2006. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Macmillan (1883); Peter Smith Publisher Inc. (1966) ISBN 0-8049-0115-5.
- ^ The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ a b History of Chicago, Illinois. Books.google.com. 30 July 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ W. J. Black (1942); AMS Press (1968)
- ^ The Iliad by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ Guide to the James Robinson Smith Papers, Yale University, p. 4, retrieved 30 August 2011
- ^ Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book. Clarendon Press. 1913.
- ^ Praeceptor, a master's book (1913), Internet Archive, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ Latona, Angela Marie (9 January 2008), Bringing the classics — and classicists — to life, Andover Townsman
- ^ Memorial Minute: William Graves Perry Jr., Harvard University, 27 May 1999
- ^ University Of Chicago Press (1961) ISBN 0-226-46940-9
- ^ a b Dr. Ennis Rees, 84, Tributes.com, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ a b "Biography - Hull, Denison Bingham (1897-1988): An article from: Contemporary Authors: Gale Reference Team: Books". Amazon.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ a b Denison B. Hull, Ohio University Press, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ Penguin Classics (1988) ISBN 0-14-044444-0
- ^ Homer; Martin Hammond (translator) (1987). The Iliad. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-044444-5.
{{cite book}}
:|author2=
has generic name (help) - ^ Homer the Iliad (English): Description, Powell's Books, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=oXwX6z3geSsC&pg=PA1&lpg=PA1&dq=#v=onepage&q&f=false
- ^ a b johnstonia home page (home page of Ian Johnston)
- ^ 2006 (2nd ed.), Richer Resources Publications, ISBN 978-0-9776269-0-8
- ^ a b The odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Jordan, Herbert. "The Iliad of Homer Translated by Herbert Jordan: About the Translator". IliadTranslation.com. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
- ^ "The Iliad (Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture) [Paperback]". Amazon.com. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B000APBHIO
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001H6Q3V6/
- ^ [1]
- ^ Homer, Odyssey, Book 1, line 1
- ^ Chapman, George, trans. 1857. The Odysseys of Homer, vol. 1
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ Online Library of Liberty - HOMER'S ODYSSES. translated out of greek by THOMAS HOBBES, OF MALMESBURY. - The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey)
- ^ The Heritage Press (1942); Easton Press (1978); Wildside Press (2002) ISBN 1-58715-674-1.
- ^ The Odyssey by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ Bibliomania: Free Online Literature and Study Guides
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ The Iliad and Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey, with the hymns ... - Google Books
- ^ Homer and English metre, an essay on ... - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer in English Hendecasyllable Verse by Henry Alford : Homer : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer - Google Books
- ^ Read the ebook The Odyssey of Homer : construed literally, and word for word (Volume 1) by Reverend Giles
- ^ Read the ebook The Odyssey; or, The ten years' wandering of Odusseus, after the ten years' siege of Troy. Reproduced in dramatic bland verse by Homer
- ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 419.
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer
- ^ A nearly literal translation of ... - Google Books
- ^ Ditchfield, P. H. (1890). The Literature and Writers of Reading and the District. Vol. 2. Bibliographical Society (Library Association of Reading [England]). p. 419.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - ^ The Odyssey of Homer: translated ... - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ Read the ebook The Odyssey of Homer : rendered into English blank verse by Homer
- ^ Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 48. 1896. p. 270.
- ^ Homer's Odyssey, ed. with Engl ... - Google Books
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ Roth, Cecil (27 October 1940), The Jews in the Defence of Britain: Thirteenth to Nineteenth Centuries
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey, books i.-xii., tr. into ... - Google Books
- ^ Read the ebook The Odyssey of Homer in English verse by Homer
- ^ "Internet Archive Search: arthur s. way". Archive.org. 10 March 2001. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ A literary atlas & gazetteer of the ... Books.google.com. 2 August 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Full text of "The Odyssey, ed. with references [&c.] by H. Hayman"
- ^ Homer's Odyssey, books xxi.-xxiv ... - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer (Open Library)
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer: Done Into English Verse (Open Library)
- ^ Historic magazine and notes and ... - Google Books
- ^ W. J. Black (1944); AMS Press (1968); IndyPublish.com (2001) ISBN 1-4043-2238-8
- ^ The Odyssey by Homer - Project Gutenberg
- ^ Homer's Odyssey, Books XIII-XXIV
- ^ Full text of "The Odyssey"
- ^ Wordsworth translated: a case study ... Books.google.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Periodical. Books.google.com. 13 August 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Homer's Odyssey
- ^ Classical E-Text: HOMER, ODYSSEY 1
- ^ The Odyssey (Open Library)
- ^ The Odyssey (Open Library)
- ^ "Robert H Hiller (1864 - )". Records.ancestry.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ "'Wittenberg, dear Wittenberg' Composer of Alma Mater Leaves Significant Mark". Wittenberg Magazine. 17 December 2009.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ The Odyssey of Homer - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer - Google Books
- ^ T. E. Lawrence letters, 1915
- ^ Signet Classics (1999) ISBN 0-451-52736-4
- ^ The Odyssey: The Story of Odysseus - Google Books
- ^ the odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Lingua Latin: Praeceptor: A Master's Book. Clarendon Press. 1913.
- ^ Praeceptor, a master's book (1913), Internet Archive, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ HomerOdysseyVariousTransBk1
- ^ Harper Perennial Modern Classics, reprint edition (1999) ISBN 0-06-093195-7
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ No man's lands: one man's odyssey ... Books.google.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Amazon.com: The Odyssey: The Fitzgerald Translation (9780374525743): Homer, Robert Fitzgerald, D. S. Carne-Ross: Books
- ^ Briggs, Ward W. (1994). Biographical dictionary of North American classicists. p. 163.
- ^ A brief memoir, for his wife, children, and grandchildren by Preston H. Epps, University of North Carolina, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ Cook, Albert: Forces in Modern and Postmodern Poetry (PDF), Peter Lang, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ HOMER THE ODYSSEY - Google Books
- ^ "Georgetown University - Colby-Shewring Collection: Collection Description". Gulib.georgetown.edu. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Duckworth (2000) ISBN 0-7156-2958-1
- ^ The odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey of Homer - Google Books
- ^ The odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Hosking, Patrick; Wighton, David (23 October 2002). "Lives in Brief: Brian Kemball-Cook, headmaster and academic". London: The Times.
- ^ the odyssey of homer
- ^ Sophocles: Oedipus Rex (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Greek Edition), Amazon.com, retrieved 29 August 2011
- ^ The Odyssey: translation and analysis - Google Books
- ^ The essential Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ Oliver Taplin (20 May 2006). "Review: Homer's Odyssey adapted by Simon Armitage". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ The Odyssey - Google Books
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/The-Odyssey-Homer/dp/0199360316 ]
Further reading
- Homer; Dykman, Aminadav; Steiner, George (1996), Dykman, Aminadav; Steiner, George (eds.), Homer in English, Classics: Poets in Translation, Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-044621-0
External links
- Published English Translations of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey by Ian Johnston. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
- Homer; Kline, A. S. (translator) (2004), The Odyssey:A complete English translation with hyper-linked index, PoetryInTranslation.com
{{citation}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help) - Homer; Huddleston, James (translator), The Chicago Homer, NorthWestern.edu, retrieved 8 August 2011
{{citation}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)