A Handbook for Latin Clubs - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
_The Life of the Greeks and Romans_. Guhl and Koner. P. 531.
THE BOOK MARKETS.
_Ancient Rome in the Light of Recent Discoveries_. Rodolfo Lanciani. P. 183.
_The Life of the Greeks and Romans_. Guhl and Koner. P. 529.
_Society in Rome under the Caesars_. William Ralph Inge. Chap. vi.
ANCIENT MYTHS AND LEGENDS
"O antique fables! beautiful and bright, And joyous with the joyous youth of yore; O antique fables! for a little light Of that which s.h.i.+neth in you evermore, To cleanse the dimness from our weary eyes And bathe our old world with a new surprise Of golden dawn entrancing sea and sh.o.r.e.
--James Thomson
SONG.--Hymn to the Dawn.
_Dido: An Epic Tragedy_. Miller and Nelson. P. 61.
THE RELATION OF THE CLa.s.sIC MYTHS TO LITERATURE.
The Influence of the Cla.s.sics on American Literature. Paul Sh.o.r.ey.
_Chautauqua_. Vol. xliii, p. 121.
_Cla.s.sic Myths in English Literature_. C.M. Gayley. Introduction.
THE ORIGIN OF MYTHS.
_Cla.s.sic Myths in English Literature_. C.M. Gayley. P. 431.
MYTHOLOGY IN ART.
Cla.s.sic Myths in Modern Art. _Chautauqua_. Vol. xlii, p. 455.
THE MYTH OF ADMETUS AND ALCESTIS.
_Cla.s.sic Myths in English Literature_. C.M. Gayley. P. 106.
TARPEIA AND THE TARPEIAN ROCK.
_Walks in Rome_. Augustus J.C. Hare. P. 118.
_The Marble Faun_. Nathaniel Hawthorne. Chap. xiii.
The Origin and Growth of the Myth about Tarpeia. Henry A. Sanders.
_School Review_. Vol. viii, p. 323.
LAMIA. _Complete Poetical Works_. John Keats. P. 146.
PLAY.--Persephone.
_Children's Cla.s.sics in Dramatic Form_. Augusta Stevenson. Vol. iv.
RECITATION.--Mangled Mythology.
_Literary Digest_. Vol. x.x.xix, p. 1110.
THE ANCIENT MYTH IN MODERN LITERATURE
"The debt of literature to the myth-makers of the Mediterranean has been an endless one starting at Mt. Olympus, and flowing down in fertilizing streams through all the literary ages."
--James A. Harrison
ICARUS.
_Poetical Works_. Bayard Taylor. P. 88.
ORPHEUS WITH HIS LUTE.
_Henry VIII_. William Shakespeare. Act. iii, scene i.
IPHIGENIA AND AGAMEMNON.
The Shades of Agamemnon and Iphigenia. _Poems and Dialogues in Verse_. Walter Savage Landor. Vol. i, p. 78.
VENUS AND VULCAN.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Saxe. P. 238.
PANDORA.
_Poetical Works_. Bayard Taylor. P. 203.
THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Whittier. P. 36.
ICARUS: OR THE PERIL OF THE BORROWED PLUMES.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Saxe. P. 229.
LAODAMIA.
_Complete Poetical Works_. William Wordsworth. P. 525.
THE LOTUS EATERS _Poetical Works_. Alfred Tennyson. P. 51.
THE SHEPHERD OF KING ADMETUS.
_Complete Poetical Works_. James Russell Lowell. P. 44.
_Cla.s.sic Myths in English Literature_. C.M. Gayley. P. 131.
CERES.
Bliss Carman. _Literary Digest_. Vol. xlv, p. 347.
PERSEPHONE.
_Poetical Works_. Jean Ingelow. P. 181.
WHAT ENGLISH OWES TO GREEK
"We are all Greeks. Our laws, our literature, our religion, our arts, have their root in Greece."