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The Iliad of Homer - Get a Free Blog

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111.<br />

112.<br />

113.<br />

Dryden's Virgil, ii. 510.<br />

Dysparis, i.e. unlucky, ill fated,<br />

Paris. This alludes to the evils<br />

which resulted from his having<br />

been brought up, despite the<br />

omens which attended his<br />

birth.<br />

<strong>The</strong> following scene, in which<br />

<strong>Homer</strong> has contrived to introduce<br />

so brilliant a sketch <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Grecian warriors, has been imitated<br />

by Euripides, who in his<br />

"Phoenissae" represents Antigone<br />

surveying the opposing<br />

champions from a high tower,<br />

while the paedagogus describes<br />

their insignia and details<br />

their histories.<br />

—No wonder, &c. Zeuxis, the<br />

celebrated artist, is said to have

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