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A Story of the Golden Age

ADVENTURE XII. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN THE WORLD

Word Count: 1950    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

, and started on his journey back towards Tiryns; and Odysseus, t

s had said. "Why not go now? For I and my brave m

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A Story of the Golden Age
A Story of the Golden Age
“You have heard of Homer, and of the two wonderful poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey, which bear his name. No one knows whether these poems were composed by Homer, or whether they are the work of many different poets. And, in fact, it matters very little about their authorship. Everybody agrees that they are the grandest poems ever sung or written or read in this world; and yet, how few persons, comparatively, have read them, or know any thing about them except at second-hand! Homer commences his story, not at the beginning, but "in the midst of things;" hence, when one starts out to read the Iliad without having made some special preparation beforehand, he finds it hard to understand, and is tempted, in despair, to stop at the end of the first book. Many people are, therefore, content to admire the great masterpiece of poetry and story-telling simply because others admire it, and not because they have any personal acquaintance with it.”