        item: #1 of 4
          id: 13725
      author: Homer
       title: Stories from the Odyssey
        date: None
       words: 68533
      flesch: 81
     summary: When Eumæus had entered the house, Odysseus lingered awhile, gazing sadly at the faithful Argus. Peiræus readily undertook the charge, and this point being settled they thrust out from the shore and rowed away in the direction of the harbour, while Telemachus strode off with rapid footsteps along the path which led to the swineherd's hut. II On the evening before the arrival of Telemachus Odysseus was sitting after supper with Eumæus and the other herdsmen, and wishing to learn the purpose of Eumæus towards him he said: I will no longer be a burden to thee and thy fellows.
    keywords: art; day; days; eumæus; eyes; face; fair; father; good; hall; hand; heart; heaven; home; house; ithaca; land; lay; left; man; men; mother; night; odysseus; penelope; place; return; saw; sea; ship; son; telemachus; thee; thou; thou art; thy; time; troy; voice; water; way; wife; wine; wooers; words
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        item: #2 of 4
          id: 26275
      author: Snider, Denton Jaques
       title: Homer's Odyssey A Commentary
        date: None
       words: 124025
      flesch: 72
     summary: In the first portion of the Book Ulysses and his companions were the Present to which the Past appeared in Hades. Not alone the outer habitations of people Ulysses beheld, but also their inner essence, their consciousness.
    keywords: book; calypso; character; circe; companions; deed; divine; experience; fact; family; father; form; goddess; gods; great; greek; hades; helen; hero; homer; human; iliad; ithaca; land; life; man; men; menelaus; mind; movement; nature; negative; odyssey; order; pallas; people; phæacia; place; poem; poet; present; return; sea; second; son; spirit; state; story; suitors; tale; telemachus; thought; time; trojan; troy; ulysses; war; way; world
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        item: #3 of 4
          id: 658
      author: Quintus, Smyrnaeus, active 4th century
       title: The Fall of Troy
        date: None
       words: 81426
      flesch: 79
     summary: Still clashed the grappling hosts, Man slaying man: aye bloodier waxed the fray As rained the blows: corpse upon corpse was flung Confusedly, like thunder-drops, or flakes Of snow, or hailstones, by the wintry blast At Zeus' behest strewn over the long hills And forest-boughs; so by a pitiless doom Slain, friends with foes in heaps on heaps were strown. So man slew man in fight; but more than all Eurypylus hurled doom on many a foe.
    keywords: achilles; aias; argives; arms; battle; blood; child; day; dead; death; doom; dust; earth; fair; father; feet; fell; fight; fire; foes; forth; gods; great; grief; hands; hath; heart; heaven; high; host; king; lay; life; long; lord; man; men; mid; mighty; o'er; priam; round; sea; ships; slain; slew; son; sons; soul; spake; spear; strength; strife; swift; thee; thou; thy; trojans; troy; war; wild; wrath; yea; zeus
       cache: 658.txt
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        item: #4 of 4
          id: 7972
      author: Lang, Andrew
       title: Homer and His Age
        date: None
       words: 96350
      flesch: 73
     summary: _Flaith_ seems clearly to mean land-owners, or squires, says Sir James Ramsay. Mr. Monro writes, _doma_ usually means _megaron_, and he supposes a slip from another reading, _thalamon_ for _megaron_, which is not satisfactory.
    keywords: achilles; agamemnon; age; armour; b.c; body; book; bronze; case; centuries; century; corslets; critics; dead; diomede; early; editor; epic; fact; footnote; graves; greece; greek; hall; hector; helbig; heroes; homeric; house; iliad; iron; late; lays; leaf; life; like; man; men; monro; mycenaean; nestor; new; odysseus; odyssey; opinion; passage; period; pisistratus; poems; poet; point; shield; spear; sword; text; theory; things; time; vol; war; weapons; work
       cache: 7972.txt
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