The Anglo-Saxon Poems of Beowulf: The Scôp Or Gleeman's Tale, and The Fight at FinnesburgBenjamin Thorpe James Wright, 1855 - 330 страници |
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Страница 2
... and when war comes , for the people act : by praiseworthy deeds shall , in every tribe , 50 a man flourish . Him á Scyld gewát Scyld then departed 29. MS . þæt . 39. [ guð - fru ] K. tó gesceap - hwíle , fela - hror feran on 2 BEOWULF .
... and when war comes , for the people act : by praiseworthy deeds shall , in every tribe , 50 a man flourish . Him á Scyld gewát Scyld then departed 29. MS . þæt . 39. [ guð - fru ] K. tó gesceap - hwíle , fela - hror feran on 2 BEOWULF .
Страница 9
... departed then to visit , after night had come , the lofty house , how it the Ring - Danes , after their beer potation , had occupied . He then found therein a company of nobles sleeping after their feast ; sorrow they knew not , 240 ...
... departed then to visit , after night had come , the lofty house , how it the Ring - Danes , after their beer potation , had occupied . He then found therein a company of nobles sleeping after their feast ; sorrow they knew not , 240 ...
Страница 16
... Departed then o'er the wavy sea , by the wind impell'd , the floater foamy - neck'd , to a bird most like , till that about an hour of the second day the twisted prow had sail'd , so that the voyagers saw land , the ocean - shores shine ...
... Departed then o'er the wavy sea , by the wind impell'd , the floater foamy - neck'd , to a bird most like , till that about an hour of the second day the twisted prow had sail'd , so that the voyagers saw land , the ocean - shores shine ...
Страница 19
... departed , old from his courts : him well remembers almost every sage , widely throughout the earth . We through kind feeling thy lord , Healfdene's son , have come to seek , thy prince to defend . Be thou our kind informant . We have ...
... departed , old from his courts : him well remembers almost every sage , widely throughout the earth . We through kind feeling thy lord , Healfdene's son , have come to seek , thy prince to defend . Be thou our kind informant . We have ...
Страница 21
... departed then to go , the vessel still abode , lay heavy in the mud 610 the wide - bosom'd ship , guman onetton , sigon ætsomne , oppæt hý æl - timbred , 620 geatolic and gold - fáh , 613. MS . beran . at anchor fast . A boar's likeness ...
... departed then to go , the vessel still abode , lay heavy in the mud 610 the wide - bosom'd ship , guman onetton , sigon ætsomne , oppæt hý æl - timbred , 620 geatolic and gold - fáh , 613. MS . beran . at anchor fast . A boar's likeness ...
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Често срещани думи и фрази
æfter ænig bær beágas bearn Beowulf bið bold byrnie Comp cyning cynnes Danes deadly deeds Eadgils eald eall eorl eorla Eormanric fæder fæst falchion fela feónd feor fierce folces Geáta gefrægn gemunde gewát gold Goth Grendel gumena hæfde hall Healfdene heard Heardred helm Hengest heold Heorot Herebeald Higeláces hilde hine Hnæf hord Hróðgár Hrothgar Hrunting Hygd Hygelac hyne hyrde king leód leôde lord mæg manna mapelode martial meahte mihte monig næs niht noble ofer Ohthere Ongentheow Pæt pone ponne prince sceal Scyldinga Scyldings Scylfing sécean secg secgan seó sið spake supplied from conjecture swá sword swylce syððan thane thee thou treasure wære wæs warrior weard Weders wið Wiglaf wiht wolde words wordum wyrd wyrm þá þæm þær þæs þæt þæt hie þám þeah þegn þeóden þone þonne þurh
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Страница iii - English power, until we are prepared to read of its final overthrow. 23. THE ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE, ACCORDING TO THE SEVERAL ORIGINAL AUTHORITIES. Vol. I., Original Texts. Vol. II., Translation. Edited and translated by BENJAMIN THORPE, Esq., Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich, and of the Society of Netherlandish Literature at Leyden. 1861. This Chronicle, extending...
Страница 84 - ready and fated, bow'd to his domestic couch : they set at their heads their disks of war, their shield-wood bright ; there on the bench was, over the noble, easy to be seen his high martial helm, his ringed byrnie, and war-wood stout.
Страница 27 - For his daring / treasures deal. Be thou hastening, / bid them in To my sight, this troop of friends / assembled together ; Say to them eke in words / that they are welcome To the Danish people.
Страница 171 - ... mine alone, to strive with his strength against the monster, to perform heroic deeds. With my might I shall gain the gold; or war, a perilous violent death, shall carry off your prince." > Then by his shield the strong warrior arose, stern under his helmet; he bore the battle-corslet under the rocky cliffs; he trusted in the strength of a single man. Such is no coward's venture. Then he, excellent in virtues, who had survived very many combats, wild attacks, when foot-warriors crashed together,...
Страница 50 - The fell wretch expected that ere day came he would dissever the life from the body of each, for in him the hope had risen of a gluttonous feast. Yet 'twas not his fate that he might more of the race of men eat after that nighi.
Страница 293 - M. sagt: orphanus est lapis, qui in corona romani imperatoris est, neque unquam alibi visus est, propter quod etiam orphanus vocatur. est autem colore quasi vinosus, subtilem habens vinositatem, et hoc est sicut si candidum nivis candens seu micans penetraverit in rubeum...
Страница 228 - Eaha, they drew their swords ; and at the other doors, Ordlaf and Guthlaf, and Hengest himself, turn'd on their track.
Страница vii - A Translation of the Anglo-Saxon Poem of Beowulf, with a copious Glossary, Preface, and Philological Notes, by John M.
Страница viii - With respect to this the oldest heroic poem in any Germanic tongue, my opinion is, that it is not an original production of the Anglo-Saxon muse, but a metrical paraphrase of an heroic Saga composed in the south-west of Sweden, in the old common language of the North, and probably brought to this country during the sway of the Danish dynasty.
Страница vii - TWENTY-FOUR years have passed since, while residing in Denmark, I first entertained the design of one day producing an edition of Beowulf; and it was in prosecution of that design that, immediately on my arrival in England in 1830, I carefully collated the text of Thorkelin's edition with the Cottonian manuscript. Fortunately, no doubt, for the work, a series of cares, together with other literary engagements, intervened and arrested my progress. I had, in fact, abandoned every thought of ever resuming...