2 Matching Annotations
- Aug 2016
-
ebooks.adelaide.edu.au ebooks.adelaide.edu.au
-
What remained for him but to fly to a third corner and then to a fourth?
An analogy for how life is ephemeral, and often very linear, not giving one the chance to make a "unique" decision. Woolf visits this topic often, giving the essay a depressing feeling.
-
- Oct 2013
-
rhetoric.eserver.org rhetoric.eserver.org
-
and therefore people think that, if his name is mentioned many times, many things have been said about him. So that Homer, by means of this illusion, has made a great deal of though he has mentioned him only in this one passage, and has preserved his memory, though he nowhere says a word about him afterwards.
-