Olympus, and flowing down in
fertilizing streams through all the literary ages."
--James A. Harrison
ICARUS.
_Poetical Works_. Bayard Taylor. P. 88.
ORPHEUS WITH HIS LUTE.
_Henry VIII_. William Shakespeare. Act. iii, scene i.
IPHIGENIA AND AGAMEMNON.
The Shades of Agamemnon and Iphigenia. _Poems and Dialogues in
Verse_. Walter Savage Landor. Vol. i, p. 78.
VENUS AND VULCAN.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Saxe. P. 238.
PANDORA.
_Poetical Works_. Bayard Taylor. P. 203.
THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Whittier. P. 36.
ICARUS: OR THE PERIL OF THE BORROWED PLUMES.
_Poetical Works_. John G. Saxe. P. 229.
LAODAMIA.
_Complete Poetical Works_. William Wordsworth. P. 525.
THE LOTUS EATERS
_Poetical Works_. Alfred Tennyson. P. 51.
THE SHEPHERD OF KING ADMETUS.
_Complete Poetical Works_. James Russell Lowell. P. 44.
_Classic Myths in English Literature_. C.M. Gayley. P. 131.
CERES.
Bliss Carman. _Literary Digest_. Vol. xlv, p. 347.
PERSEPHONE.
_Poetical Works_. Jean Ingelow. P. 181.
WHAT ENGLISH OWES TO GREEK
"We are all Greeks. Our laws, our literature, our religion, our
arts, have their root in Greece.
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