所属专辑:伊索寓言|Aesop's Fables|中英对照版 喜欢下载分享 声音简介 A Lion used to prowl about a field in which Four Oxen used to dwell. Many a time he tried to attack them; but whenever he came near they turned their tails to one another, so that whichever way he approached them he ...
所属专辑:EN|经典|伊索寓言Aesop's Fables 声音简介 A Lion used to prowl about a field in which Four Oxen used to dwell. Many a time he tried to attack them; but whenever he came near they turned their tails to one another, so that whichever way he approached them he was met by the...
Aesop
The Day-Dreamemphasizes the pleasure in being able to return to a sleep state and avoid reality. However, the poem is similar to other Tennyson poems in that
Helios is described even in the Homeric poems as the god who sees and hears every thing, but, notwithstanding this, he is unaware of the fact that the companions of Odysseus robbed his oxen, until he was informed of it by Lampetia. (Od. xii. 375.) But, owing to his omniscience, he...
Athene, as they say, took the form of Deiphobus for the sake of Hector, and the unshorn Phoebus for the sake of Admetus fed the trailing-footed oxen, and the spouse us came as an old woman to Semele. But, while you treat seriously such things, how can you deride us? Your ...
and ripping apart the oxen, that threatened them with their horns, the fierce women rushed back to kill the poet. As he stretched out his hands, speaking ineffectually for the first time ever, not affecting them in any way with his voice, the impious ones murdered him: and the spirit, ...
9. A few plurals are formed by adding en, as brother——brethren, child——children, ox——oxen. 10. Brother, pea, die, and penny have each two plurals, which differ in meaning. Brothers refers to male children of the same parents, brethren to members of a religious body or the li...
《伊索寓言》(Aesop's Fables) 5.48万308免费订阅 伊索寓言-牛和宰牛匠(The Oxen and the Butchers) 20202:49 伊索寓言-狮子老虎和狐狸(The Lion, the Mouse, and the Fox) 34902:04 伊索寓言-虚荣的寒鸦(The Vain Jackdaw) 25803:25 伊索寓言-放牧山羊的人和野山羊(The Goatherd and the Wild Goats) 268...
The Axle-trees groaned and creakedterribly; whereupon the Oxen, turning round, thus addressed the wheels :”Hullothere! Why do you make so much noise? We bear all the labor, and we, not you,ought to cry out.” Those who suffer most cry out the best. ...