×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.

The Odysseys of Homer by Homer Trans by George Chapman: "There will be killing till the score is paid"
476
by George Chapman, HomerGeorge Chapman
21.99
In Stock
Overview
George Chapman was born at Hitchin in Hertfordshire in about 1559. There is some evidence that Chapman attended Oxford University but did not obtain a degree, but the evidence is rather scant. During the first part of the early 1590s Chapman was in Europe, in military action in the Low Countries fighting under the famed English general Sir Francis Vere. It is from this period that his earliest published works are found including the obscure philosophical poems The Shadow of Night (1594) and Ovid's Banquet of Sense (1595). By the end of the 1590s, Chapman had become a successful playwright, working for the Elizabethan Theatrical entrepreneur, Philip Henslowe, and later for the Children of the Chapel. From 1598 he published his translation of the Iliad in installments. In 1616 the complete Iliad and Odyssey appeared in The Whole Works of Homer, the first complete English translation, which until Alexander Pope's, was the most popular in the English language and was the entry point for most English readers of these magnificent poems. The great Ben Jonson was also using Chapman's talents in the play Eastward Ho (1605), co-written with John Marston. Both Chapman and Jonson landed in jail over some satirical references to the Scots in the play but both were quick to say that Marston was the culprit. Chapman also wrote one of the most successful masques of the Jacobean era, The Memorable Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn, performed on February 15th, 1613. Another masque, The Masque of the Twelve Months, performed on Twelfth Night 1619 is also now given as Chapman's. George Chapman died in London on May 12th, 1634 having lived his latter years in poverty and debt. He was buried at St Giles in the Fields.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781787374621 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Portable Poetry |
Publication date: | 08/16/2017 |
Pages: | 476 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.96(d) |
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Homer's Odyssey has captivated readers and influenced writers and artists for more than 2,000 years. ...
Homer's Odyssey has captivated readers and influenced writers and artists for more than 2,000 years.
Reading the poem in its original language provides an experience as challenging as it is rewarding. Most students encountering Homeric Greek for the first time ...
Famously praised by John Keats for speaking ‘loud and bold’, Chapman’s Homer brought Greek poetry ...
Famously praised by John Keats for speaking ‘loud and bold’, Chapman’s Homer brought Greek poetry
and civilization to life for centuries of readers. Many have praised its rough energy and creativity, the crashing power of the verses, its grim depiction ...
Jamie Houghton takes one of the great epics of literature and reimagines it. She climbs ...
Jamie Houghton takes one of the great epics of literature and reimagines it. She climbs
inside the heart of Homer's story and lays bare the inner workings of characters we may think we know. She does this in a lyrical ...
What reader could fail to be enthralled by the Iliad and the Odyssey, those greatest
heroic epics of antiquity? Yet the author of those immortal text remains, in the end, an enigma. The central paradox of 'Homer' is that- while ...
For Greeks of the Classical period (and onwards) Homer was simply 'the Poet', in much ...
For Greeks of the Classical period (and onwards) Homer was simply 'the Poet', in much
the same way that for centuries in the Western tradition the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures were 'the Book'. Homer came to dominate the Greek literary ...
This is a photographic journal of an actual Osprey family in the summer of 2012. ...
This is a photographic journal of an actual Osprey family in the summer of 2012.
Their nest was located on Scotch Bonnet tributary behind the Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor, NJ. It's a story about Homer, the youngest of three ...
The Iliad in Classical Attic; sometimes referred to as the Song of Ilion or Song ...
The Iliad in Classical Attic; sometimes referred to as the Song of Ilion or Song
of Ilium) is an ancient Greek epic poem in dactylic hexameter, traditionally attributed to Homer. Set during the Trojan War, the ten-year siege of the ...
The Iliad is one of the oldest surviving works of western literature—and widely considered one ...
The Iliad is one of the oldest surviving works of western literature—and widely considered one
of the best. But many questions remain unanswered about the origin of this classical epic poem. Was the Iliad written by a blind Greek poet ...