This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
for the love of | 29 |
the luck of troy | 29 |
of the fair hands | 25 |
helen of the fair | 25 |
this way and that | 23 |
the land of the | 22 |
to the house of | 21 |
the sons of troy | 18 |
the love of god | 18 |
said that he would | 16 |
for love of god | 15 |
the walls of troy | 15 |
the fleece of gold | 15 |
the best of the | 15 |
the head of the | 15 |
the son of achilles | 14 |
and with that word | 14 |
he said that he | 14 |
land of the dead | 13 |
the sons of pallas | 13 |
the door of the | 13 |
that the god had | 12 |
the son of peleus | 12 |
one of the great | 11 |
the rest of the | 11 |
the king of the | 11 |
back to the ships | 11 |
the men of troy | 11 |
in front of the | 11 |
in the midst of | 11 |
till he came to | 10 |
the son of the | 10 |
to right and left | 10 |
the ships of the | 10 |
of helen of the | 10 |
god help me so | 10 |
said that he was | 10 |
the back of the | 10 |
when he was a | 10 |
to the palace of | 10 |
the plain of troy | 10 |
god had made for | 10 |
the god had made | 10 |
ships of the greeks | 10 |
of gold and silver | 10 |
best of the greeks | 10 |
of the north wind | 10 |
to the isle of | 9 |
the time of ulysses | 9 |
the body of achilles | 9 |
the way to the | 9 |
when they saw the | 8 |
all through the night | 8 |
of the sons of | 8 |
by the hands of | 8 |
the most beautiful of | 8 |
went to the house | 8 |
of one of the | 8 |
in the hands of | 8 |
the house of hades | 8 |
to the place where | 8 |
of the isle of | 8 |
the king and queen | 8 |
to his own country | 8 |
in the time of | 8 |
in the temple of | 8 |
fro day to day | 8 |
that i was born | 8 |
the crest of the | 8 |
for the sake of | 8 |
the isle of scyros | 8 |
in the middle of | 8 |
but he did not | 8 |
the isle of the | 8 |
the folk of troye | 8 |
i can no more | 8 |
most beautiful of the | 8 |
armour that the god | 8 |
a great pile of | 8 |
the city of priam | 8 |
to the hut of | 8 |
the ranks of the | 8 |
and at last he | 8 |
on the shore of | 7 |
stole the luck of | 7 |
for the last time | 7 |
the greeks and trojans | 7 |
was one of the | 7 |
that they did not | 7 |
was a young man | 7 |
that he had not | 7 |
in the house of | 7 |
when he came to | 7 |
the chief of the | 7 |
to the temple of | 7 |
the middle of the | 7 |
he had not the | 7 |
till they came to | 7 |
the sons of phytalus | 7 |
that he did not | 7 |
the temple of pallas | 7 |
they came to the | 7 |
and told him that | 7 |
and over al this | 7 |
the men of the | 7 |
with that word he | 7 |
the sothe for to | 7 |
in the night the | 7 |
the body of the | 7 |
who had been the | 7 |
for the death of | 7 |
chief of the gods | 7 |
all the rest of | 7 |
of the silver feet | 7 |
is one of the | 7 |
for al this world | 7 |
that he was a | 7 |
told him that he | 7 |
of the men of | 7 |
the dead body of | 7 |
the day of the | 7 |
the garden of the | 7 |
at the feet of | 7 |
he came to a | 7 |
with sword and spear | 7 |
the goddess of the | 7 |
the hands of the | 6 |
to the ship of | 6 |
the end of the | 6 |
the trojans and the | 6 |
and anointed him with | 6 |
disguised as a beggar | 6 |
of troy and the | 6 |
the god of the | 6 |
of the god of | 6 |
the strong man heracles | 6 |
the toun of troye | 6 |
thought that he would | 6 |
sons of the north | 6 |
and all the chiefs | 6 |
the very voice of | 6 |
the trojans would have | 6 |
their wives and children | 6 |
not seem to have | 6 |
his spear through the | 6 |
through the night to | 6 |
that he could not | 6 |
they did not know | 6 |
he came to himself | 6 |
at the head of | 6 |
goddess of the sea | 6 |
and set fire to | 6 |
the father of ulysses | 6 |
did not know that | 6 |
to the land of | 6 |
and said that he | 6 |
was a prophecy that | 6 |
the daughter of the | 6 |
of the valour of | 6 |
the house of ulysses | 6 |
was the most beautiful | 6 |
drove his spear through | 6 |
the mouth of the | 6 |
the queen of the | 6 |
pile of dry wood | 6 |
so ulysses and diomede | 6 |
the child of the | 6 |
the horse of tree | 6 |
the greeks made a | 6 |
the gods in heaven | 6 |
was the son of | 6 |
the stealing of helen | 6 |
out of the battle | 6 |
ranks of the greeks | 6 |
the name of the | 6 |
the shore of the | 6 |
day of the valour | 6 |
the horses of achilles | 6 |
there was a prophecy | 6 |
the hut of agamemnon | 6 |
have pity on me | 6 |
stood up and said | 6 |
within the walls of | 6 |
as i have told | 6 |
came out of the | 6 |
the slaying of the | 6 |
dead body of patroclus | 6 |
in the very voice | 6 |
to the door of | 6 |
cattle of the sun | 6 |
on the plain of | 6 |
the valour of hector | 6 |
in the heart of | 6 |
the hut of achilles | 6 |
the isle of tenedos | 6 |
the sons of the | 6 |
that the greeks had | 6 |
they had come to | 6 |
in front of them | 6 |
from the land of | 6 |
as he was wont | 6 |
and he saw that | 6 |
set fire to it | 6 |
the ranks of troy | 6 |
they thought that the | 6 |
ulysses and his men | 6 |
great pile of dry | 6 |
returned to the war | 6 |
set fire to the | 6 |
it for the beste | 6 |
and went to the | 5 |
that he might not | 5 |
and he was the | 5 |
and the rest of | 5 |
the bodies of the | 5 |
in the ranks of | 5 |
queen of the amazons | 5 |
and when he was | 5 |
as ye may here | 5 |
anointed him with oil | 5 |
and all the greeks | 5 |
with al myn herte | 5 |
the light of the | 5 |
him who he was | 5 |
the phial of gold | 5 |
and that he had | 5 |
of the fleece of | 5 |
of the horse of | 5 |
but al for nought | 5 |
went up to the | 5 |
the arms of achilles | 5 |
as the custom was | 5 |
son of the bright | 5 |
hermes of the golden | 5 |
and clothed him in | 5 |
that the sons of | 5 |
with al my might | 5 |
that word he gan | 5 |
the place where the | 5 |
the waves of the | 5 |
the men of ulysses | 5 |
but at the laste | 5 |
in the hall of | 5 |
he and his men | 5 |
temple of the goddess | 5 |
the children of the | 5 |
to telle in short | 5 |
in the open air | 5 |
the sack of troy | 5 |
is me that ever | 5 |
he came to the | 5 |
fell in love with | 5 |
the temple of the | 5 |
of gods and men | 5 |
him face to face | 5 |
and she sat down | 5 |
in the tenth year | 5 |
than seyde he thus | 5 |
the voice of his | 5 |
the siege of troy | 5 |
put on his armour | 5 |
led him into the | 5 |
off the head of | 5 |
and whan that he | 5 |
the god of war | 5 |
as i shal yow | 5 |
in a golden casket | 5 |
back to the ship | 5 |
and laid him in | 5 |
out of the wound | 5 |
the armour from the | 5 |
in the palace of | 5 |
he was taken to | 5 |
i will give you | 5 |
of the hands of | 5 |
on the other hand | 5 |
had come to the | 5 |
we do not know | 5 |
the wall of the | 5 |
what will i do | 5 |
he was wont to | 5 |
swayed this way and | 5 |
the noise of the | 5 |
the cries of the | 5 |
do not leave me | 5 |
the side of the | 5 |
into the house of | 5 |
the sound of a | 5 |
of the bright dawn | 5 |
he went to the | 5 |
the splendour of zeus | 5 |
to the argive ships | 5 |
the son of a | 5 |
myn owene swete herte | 5 |
the nymphs of the | 5 |
from the isle of | 5 |
in the open plain | 5 |
for sorwe of which | 5 |
they came to a | 5 |
of the golden wand | 5 |
thetis of the silver | 5 |
and the people of | 5 |
the whole greek army | 5 |
the daughters of the | 5 |
in his herte he | 5 |
knew that she was | 5 |
in the land of | 5 |
and called to his | 4 |
from his neck by | 4 |
and parents of ulysses | 4 |
the most cunning of | 4 |
the ship of protesilaus | 4 |
the golden images and | 4 |
clothed him in a | 4 |
arrow from the bow | 4 |
ulysses sails to seek | 4 |
were given to the | 4 |
what do you want | 4 |
wounded as he was | 4 |
the fields and the | 4 |
tell the trojans that | 4 |
isle of the gorgons | 4 |
that he would be | 4 |
a prisoner and a | 4 |
she could speak in | 4 |
on the floor of | 4 |
shores of the sea | 4 |
keep helen of the | 4 |
the story says that | 4 |
and strongest of men | 4 |
the land of sunrising | 4 |
the cap of darkness | 4 |
how ulysses invented the | 4 |
the tomb of ilus | 4 |
the body of antilochus | 4 |
by god and by | 4 |
the spears of the | 4 |
an ancient king of | 4 |
she was so beautiful | 4 |
that the beggar was | 4 |
were placed in a | 4 |
but at last he | 4 |
thou found thy prayer | 4 |
at the back of | 4 |
was taken to the | 4 |
on the other side | 4 |
banks of the river | 4 |
with his last breath | 4 |
gan him for to | 4 |
while he was still | 4 |
far across the sea | 4 |
he would not fight | 4 |
in this world ther | 4 |
not the strength to | 4 |
an offering to the | 4 |
north went the news | 4 |
left wing of the | 4 |
the wind has overthrown | 4 |
for there was no | 4 |
in love with her | 4 |
and for the love | 4 |
was the child of | 4 |
the coming of the | 4 |
as the song ceases | 4 |
may still be seen | 4 |
and took his leve | 4 |
and no man could | 4 |
wine in cups of | 4 |
the cry came to | 4 |
was a master thief | 4 |
seek the son of | 4 |
gift of the gods | 4 |
of the sea and | 4 |
up to the scaean | 4 |
spear that none but | 4 |
towards the ships of | 4 |
him on a bier | 4 |
deep base of the | 4 |
we shall hear again | 4 |
the storm of the | 4 |
whan that she was | 4 |
the old man was | 4 |
the greatest chiefs and | 4 |
the crowd of trojans | 4 |
were a race of | 4 |
priam gave him a | 4 |
an arrow from the | 4 |
the young men of | 4 |
the bodies of dead | 4 |
in their midst he | 4 |
the slaying of paris | 4 |
but it seems that | 4 |
anger for the death | 4 |
isle of the west | 4 |
this place she dies | 4 |
lived in the time | 4 |
mouth of the river | 4 |
of the race of | 4 |
the helmet of achilles | 4 |
the death of his | 4 |
the greeks did not | 4 |
robbed me of my | 4 |
he was a very | 4 |
breastplate and breast of | 4 |
to the grekes ost | 4 |
to the elysian plain | 4 |
at last the fleet | 4 |
boyhood and parents of | 4 |
with al his fulle | 4 |
spears in their hands | 4 |
then the trojans would | 4 |
in the voice of | 4 |
forth to the greek | 4 |
back to the place | 4 |
forth from great ilion | 4 |
the most famous of | 4 |
ulysses stole the luck | 4 |
great pile of wood | 4 |
all the best men | 4 |
the house of atreus | 4 |
the name she bears | 4 |
the bravest of the | 4 |
as had never been | 4 |
his spear clean through | 4 |
on the men of | 4 |
the shores of the | 4 |
to the music of | 4 |
and the saving of | 4 |
from the bow of | 4 |
battle at the ships | 4 |
leaped into his chariot | 4 |
it was believed that | 4 |
in the greek camp | 4 |
arrows from the walls | 4 |
the beggars in the | 4 |
with that she gan | 4 |
open hand of god | 4 |
the cattle of the | 4 |
into the open plain | 4 |
of the second hut | 4 |
who were on the | 4 |
to the king of | 4 |
for wel wot i | 4 |
his chariot to the | 4 |
thy father far away | 4 |
fell at his feet | 4 |
the queen of love | 4 |
was believed that she | 4 |
to the sea shore | 4 |
that they had come | 4 |
as long as the | 4 |
strip the armour from | 4 |
the door of his | 4 |
the throne of the | 4 |
the great horse of | 4 |
when they had eaten | 4 |
but the greeks never | 4 |
glorious armour that the | 4 |
with his left hand | 4 |
that in this place | 4 |
to cut down trees | 4 |
with the amazons and | 4 |
come within the walls | 4 |
must have been the | 4 |
how he had been | 4 |
their king so wise | 4 |
did not know by | 4 |
and fought in the | 4 |
joan of arc when | 4 |
the women and children | 4 |
i shal yow telle | 4 |
waves of the sea | 4 |
in the hut of | 4 |
wooing of helen of | 4 |
the tribes of men | 4 |
the huts on the | 4 |
that cause is of | 4 |
as a beggar who | 4 |
through breastplate and breast | 4 |
as if it were | 4 |
came upon the greeks | 4 |
ran red with blood | 4 |
he did not know | 4 |
i make thee whole | 4 |
with a great voice | 4 |
the rest of us | 4 |
heat of the sun | 4 |
the battles with the | 4 |
and meriones of crete | 4 |
sorry that he had | 4 |
but he would not | 4 |
he threw his spear | 4 |
but he could not | 4 |
on the left of | 4 |
and spears and arrows | 4 |
asked him who he | 4 |
a huge stone from | 4 |
to seek the son | 4 |
device of the horse | 4 |
and the ransoming of | 4 |
why call on things | 4 |
whole army of the | 4 |
that he would go | 4 |
what sholde i lenger | 4 |
his mother bewailed him | 4 |
to come within the | 4 |
was taken away from | 4 |
and he made his | 4 |
torch in her hand | 4 |
how people lived in | 4 |
troy and the saving | 4 |
high in the air | 4 |
with a heavy heart | 4 |
the second hut on | 4 |
the mother of eurypylus | 4 |
it is not easy | 4 |
the people of eurypylus | 4 |
and stood in the | 4 |
the people of athens | 4 |
went down to the | 4 |
god helpe me so | 4 |
the house of circe | 4 |
but he had no | 4 |
and the other chiefs | 4 |
of the sun god | 4 |
sleep and put on | 4 |
nymphs of the isle | 4 |
sails to seek the | 4 |
him out of the | 4 |
seen the open hand | 4 |
did not know whether | 4 |
we never hear of | 4 |
his great bow and | 4 |
i will tell you | 4 |
the end of troy | 4 |
chiefs were sitting at | 4 |
out of this world | 4 |
as the sound of | 4 |
all the people of | 4 |
one of the five | 4 |
the hand of paris | 4 |
we do not hear | 4 |
in the crowd of | 4 |
he leaped into his | 4 |
the wooing of helen | 4 |
golden images and the | 4 |
by the splendour of | 4 |
of the west wind | 4 |
the bodyguard of penthesilea | 4 |
the company of the | 4 |
is not inconsistent with | 4 |
the ransoming of hector | 4 |
was a little boy | 4 |
and bronze and iron | 4 |
and avenging of patroclus | 4 |
three crowns of life | 4 |
clean through his body | 4 |
slaying and avenging of | 4 |
into his chariot and | 4 |
not go into the | 4 |
most cunning of men | 4 |
and said that the | 4 |
with gold and silver | 4 |
pools of thy bathing | 4 |
to the back of | 4 |
that he would take | 4 |
base of the world | 4 |
and there was no | 4 |
of the king of | 4 |
go to the house | 4 |
when he was young | 4 |
second hut on the | 4 |
go forth from great | 4 |
and said that his | 4 |
god and by my | 4 |
him in a white | 4 |
and he did not | 4 |
diomede and ulysses were | 4 |
to go into the | 4 |
prisoner and a prize | 4 |
and laid him on | 4 |
and fell upon the | 4 |
to be her husband | 4 |
spy among the trojans | 4 |
from east to west | 4 |
to be his wife | 4 |
i shall kill him | 4 |
last the fleet came | 4 |
up and said that | 4 |
down to the sea | 4 |
her that spareth not | 4 |
and round him all | 4 |
call on things so | 4 |
the night to the | 4 |
to be allowed to | 4 |
father far away shall | 4 |
and aias and ulysses | 4 |
did not know him | 4 |
laid him in the | 4 |
the saving of helen | 4 |
to carry the body | 4 |
set the ships aflame | 4 |
the lords of the | 4 |
and as soon as | 4 |
the tallest and strongest | 4 |
thou of the ages | 4 |
he would be a | 4 |
invented the device of | 4 |
the glorious armour that | 4 |
in the greek here | 4 |
ashes were placed in | 4 |
was driven back to | 4 |
burn themselves and die | 4 |
the floor of the | 4 |
the valour of eurypylus | 4 |
on the step of | 4 |
in his chariot to | 4 |
went on his way | 4 |
in this great battle | 4 |
through the night and | 4 |
was the tomb of | 4 |
the people of troy | 4 |
woe is me that | 4 |
the chiefs in the | 4 |
seems to me to | 4 |
of the battle to | 4 |
the splendid armour of | 4 |
as a slave to | 4 |
be lord of me | 4 |
the death of achilles | 4 |
the trojans from the | 4 |
the body of patroclus | 4 |
what was best to | 4 |
voice of his wife | 4 |
the town of troy | 4 |
and thought that they | 4 |
his father gave him | 4 |
of this and that | 4 |
in his own house | 4 |
in stratagems of war | 4 |
that he would not | 4 |
thou deep base of | 4 |
and wine in cups | 4 |
the ship of ulysses | 4 |
on the day of | 4 |
ulysses invented the device | 4 |
the floor of his | 4 |
step of the altar | 4 |
guessed that the beggar | 4 |
leader of the trojans | 4 |
that the wind has | 4 |
the step of the | 4 |
to the shore of | 4 |
spy on the greeks | 4 |
the boyhood and parents | 4 |
end of troy and | 4 |
one of the huts | 4 |
bodies of dead men | 4 |
could not bear to | 4 |
the goddess pallas athena | 4 |
the oaths were taken | 4 |
old age and death | 4 |
now hast thou found | 4 |
when the last ship | 4 |
greeks did not know | 4 |
of the hut of | 4 |
that he was afraid | 4 |
you have told me | 4 |
round him all his | 4 |
arose and said that | 4 |
his herte gan to | 4 |
that fell from heaven | 4 |
that is al my | 4 |
spear in his hand | 4 |
ancient king of troy | 4 |
the arrow out of | 4 |
when they heard the | 4 |
and aias and the | 4 |
away to his own | 4 |
a race of warlike | 4 |
ulysses and diomede to | 4 |
from sleep and put | 4 |
the flame of the | 4 |
but the greeks were | 4 |
that my lyf may | 4 |
to command the army | 4 |
bidding the greeks arm | 4 |
the night the greeks | 4 |
the time is right | 4 |
and said that they | 4 |
the body of paris | 4 |
was too old to | 4 |
had eaten and drunk | 4 |
a spear in his | 4 |
when he saw the | 4 |
to the ships and | 4 |
have seen the open | 4 |
the cruelty of achilles | 4 |
to the dogs to | 4 |
hast thou found thy | 4 |
out of the war | 4 |
to the scaean gate | 4 |
the dogs to eat | 4 |
and at the laste | 4 |
herte and al my | 4 |
the wind comes quick | 4 |
so his father gave | 4 |
in the isle of | 4 |
five hundred young men | 4 |
and the greeks who | 4 |
of the whole army | 4 |
tallest and strongest of | 4 |
and aeneas and paris | 4 |
and spy on the | 4 |
by an arrow from | 4 |
of the men who | 4 |
was angry with them | 4 |
tried to make peace | 4 |
god of the dead | 4 |
of the sack of | 4 |
took the luck of | 4 |
gold and silver and | 4 |
the chiefs were sitting | 4 |
would tell the trojans | 4 |
on the way to | 4 |
the arrows of the | 4 |
chariot and was driven | 4 |
against the shield of | 4 |
the left wing of | 4 |
with that word she | 4 |
great horse of tree | 4 |
far away shall comfort | 4 |
that the whole army | 4 |
had returned to the | 4 |
away back to troy | 4 |
helen had given him | 4 |
of the huts on | 4 |
lest he should be | 4 |
slaying as he went | 4 |
his chariot and was | 4 |
of gold and amber | 4 |
of the greeks were | 4 |
on a summer day | 4 |
battles with the amazons | 4 |
this their king so | 4 |
not know by sight | 4 |
the horses to the | 4 |
laid him on a | 4 |
filled with the foaming | 4 |
speak in the very | 4 |
that the god would | 4 |
the breath of god | 4 |
achilles said that he | 4 |
neoptolemos what is it | 4 |
the device of the | 4 |
that the trojans should | 4 |
at the hands of | 4 |
a chamber of stone | 4 |
the horses of the | 4 |
sound of a song | 4 |
in their ships and | 4 |
to give warning if | 4 |
a gift of the | 4 |
ne shal i never | 4 |
go into the horse | 4 |
of thousands of men | 4 |
in the name of | 4 |
he knew that she | 4 |
between the trojans and | 4 |
may helen be there | 4 |
that none but he | 4 |
and by my trouthe | 4 |
way of the sword | 4 |
the child of zeus | 4 |
he was determined to | 4 |
the amazons and memnon | 4 |
the amazons were a | 4 |
of the best of | 4 |
men of crete and | 4 |
over the bodies of | 4 |
he had no son | 4 |
away shall comfort thee | 4 |
in the day of | 4 |
he was too old | 4 |
to the gods in | 4 |
the bow of paris | 4 |
give warning if the | 4 |
it seems that he | 4 |
he came to his | 4 |
in dust and blood | 4 |
in his chariot and | 4 |
he was still a | 4 |
deathless maidens of the | 4 |
towers of the giants | 4 |
and bore him up | 4 |
he drew his sword | 4 |
how ulysses stole the | 4 |
does not seem to | 4 |
placed in a golden | 4 |
amazons were a race | 4 |
huge stone from the | 4 |
and with a syk | 4 |
his way to the | 4 |
for the trojans had | 4 |
go back to the | 4 |
in the night and | 4 |
image that fell from | 4 |
a great army of | 4 |
and he bade his | 4 |
so plain a riddle | 4 |
the palace of the | 4 |
none but he could | 4 |
and was driven back | 4 |
said that the greeks | 4 |
maidens of the waters | 4 |
there he sat down | 4 |
of cedar wood and | 4 |
the god of armour | 4 |
in this place she | 4 |
a spy among the | 4 |
i have seen the | 4 |
torch that makest one | 4 |
for i have herd | 4 |
the open hand of | 4 |
on things so weak | 4 |
he was a little | 4 |
if there was a | 4 |
if that i may | 4 |
and if that i | 4 |
all the greeks were | 4 |
that was the tomb | 4 |
sail away next day | 4 |
on the face of | 4 |
by the hand of | 4 |
even as the sound | 4 |
the wall of troy | 4 |
among the daughters of | 4 |
and the flame of | 4 |
the whole army of | 4 |
hands of the trojans | 4 |
the best man among | 4 |
garden of the gods | 4 |
in the dust of | 4 |
me that ever i | 4 |
that no man may | 4 |
the foot of the | 4 |
and the trojans were | 4 |
could not be taken | 4 |
til at the laste | 4 |
to take vengeance for | 4 |
brought fire against the | 4 |
people lived in the | 4 |
the deathless maidens of | 4 |
driven back to the | 4 |
at the door of | 4 |
ulysses stood up and | 4 |
in the end to | 4 |
in the garden of | 4 |
in his own country | 4 |
were the best archers | 4 |
the houses of the | 4 |
as i have seyd | 4 |
the slaying and avenging | 4 |
the harbour of aulis | 4 |
of the trojans was | 4 |
whyl that my lyf | 3 |
the heroes in the | 3 |
as the voice of | 3 |
al his fulle might | 3 |
if it were a | 3 |
he was a tall | 3 |
not wroth with me | 3 |
and it seemed to | 3 |
painted with pictures of | 3 |
the goddess of corn | 3 |
to the war to | 3 |
the end of all | 3 |
is only the crying | 3 |
her son on the | 3 |
between europe and asia | 3 |
him into the hall | 3 |
i shal ben here | 3 |
praying to the gods | 3 |
the doorway of the | 3 |
al this mene whyle | 3 |
came to the palace | 3 |
on the knees of | 3 |
the daughter of priam | 3 |
he bade his men | 3 |
door of the hall | 3 |
the great heat of | 3 |
of achilles by the | 3 |
king and queen of | 3 |
knew not where he | 3 |
and he threw his | 3 |
of the great wrongs | 3 |
to protect him from | 3 |
for they could not | 3 |
what hope have i | 3 |
hole in the rock | 3 |
and if so be | 3 |
that i speke of | 3 |
in al the toun | 3 |
you do not know | 3 |
young men of the | 3 |
the atreids and odysseus | 3 |
were set at the | 3 |
but wel i woot | 3 |
be seen in the | 3 |
with him to the | 3 |
then to the ships | 3 |
it seemed to them | 3 |
and he could hardly | 3 |
told a long story | 3 |
was a rich man | 3 |
the greeks had a | 3 |
and his men would | 3 |
the strength of men | 3 |
great heat of the | 3 |
he tried the string | 3 |
they could not see | 3 |
his hands for the | 3 |
great wrongs of the | 3 |
the wide sea to | 3 |
still a living man | 3 |
a chief of the | 3 |
god of the sea | 3 |
i have told you | 3 |
of the hundred cities | 3 |
philoktetes i am destroyed | 3 |
he went on his | 3 |
till he reached the | 3 |
dark it was that | 3 |
the son of neleus | 3 |
a freend of his | 3 |
did not dare to | 3 |
the night is late | 3 |
went alone to the | 3 |
could string the bow | 3 |
the untrodden sanctuaries where | 3 |
for he did not | 3 |
for he was the | 3 |
him that he was | 3 |
glad were the trojans | 3 |
but ulysses did not | 3 |
have been found in | 3 |
to help the greeks | 3 |
and then they went | 3 |
jason and his company | 3 |
of the world wrought | 3 |
he fell and died | 3 |
he was alive or | 3 |
the winged shoon of | 3 |
and all around were | 3 |
cups of gold and | 3 |
that the son of | 3 |
of the olympian gods | 3 |
to the crest of | 3 |
did not go to | 3 |
the house of menelaus | 3 |
to bring back the | 3 |
came they to the | 3 |
and whence he came | 3 |
the body of a | 3 |
he took his leve | 3 |
hid him in a | 3 |
he would not cease | 3 |
of no other man | 3 |
what he could do | 3 |
i will give thee | 3 |
in all to me | 3 |
and drove them to | 3 |
in his hand he | 3 |
to spy out the | 3 |
not be able to | 3 |
and could not be | 3 |
to the god of | 3 |
leaped to his feet | 3 |
down with his sword | 3 |
in the line of | 3 |
death for her that | 3 |
he roos and took | 3 |
to his own palace | 3 |
the people of the | 3 |
and he told them | 3 |
the lord of thunder | 3 |
hir in hir ere | 3 |
at the sight of | 3 |
had your fill of | 3 |
there was no more | 3 |
to the gods of | 3 |
seems to be a | 3 |
the brother of the | 3 |
a great red deer | 3 |
is not lawful for | 3 |
you must be told | 3 |
the face of a | 3 |
not one of the | 3 |
the trojans and their | 3 |
he said to the | 3 |
was glad when he | 3 |
his eyes on the | 3 |
their ships and sail | 3 |
the sacker of cities | 3 |
her husband in the | 3 |
have found out the | 3 |
against one of the | 3 |
on his way to | 3 |
and he stood up | 3 |
and then rose and | 3 |
court of the palace | 3 |
he fell upon the | 3 |
a circle round the | 3 |
that i shal seye | 3 |
more beautiful than the | 3 |
with her to see | 3 |
yet if war come | 3 |
and he drew his | 3 |
into the midst of | 3 |
to cross the sea | 3 |
day when the greeks | 3 |
would that i had | 3 |
that this was a | 3 |
fell in the dust | 3 |
went on board his | 3 |
as they went out | 3 |
the mother of ulysses | 3 |
treaders down of cities | 3 |
days he had finished | 3 |
no will of mine | 3 |
and he fell and | 3 |
to help the trojans | 3 |
the boughs of the | 3 |
the fortune of the | 3 |
and all manner of | 3 |
he was and whence | 3 |
him to his own | 3 |
the world wrought into | 3 |
in al this world | 3 |
as was the manner | 3 |
and he felt for | 3 |
sea was black with | 3 |
the front of the | 3 |
come back from the | 3 |
the meaning of this | 3 |
was so brave and | 3 |
went to his own | 3 |
that in this world | 3 |
lived in the hills | 3 |
went and stood in | 3 |
to be the cause | 3 |
shal been right as | 3 |
as long as he | 3 |
and out of the | 3 |
he was the best | 3 |
other side of the | 3 |
and leaped into the | 3 |
the sake of the | 3 |
at the crest of | 3 |
and he seemed to | 3 |
them from the wall | 3 |
be angry with me | 3 |
was wont to done | 3 |
many and many a | 3 |
and gave him food | 3 |
come out of the | 3 |
ye that cast temples | 3 |
and in their midst | 3 |
and seyde as ye | 3 |
one of the men | 3 |
them to the ships | 3 |
to be a great | 3 |
a ship of the | 3 |
in the form of | 3 |
al the toun of | 3 |
winged shoon of hermes | 3 |
crete of the hundred | 3 |
could not do that | 3 |
troy disguised as a | 3 |
of the greek army | 3 |
before the time of | 3 |
the top of the | 3 |
after so many years | 3 |
but i know not | 3 |
it was made of | 3 |
was in vain that | 3 |
the hearts of all | 3 |
the trojan women the | 3 |
was the best archer | 3 |
told the stories of | 3 |
and his wife penelope | 3 |
were sorry for him | 3 |
see his mother again | 3 |
wept when she heard | 3 |
this al and som | 3 |
so soon to die | 3 |
when at last the | 3 |
not to come near | 3 |
leaning on his spear | 3 |
and priam and the | 3 |
i am right sory | 3 |
the immortal heavenly ones | 3 |
niste what was best | 3 |
it is only the | 3 |
what shal i doon | 3 |
was as large as | 3 |
he may have been | 3 |
his neck by a | 3 |
and he said that | 3 |
that it would be | 3 |
out into the open | 3 |
to the nymphs of | 3 |
on to face the | 3 |
he would give the | 3 |
striveth well and perisheth | 3 |
brave men who had | 3 |
how the sons of | 3 |
for the first time | 3 |
one of the greeks | 3 |
his spear for a | 3 |
as i best can | 3 |
if that i shal | 3 |
it may be that | 3 |
straight up to the | 3 |
for many a day | 3 |
light of the sun | 3 |
sent him to be | 3 |
dwellings of the dead | 3 |
in the harbour of | 3 |
fifty rows of vines | 3 |
the three grey women | 3 |
of the great achilles | 3 |
the day of battle | 3 |
cast the hawsers loose | 3 |
tales of troy and | 3 |
the river of ocean | 3 |
but all the rest | 3 |
in the island of | 3 |
all the floor of | 3 |
the sea was black | 3 |
to the tent of | 3 |
with the son of | 3 |
were covered with bronze | 3 |
of the hall in | 3 |
for ought i can | 3 |
to one of the | 3 |
er that she go | 3 |
night and all the | 3 |
around the mighty dead | 3 |
this was the end | 3 |
men of the guard | 3 |
of the fair hair | 3 |
when she heard that | 3 |
and went to see | 3 |
sore that me smerte | 3 |
drew his sword and | 3 |
the might of aias | 3 |
him limb from limb | 3 |
had no power to | 3 |
and robbed me of | 3 |
with all his men | 3 |
the ghost of the | 3 |
the king of lycia | 3 |
and up and down | 3 |
and the sea was | 3 |
him back to the | 3 |
that al this thing | 3 |
no man could move | 3 |
a man to have | 3 |
fell on the floor | 3 |
not where he was | 3 |
cast temples to desolation | 3 |
out of their course | 3 |
he was afraid of | 3 |
they came back to | 3 |
it was well for | 3 |
seyde as ye may | 3 |
the brother of aias | 3 |
and that he must | 3 |
wondered at the beauty | 3 |
the ship of the | 3 |
that they might not | 3 |
that he must be | 3 |
he had taken it | 3 |
and the voice of | 3 |
to die in evil | 3 |
and fell from the | 3 |
king of the thracians | 3 |
lie there in dust | 3 |
had sent him to | 3 |
and this they did | 3 |
of euripides translated into | 3 |
and out they all | 3 |
the hands of helen | 3 |
that he had killed | 3 |
wood out of his | 3 |
the anger of the | 3 |
and the swords of | 3 |
it ioye was to | 3 |
the taking of troy | 3 |
the heaps of slain | 3 |
father when he came | 3 |
he had never seen | 3 |
the palace of priam | 3 |
and sat down beside | 3 |
of the stories that | 3 |
for they had never | 3 |
in the city of | 3 |
swift as the wind | 3 |
it is one of | 3 |
he had eaten and | 3 |
crest of mount ida | 3 |
leaning on his staff | 3 |
and he told her | 3 |
only the crying of | 3 |
proposed that they should | 3 |
father was a rich | 3 |
twinned be we tweyne | 3 |
on cliffs above the | 3 |
thought that they were | 3 |
that he had returned | 3 |
a sooth of this | 3 |
untrodden sanctuaries where lie | 3 |
front of the ship | 3 |
stern of the ship | 3 |
his hands and feet | 3 |
die in evil were | 3 |
had never heard of | 3 |
and the man who | 3 |
and sailed the wide | 3 |
they had fought against | 3 |
how sore that me | 3 |
came into his heart | 3 |
the arms of his | 3 |
now at that time | 3 |
gave him food and | 3 |
the son of tydeus | 3 |
was and whence he | 3 |
in cups of gold | 3 |
the camp of the | 3 |
and take away his | 3 |
and stood in front | 3 |
he was tired of | 3 |
one of the women | 3 |
yourselves so soon to | 3 |
and up and doun | 3 |
and he found her | 3 |
a hollow of the | 3 |
the town of agamemnon | 3 |
did not tell the | 3 |
a pool of blood | 3 |
gave him his daughter | 3 |
asked him why he | 3 |
and the end of | 3 |
the roof of the | 3 |
and all the people | 3 |
to the sons of | 3 |
when we come to | 3 |
the day when the | 3 |
the banks of the | 3 |
with the blood of | 3 |
al that ever he | 3 |
sat down beside her | 3 |
was believed to be | 3 |
at night on the | 3 |
that she could not | 3 |
it may not be | 3 |
the smoke going up | 3 |
and from his head | 3 |
he felte his herte | 3 |
head of the minotaur | 3 |
while they were talking | 3 |
in dark mourning raiment | 3 |
forth gushed the blood | 3 |
that al this world | 3 |
drove them to the | 3 |
they went to their | 3 |
as is a man | 3 |
way to the island | 3 |
then they went to | 3 |
her that striveth well | 3 |
and all the plain | 3 |
on the grave of | 3 |
the throwing of the | 3 |
the place where he | 3 |
it is not lawful | 3 |
held the helm and | 3 |
sat down on the | 3 |
to the ground and | 3 |
which is now called | 3 |
say that it was | 3 |
in the front of | 3 |
the might of zeus | 3 |
out of the way | 3 |
agamemnon lord of spears | 3 |
to try to find | 3 |
him and kill him | 3 |
he gan him for | 3 |
there is a crown | 3 |
put her to a | 3 |
to go back to | 3 |
rich presents of gold | 3 |
the blood of aias | 3 |
was never to see | 3 |
knew that they were | 3 |
of the trojans in | 3 |
all the other women | 3 |
in the way of | 3 |
her to a cruel | 3 |
because she was so | 3 |
lay in wait for | 3 |
the hosts of troy | 3 |
as when in mountain | 3 |
and to all the | 3 |
the souls of men | 3 |
to speke of this | 3 |
him to be her | 3 |
to a cruel death | 3 |
the shadow of the | 3 |
carry the women captives | 3 |
was set before them | 3 |
give me back my | 3 |
what you are doing | 3 |
knew that he had | 3 |
centuries before the time | 3 |
wrongs of the world | 3 |
to make sure that | 3 |
i do not know | 3 |
that his father was | 3 |
the greeks believed that | 3 |
against the trojan men | 3 |
of the noise and | 3 |
world wrought into music | 3 |
the house of my | 3 |
she said that she | 3 |
and that she was | 3 |
for her that striveth | 3 |
from the sea to | 3 |
a long story about | 3 |
recked not of the | 3 |
the midst of his | 3 |
was best to rede | 3 |
then all the rest | 3 |
in truth a great | 3 |
am the daughter of | 3 |
the hands of foes | 3 |
was still a boy | 3 |
to seek his father | 3 |
the slayer of argos | 3 |
which the greeks called | 3 |
when i took the | 3 |
will not be able | 3 |
have here my trouthe | 3 |
men of the city | 3 |
the trojans gathered round | 3 |
to the island of | 3 |
that he might be | 3 |
down on the trojans | 3 |
they rushed on him | 3 |
crest of the hill | 3 |
crown in death for | 3 |
of crete of the | 3 |
achilles had been given | 3 |
with his own hands | 3 |
laid it in the | 3 |
the son of ulysses | 3 |
she sat down on | 3 |
stripped the armour from | 3 |
him food and wine | 3 |
to fight to the | 3 |
and all the air | 3 |
it was wont to | 3 |
for he knew that | 3 |
he was a cretan | 3 |
when she saw him | 3 |
him in new raiment | 3 |
for a long while | 3 |
the face of the | 3 |
for their wives and | 3 |
on his way back | 3 |
the midst of the | 3 |
and on his wey | 3 |
the secret of the | 3 |
out of his hand | 3 |
came down from the | 3 |
the other side of | 3 |
and the sons of | 3 |
fell with a crash | 3 |
a young man named | 3 |
the crying of one | 3 |
be the cause of | 3 |
the trojans saw the | 3 |
and they had no | 3 |
on his left hand | 3 |
in the course of | 3 |
ship in the harbour | 3 |
a prey to dogs | 3 |
the trojans heard that | 3 |
of the greeks had | 3 |
for they did not | 3 |
said that they had | 3 |
drove in his chariot | 3 |
by hands of foes | 3 |
no man of them | 3 |
the gods be with | 3 |
that they were the | 3 |
this world ther nis | 3 |
lay in the dust | 3 |
drew back from the | 3 |
was the way in | 3 |
when thou art dead | 3 |
when he had eaten | 3 |
as soon as he | 3 |
and walked to the | 3 |
the sun never shone | 3 |
with his strong hands | 3 |
and the walls and | 3 |
then she opened her | 3 |
was still a living | 3 |
all that he had | 3 |
when thou camest here | 3 |
on the walls of | 3 |
which she was weaving | 3 |
in death for her | 3 |
temple of pallas athene | 3 |
palace of the king | 3 |
first of all to | 3 |
one day when they | 3 |
god shilde us fro | 3 |
and in three days | 3 |
how are ye blind | 3 |
where lie the ancient | 3 |
and carry the women | 3 |
the light of a | 3 |
and all the trojan | 3 |
death of achilles ulysses | 3 |
said that it was | 3 |
is in truth a | 3 |
to be seen in | 3 |
ulysses the sacker of | 3 |
and how he slew | 3 |
that striveth well and | 3 |
of men who had | 3 |
went out into the | 3 |
was the end of | 3 |
door of the cave | 3 |
island of the gorgons | 3 |
and they did not | 3 |
the palace of king | 3 |
in the court of | 3 |
believed that she could | 3 |
hoping that the god | 3 |
as swift as the | 3 |
the sons of atreus | 3 |
all in all to | 3 |
stood in front of | 3 |
with a great cry | 3 |
truth a great misery | 3 |
out of sight of | 3 |
shilde us fro mischaunce | 3 |
the great bow of | 3 |
wast all in all | 3 |
the great wrongs of | 3 |
they were brought before | 3 |
on board his ship | 3 |
the warrior sons of | 3 |
no son of mine | 3 |
lie the ancient dead | 3 |
i will show thee | 3 |
and that is al | 3 |
and leaped to his | 3 |
on hands and knees | 3 |
of the most beautiful | 3 |
would ye be wise | 3 |
rose in the air | 3 |
of silver and gold | 3 |
and he was so | 3 |
who he was and | 3 |
deep in the earth | 3 |
here and there among | 3 |
who had been his | 3 |
hung by a belt | 3 |
then the sun set | 3 |
the trojans in the | 3 |
and there among the | 3 |
his courage and his | 3 |
sword and the shoon | 3 |
he had been told | 3 |
one of the wooers | 3 |
the horses and chariot | 3 |
prayed that he might | 3 |
he saw that the | 3 |
and here and there | 3 |
he was one of | 3 |
that cast temples to | 3 |
went up into the | 3 |
went up and down | 3 |
the spirits of the | 3 |
and put on his | 3 |
am i that i | 3 |
euripides translated into english | 3 |
for his heart was | 3 |
so he said that | 3 |
so he went on | 3 |
the women of troy | 3 |
the king of that | 3 |
went up through the | 3 |
the most beautiful woman | 3 |
the island of the | 3 |
by no will of | 3 |
the things that are | 3 |
the face of her | 3 |
what are you saying | 3 |
i shal yow devyse | 3 |
in a pool of | 3 |
go up to the | 3 |
it were a gret | 3 |
out of his minde | 3 |
that i had died | 3 |
is for to done | 3 |
thrice he tried to | 3 |
the eyes of theseus | 3 |
and lay waste tombs | 3 |
he had brought from | 3 |
the son of laertes | 3 |
him out of his | 3 |
his way back to | 3 |
as if they were | 3 |
by the way they | 3 |
sothe for to seyne | 3 |
a great golden cup | 3 |
philoktetes your words are | 3 |
smote the grey sea | 3 |
and most beautiful of | 3 |
in heaps on heaps | 3 |
the god of love | 3 |
eyes on the eyes | 3 |
through the neck of | 3 |
that he was to | 3 |
that the old man | 3 |
in front of it | 3 |
into english rhyming verse | 3 |
is a crown in | 3 |
leaped into the chariot | 3 |
was the heart of | 3 |
shortly for to seyne | 3 |
the sword and the | 3 |
skin of a stag | 3 |
horse of tree had | 3 |
the voice of a | 3 |
his father was a | 3 |
and brought her home | 3 |
so dark it was | 3 |
and said that it | 3 |
them all in the | 3 |
said that she would | 3 |
and laid it in | 3 |
ashes of the hearth | 3 |
cause is of my | 3 |
and that as faste | 3 |
it was a great | 3 |
sanctuaries where lie the | 3 |
sacrifices to the gods | 3 |
the hills on the | 3 |
it would have been | 3 |
the stern of the | 3 |
and slay the men | 3 |
a river in flood | 3 |
down to the ship | 3 |
will tell you all | 3 |
al this world ne | 3 |
with a great white | 3 |
way to the isle | 3 |
the wife of thon | 3 |
evil were the stain | 3 |
it was difficult to | 3 |
that al the world | 3 |
did but graze the | 3 |
to give me the | 3 |
deeds worthy of my | 3 |
and he went back | 3 |
to his father and | 3 |
was alive or dead | 3 |
he said that the | 3 |
in torment and in | 3 |
that it was his | 3 |
that day by day | 3 |
son of the dawn | 3 |
her hole in the | 3 |
the arrows of his | 3 |
on the eyes of | 3 |
and when she had | 3 |
the shoes of swiftness | 3 |
i have told yow | 3 |
and there were many | 3 |
should fall on them | 3 |
have told me the | 3 |
for the more part | 3 |
against him in the | 3 |
forth to meet him | 3 |
on the ship of | 3 |
he came to be | 3 |
on the top of | 3 |
the greatest and most | 3 |
smoke going up from | 3 |
when they came back | 3 |
protect him from the | 3 |
on her way to | 3 |
i speke of love | 3 |
one of his own | 3 |
to speak to him | 3 |
the helm and steered | 3 |
what will we do | 3 |
i will think of | 3 |
of sight of land | 3 |
now when the trojans | 3 |
the faces of the | 3 |
be a great joy | 3 |
great vessels of bronze | 3 |
to strip his armour | 3 |
of troy and greece | 3 |
well and perisheth unstained | 3 |
of the company of | 3 |
the country of the | 3 |
the beggar said that | 3 |
what do you mean | 3 |
burned the body of | 3 |
that she gan hir | 3 |
as nought ne were | 3 |
in evil were the | 3 |
that ever i saw | 3 |
and came to her | 3 |
said that ulysses was | 3 |
a crown in death | 3 |
in the old time | 3 |
at the beauty of | 3 |
crying of one of | 3 |
king of the people | 3 |
of the blind prophet | 3 |
and they would be | 3 |
and it seems that | 3 |
a kind of fairy | 3 |
for which ful ofte | 3 |
as one of the | 3 |
it was in vain | 3 |
he stood beside the | 3 |
roos and took his | 3 |
in the eyes of | 3 |
he went back to | 3 |
right in this wyse | 3 |
eek for hem that | 3 |
like the roaring of | 3 |
the rich city of | 3 |
in the light of | 3 |
they to the ships | 3 |
into troy disguised as | 3 |
were painted with pictures | 3 |
translated into english rhyming | 3 |
buried by his friends | 3 |
known that he was | 3 |
clad in dark mourning | 3 |
at the foot of | 3 |
take no heed of | 3 |
took the shape of | 3 |
those which she had | 3 |
what sholde i more | 3 |
that he was not | 3 |
the skin of a | 3 |
she of the mighty | 3 |
the walls of the | 3 |
i go forth from | 3 |
ful ofte a day | 3 |
the island of calypso | 3 |
across the island to | 3 |
the most of the | 3 |
to the ships they | 3 |
the sake of his | 3 |
ulysses had a plan | 3 |
head of the gorgon | 3 |
and thus he seyde | 3 |
of the house of | 3 |
he could not be | 3 |
it is a thing | 3 |
had a mind to | 3 |
back from the ships | 3 |
and there was a | 3 |
to the worldes ende | 3 |
for in this world | 3 |
went to sleep in | 3 |
as fer as i | 3 |
neck by a cord | 3 |
the story is told | 3 |
not disobey the gods | 3 |
and al this thing | 3 |
ye treaders down of | 3 |
where the sun never | 3 |
with a syk she | 3 |
in these days that | 3 |
out in the darkness | 3 |
to a place where | 3 |
a city of light | 2 |
and he ran to | 2 |
it is pressed from | 2 |
famous for her beauty | 2 |
these were his words | 2 |
up from sleep and | 2 |
why he had been | 2 |
and were as eager | 2 |
achilles seized the sword | 2 |
temples of the gods | 2 |
a narrow path in | 2 |
ulysses answered him with | 2 |
who now was old | 2 |
and fear came upon | 2 |
forth from her fragrant | 2 |
to purpos of my | 2 |
be foremost in the | 2 |
blinding of his son | 2 |
curses of those that | 2 |
and arrows and spears | 2 |
that he wore a | 2 |
ulysses loved her very | 2 |
might not touch it | 2 |
friends came round him | 2 |
a pit among the | 2 |
to the ship on | 2 |
a great red jewel | 2 |
and drove him off | 2 |
forefront of the fight | 2 |
to be famous as | 2 |
the blinding of his | 2 |
on words in the | 2 |
a soft grey crown | 2 |
to the dardan given | 2 |
chose to shoot an | 2 |
though the grass has | 2 |
it is of the | 2 |
his bearers had carried | 2 |
sorry that a wide | 2 |
a word which she | 2 |
brother of the slain | 2 |
what was there in | 2 |
had been warned by | 2 |
thy house i fled | 2 |
is a possibility of | 2 |
of the greek chorus | 2 |
the cloud is northward | 2 |
as i shal seyn | 2 |
not been this splendour | 2 |
that ye do me | 2 |
sea to comfort him | 2 |
her as the cause | 2 |
gods of that city | 2 |
was a very beautiful | 2 |
deserve what aias has | 2 |
the bitterest day of | 2 |
sleep even to the | 2 |
he ran to find | 2 |
conventionality in her description | 2 |
days they do not | 2 |
men fought long and | 2 |
which fell from heaven | 2 |
tolde him word and | 2 |
send five hundred young | 2 |
the altar in his | 2 |
forth his hands to | 2 |
and steal the luck | 2 |
oath cannot be broken | 2 |
wound might be tended | 2 |
and her nurse carrying | 2 |
was not very fond | 2 |
both she is changed | 2 |
the chariot near him | 2 |
menelaus and little hermione | 2 |
achilles had sent his | 2 |
has grown over the | 2 |
her chain must bind | 2 |
ulysses became as artful | 2 |
and flaw of driven | 2 |
mounds piled up over | 2 |
and ilion lieth low | 2 |
the maid who prophesies | 2 |
and struck hector full | 2 |
by which the princes | 2 |
but i will give | 2 |
invented by a poet | 2 |
helen was taken by | 2 |
full of this drug | 2 |
greeks wore great cloaks | 2 |
though so very tall | 2 |
in countries far away | 2 |
in the dark borderland | 2 |
prevent her from sending | 2 |
his face was handsome | 2 |
that breathes and dies | 2 |
if fear be in | 2 |
of beautiful helen reached | 2 |
and why they came | 2 |
women pray to the | 2 |
beside the clear swift | 2 |
the foe mock at | 2 |
whom she had ever | 2 |
captive women who have | 2 |
and when she wore | 2 |
she had said a | 2 |
the chiefs let themselves | 2 |
but these they did | 2 |
through the portico and | 2 |
and ulysses seized the | 2 |
all with changeful pain | 2 |
very unwilling to leave | 2 |
his cunning in stratagems | 2 |
of hecuba is connected | 2 |
all go home and | 2 |
was taken to feast | 2 |
told the chiefs about | 2 |
with gold in great | 2 |
down to the seashore | 2 |
force my son took | 2 |
he had no horses | 2 |
covering her side from | 2 |
the dust from beneath | 2 |
the prophets therefore advised | 2 |
birds upon angry pinions | 2 |
for he was already | 2 |
that stands at bay | 2 |
the gate crowd and | 2 |
meanwhile achilles was standing | 2 |
he could see him | 2 |
but by this time | 2 |
softly to the ground | 2 |
slaying as they went | 2 |
drove his sharp tusk | 2 |
but on the general | 2 |
aid against these lying | 2 |
of the greeks to | 2 |
grandfather would have set | 2 |
sorrows is at hand | 2 |
therefore with thee i | 2 |
getting what they deserve | 2 |
is this that cometh | 2 |
boy became as beautiful | 2 |
the way in which | 2 |
seeking for paris everywhere | 2 |
to bring down birds | 2 |
thou wouldst restrain them | 2 |
chariot to the old | 2 |
being sorry to see | 2 |
clean i give them | 2 |
the fates that no | 2 |
of achilles were cause | 2 |
the grey city fell | 2 |
might ply these charges | 2 |
were at that time | 2 |
to fate and the | 2 |
too quick for him | 2 |
huts built in front | 2 |
and immemorially ancient town | 2 |
to and fro alone | 2 |
there was only silence | 2 |
fears of the hope | 2 |
light with a burning | 2 |
sudden way of the | 2 |
fight around the dead | 2 |
that his wound should | 2 |
and this treasure was | 2 |
had taken part in | 2 |
and smote his thigh | 2 |
i live till that | 2 |
dust as smoke riseth | 2 |
he must keep his | 2 |
and husbands always allowed | 2 |
head fell ringing on | 2 |
the dwelling of the | 2 |
from the fight he | 2 |
will lose heart if | 2 |
not to a dance | 2 |
all her fair tale | 2 |
to have tried to | 2 |
deck not out thine | 2 |
the highlanders used to | 2 |
to fight for them | 2 |
swooped on her and | 2 |
of nestor was in | 2 |
phytalus and their company | 2 |
went to see the | 2 |
far off in the | 2 |
when he was angered | 2 |
that night the ghost | 2 |
of a wild boar | 2 |
iron for his ransom | 2 |
and very like him | 2 |
and the spearmen were | 2 |
and went with them | 2 |
because there are martyrs | 2 |
that the babe should | 2 |
i heard the cry | 2 |
murder for brave men | 2 |
for diomede and ulysses | 2 |
herself off the ship | 2 |
the sight of helen | 2 |
the men of nestor | 2 |
full armour round troy | 2 |
day shall come for | 2 |
company of the twelve | 2 |
shield and breastplate of | 2 |
greeks and trojans fought | 2 |
white about them but | 2 |
struck his spear out | 2 |
the kin of the | 2 |
servants came to him | 2 |
he might choose a | 2 |
defiled with blood and | 2 |
his knees and spoke | 2 |
this is not the | 2 |
the walles of the | 2 |
spoke in a strange | 2 |
rain fell upon them | 2 |
herald of the greeks | 2 |
drowsiness came over her | 2 |
which is now the | 2 |
tore it out of | 2 |
the scene represents a | 2 |
peace when the princes | 2 |
simply burn the machine | 2 |
depart with the army | 2 |
only the mythology that | 2 |
for her an ivory | 2 |
would bring to fill | 2 |
broke their oaths and | 2 |
wall in the dark | 2 |
and thence she saw | 2 |
with bow and arrow | 2 |
never heard i a | 2 |
a torch he is | 2 |
old telamon stayed from | 2 |
for he would rather | 2 |
where guests were taken | 2 |
from the head of | 2 |
and many strong and | 2 |
spear more than twenty | 2 |
or three thousand men | 2 |
standing on the plain | 2 |
were foolish enough to | 2 |
said that yesterday he | 2 |
horses of achilles if | 2 |
cried and drew the | 2 |
this they must have | 2 |
babe should be killed | 2 |
of troy and had | 2 |
and the beggar said | 2 |
his face never troubled | 2 |
as the story is | 2 |
where they had so | 2 |
so achilles spoke in | 2 |
daughter lieth now as | 2 |
hecuba from understanding so | 2 |
hard and so long | 2 |
the proud water craveth | 2 |
with jewels of gold | 2 |
type of the successful | 2 |
slew them on the | 2 |
helmet on the ground | 2 |
of tree after paris | 2 |
the noise was like | 2 |
as a matter of | 2 |
gone home to bring | 2 |
no longer for her | 2 |
thetis did this because | 2 |
and desired to fall | 2 |
rushed forward like a | 2 |
was black with ships | 2 |
brave woman in bitter | 2 |
the fame of beautiful | 2 |
threw another spear at | 2 |
and the palace of | 2 |
and supper was made | 2 |
she does not definitely | 2 |
of wolves that have | 2 |
i strove to fly | 2 |
great ilion and mine | 2 |
mine arms are wreathed | 2 |
so much worse than | 2 |
dearer to each other | 2 |
sword passed clean through | 2 |
guess how ulysses had | 2 |
drops fell and vanished | 2 |
in the meantime helen | 2 |
turns to drag the | 2 |
that athena is specially | 2 |
through the dust towards | 2 |
be done for burial | 2 |
with the brothers of | 2 |
sacrifice one of their | 2 |
man would not give | 2 |
and horses to the | 2 |
hold proud easterns bowing | 2 |
trouble about one girl | 2 |
i have forgot the | 2 |
not be done at | 2 |
for any one of | 2 |
the iron club that | 2 |
battle swayed this way | 2 |
beautiful princesses might be | 2 |
still the trojans charged | 2 |
bend to the stones | 2 |
was ashamed of himself | 2 |
thy weight in gold | 2 |
rushed against the trojan | 2 |
to be lord of | 2 |
held argos and tiryns | 2 |
the wild rout of | 2 |
trojans their fill of | 2 |
and pipe did shriek | 2 |
is adorned with gold | 2 |
visor of the helmet | 2 |
soth for to seyne | 2 |
and he would get | 2 |
there was a thing | 2 |
odysseus is the type | 2 |
torch as though bearing | 2 |
out of thy house | 2 |
taken up by one | 2 |
is a loyal soldier | 2 |
long story about how | 2 |
from the fact that | 2 |
to bid me heal | 2 |
them into the river | 2 |
my torment and my | 2 |
cave of the naiads | 2 |
and slew the leader | 2 |
a led horse was | 2 |
had been obliged to | 2 |
i would not have | 2 |
of peace when the | 2 |
luck of troy from | 2 |
up within the wall | 2 |
will swear to give | 2 |
new lord that is | 2 |
ears and out of | 2 |
cry came to black | 2 |
they have left thee | 2 |
of linen or silk | 2 |
he began to grow | 2 |
tell long stories about | 2 |
was his lot chosen | 2 |
shut up within their | 2 |
above his head and | 2 |
so this is the | 2 |
was alone in the | 2 |
so shall thy long | 2 |
but for him the | 2 |
trojan showed hector an | 2 |
leather caps from the | 2 |
when they were alone | 2 |
home was in a | 2 |
shapes of joyance mystical | 2 |
and sword in hand | 2 |
voyage for him to | 2 |
who had loved and | 2 |
and many a maiden | 2 |
yield them up as | 2 |
him victory that day | 2 |
last dead deep of | 2 |
is an ill beginning | 2 |
men of aias followed | 2 |
once they took me | 2 |
usually slaves taken in | 2 |
seems that he had | 2 |
all with one voice | 2 |
murdered all their husbands | 2 |
she told him that | 2 |
of a great river | 2 |
dressed in a dirty | 2 |
felt how disgraceful it | 2 |
he said he would | 2 |
foot soldiers of the | 2 |
and hurled themselves on | 2 |
the island on a | 2 |
but oenone was roaming | 2 |
instrument fighting with the | 2 |
beneath their feet rose | 2 |
ago and weave them | 2 |
tale be true or | 2 |
and a sword with | 2 |
when your gods forsook | 2 |
agamemnon a greedy coward | 2 |
a thracian chief who | 2 |
long while the hawk | 2 |
greeks had a god | 2 |
not fight in the | 2 |
to an ancient king | 2 |
of lycomedes of scyros | 2 |
priam was sitting with | 2 |
already the swiftest runner | 2 |
poisoned arrows on the | 2 |
while achilles had lent | 2 |
rose and said that | 2 |
music through the gloom | 2 |
and was brave and | 2 |
above all in the | 2 |
so he shrank back | 2 |
was near the sentinels | 2 |
a huntsman cries on | 2 |
was himself originally a | 2 |
a man when he | 2 |
about thy breast leapt | 2 |
his journey to the | 2 |
and vultures shall devour | 2 |
these days they do | 2 |
give it to mine | 2 |
were doing a shameful | 2 |
if you see me | 2 |
the greeks accepted this | 2 |
to see if the | 2 |
than fifty thousand men | 2 |
was too strong for | 2 |
her dead are welling | 2 |
how by the shaft | 2 |
euripides here treats the | 2 |
to accept the rich | 2 |
you have made me | 2 |
the house of dictys | 2 |
troyland to be my | 2 |
but now help god | 2 |
death into a sort | 2 |
victory was almost in | 2 |
the foul sin of | 2 |
into troy for two | 2 |
come within a sword | 2 |
not really think the | 2 |
head and lift our | 2 |
thou art no son | 2 |
for they had both | 2 |
ere that day i | 2 |
with a triumphant laugh | 2 |
course he is totally | 2 |
came forth from her | 2 |
burned on them in | 2 |
was thought the greatest | 2 |
no people were stirring | 2 |
this appears very strange | 2 |
his father had a | 2 |
the action were much | 2 |
hills and in the | 2 |
his dearest friend was | 2 |
and ulysses told neoptolemus | 2 |
not sought for wealth | 2 |
ulysses and diomede went | 2 |
two handfuls of flesh | 2 |
leads the trojans as | 2 |
before was he to | 2 |
apollo had come to | 2 |
he weighed out ten | 2 |
is upon it in | 2 |
sent her the vine | 2 |
road and into the | 2 |
flaw of driven hail | 2 |
souls of men who | 2 |
were so successful that | 2 |
on the tower above | 2 |
and first he slew | 2 |
hair was turned up | 2 |
her soon after his | 2 |
pack lay a great | 2 |
arrows on the greeks | 2 |
that i love most | 2 |
behind in the camp | 2 |
mingled there with phrygian | 2 |
shal til that i | 2 |
but a treasure of | 2 |
birth to a burning | 2 |
ever lived on earth | 2 |
and i wol doon | 2 |
swiftly to their huts | 2 |
for some days he | 2 |
the greeks who tried | 2 |
tyndarus first made all | 2 |
the temple gates were | 2 |
led forth his horses | 2 |
the mighty names they | 2 |
and soon he was | 2 |
kicked and dragged him | 2 |
of the chanson de | 2 |
in that hour would | 2 |
must call each of | 2 |
her way a swift | 2 |
himself and take the | 2 |
bind once for all | 2 |
a chamber for penelope | 2 |
saw him must have | 2 |
he often threw the | 2 |
the beggar alone escaped | 2 |
furthest end of the | 2 |
deiphobus lying dead in | 2 |
great stone at eurypylus | 2 |
night to the hut | 2 |
of the brazen spear | 2 |
seen a hawk pursuing | 2 |
war against the old | 2 |
than that this loss | 2 |
knew that he could | 2 |
him up the steep | 2 |
and upraise the law | 2 |
of the maiden athena | 2 |
greeks were on the | 2 |
in thine hand upholden | 2 |
shall be as golden | 2 |
easterns bowing at thy | 2 |
not to desert philoctetes | 2 |
ready for me a | 2 |
if the soldiers took | 2 |
dance that he is | 2 |
no coined money was | 2 |
had revealed the secret | 2 |
he who had slain | 2 |
the gifts they bring | 2 |
to see his dear | 2 |
end of the line | 2 |
of troy lay always | 2 |
in the company of | 2 |
the sword over his | 2 |
was much in the | 2 |
of the great hill | 2 |
the little isle of | 2 |
with a secret arrow | 2 |
the weapons of their | 2 |
in vain that philoctetes | 2 |
the body of sarpedon | 2 |
bow and poisoned arrows | 2 |
holy blaze thus in | 2 |
the deeps of fire | 2 |
world to live in | 2 |
a wild wood on | 2 |
up their hands in | 2 |
of the greeks and | 2 |
he many a wente | 2 |
one toil that holds | 2 |
and music in key | 2 |
and for the harm | 2 |
best man among the | 2 |
shaken from prisoned hearts | 2 |
he bade them sharpen | 2 |
he was thought a | 2 |
worship such a being | 2 |
in an inner room | 2 |
and children before thee | 2 |
speak very slowly at | 2 |
to lete hir go | 2 |
who had warned hector | 2 |
not know him among | 2 |
what list yow thus | 2 |
about his brow with | 2 |
and my city a | 2 |
other greeks to share | 2 |
and pictures painted on | 2 |
altar a copy of | 2 |
but the face of | 2 |
had given him one | 2 |
being gone forth to | 2 |
dwell where the wide | 2 |
any eyes gaze now | 2 |
the ring that i | 2 |
hymen was a torch | 2 |
doom raceth against doom | 2 |
a stag or a | 2 |
she may sail the | 2 |
but not nearly so | 2 |
ship and slew laomedon | 2 |
king of gods and | 2 |
children before thee crying | 2 |
took the baby telemachus | 2 |
before i saw her | 2 |
he dies of hunger | 2 |
the type of the | 2 |
had not the fortune | 2 |
both a stone and | 2 |
the fight at the | 2 |
an arrow from his | 2 |
accidental resemblance of the | 2 |
to life she brought | 2 |
that he ought to | 2 |
cattle could always be | 2 |
strongest man who ever | 2 |
all the while the | 2 |
nestor counselled agamemnon to | 2 |
not her whom god | 2 |
and the men took | 2 |
and her prayer was | 2 |
a prize to lure | 2 |
no man had moved | 2 |
the amazon had slain | 2 |
and arrows flew in | 2 |
as the stones that | 2 |
agamemnon followed and slew | 2 |
in the little isle | 2 |
divine presence becomes visible | 2 |
she will be content | 2 |
certain eternal quality about | 2 |
along the road and | 2 |
and that all the | 2 |
as aforetime is cherished | 2 |
and oil were sorely | 2 |
feebly chattering like the | 2 |
of woe await him | 2 |
beautiful helen reached troy | 2 |
in their walls and | 2 |
ravished or attempted to | 2 |
into the dark sky | 2 |
at arms will be | 2 |
how cruelly art thou | 2 |
the death of so | 2 |
in the scaean gate | 2 |
eurypylus from the battlements | 2 |
for mine heart trusts | 2 |
these tricks of his | 2 |
the side of his | 2 |
be driven in to | 2 |
cut close my hair | 2 |
at first he only | 2 |
priam wished to wait | 2 |
hung swords and spears | 2 |
ropes to the wooden | 2 |
way of prophesying which | 2 |
come here to me | 2 |
and they came in | 2 |
was first of all | 2 |
his shoulder and out | 2 |
heavy spear that none | 2 |
a cave on the | 2 |
shapes of beasts and | 2 |
would have taken for | 2 |
of superstition and statecraft | 2 |
on the ground and | 2 |
on the wing of | 2 |
the men whom achilles | 2 |
oak tree that grew | 2 |
description of her life | 2 |
the laws of greece | 2 |
at last the earth | 2 |
me long ago to | 2 |
patroclus came out of | 2 |
which was defiled with | 2 |
of a long and | 2 |
a friend and squire | 2 |
thousands of planks were | 2 |
came over his eyes | 2 |
woman sick for shame | 2 |
what they wanted most | 2 |
when all are dead | 2 |
troy or shamings of | 2 |
bees and the pleasant | 2 |
who danced about the | 2 |
and watched well the | 2 |
believed is not sure | 2 |
heart outpour its sorrow | 2 |
brought before the king | 2 |
to deck the galleys | 2 |
it red drops seemed | 2 |
fain move to the | 2 |
driving him with your | 2 |
could not see the | 2 |
for ever in oon | 2 |
both shores of the | 2 |
the narrow sea runs | 2 |
would soon have found | 2 |
went to achilles and | 2 |
neither aias nor ulysses | 2 |
evil by the courtesy | 2 |
beaks painted red at | 2 |
yore men saw him | 2 |
by the greeks for | 2 |
ship of ulysses armed | 2 |
of men and rose | 2 |
and said that hector | 2 |
word spoken of zeus | 2 |
the divine suggestions of | 2 |
the stars and the | 2 |
greeks were sorry for | 2 |
kept thy body like | 2 |
by a slight but | 2 |
a magical song over | 2 |
me and hand till | 2 |
two plays on words | 2 |
and wrecked the ship | 2 |
he was not impudent | 2 |
to take the most | 2 |
his good is turned | 2 |
too strong to stem | 2 |
huts on the left | 2 |
in troy thou wert | 2 |
and he smote four | 2 |
if only the men | 2 |
to be burned in | 2 |
small raised deck at | 2 |
your gods were forsaking | 2 |
then the lambs were | 2 |
for a city burned | 2 |
that she cannot float | 2 |
take an oath that | 2 |
cruelly he had deserted | 2 |
a few of his | 2 |
autolycus could steal it | 2 |
of a year which | 2 |
flows round the base | 2 |
in a family of | 2 |
not see her own | 2 |
each with fifty warriors | 2 |
lay fair penthesilea in | 2 |
crested wall of troy | 2 |
of eurypylus had sworn | 2 |
yow right good day | 2 |
their fathers and husbands | 2 |
swift were all in | 2 |
see that your watch | 2 |
only helen was led | 2 |
gushing up from his | 2 |
wall and the ditch | 2 |
saw that they were | 2 |
saw that the greeks | 2 |
the same long dearth | 2 |
there be those that | 2 |
without whose kindness he | 2 |
clearly lit and heroic | 2 |
he could not reach | 2 |
i a word from | 2 |
waiting for sons that | 2 |
in weighed pieces of | 2 |
hands was at home | 2 |
hector to retire within | 2 |
reached the cave where | 2 |
and robbed thy treasure | 2 |
some other ship shall | 2 |
before the olympian system | 2 |
to make himself useful | 2 |
travelled to see her | 2 |
of the trojans had | 2 |
your gods forsook you | 2 |
not make great boasts | 2 |
burn the houses of | 2 |
sword with a hilt | 2 |
is sweeter than my | 2 |
ulysses built the chamber | 2 |
the great greek armada | 2 |
golden cup and mingled | 2 |
not glory for thy | 2 |
the host odysseus hath | 2 |
moon of the deep | 2 |
they swept over the | 2 |
if he might choose | 2 |
were now more curious | 2 |
were ever dearer to | 2 |
of a brief time | 2 |
ranks of greece as | 2 |
therefore the two wakened | 2 |
come swiftly and save | 2 |
telle or herte may | 2 |
in the following spring | 2 |
you as a beggar | 2 |
had stolen her image | 2 |
the walls with machines | 2 |
and thunder and rain | 2 |
fell trees in a | 2 |
of thy heart and | 2 |
be master of thy | 2 |
reign alone from phrygia | 2 |
in ithaca and the | 2 |
golden brooches were used | 2 |
ran on past them | 2 |
in the greek host | 2 |
of eurypylus was the | 2 |
heart with dread is | 2 |
mystic love for apollo | 2 |
came to deliver them | 2 |
shamings of the greek | 2 |
way to steal the | 2 |
is speaking the truth | 2 |
to the ancient people | 2 |
and that ulysses had | 2 |
thou hast the choice | 2 |
us the houses and | 2 |
thee must shed cold | 2 |
man who would creep | 2 |
would at last pass | 2 |
for any other mortal | 2 |
the spearmen of greece | 2 |
down to the plain | 2 |
perhaps marred to most | 2 |
spirit of pity for | 2 |
father prayed to apollo | 2 |
middle of the town | 2 |
her own two brothers | 2 |
face as aforetime is | 2 |
at the tomb of | 2 |
wrecked on a desert | 2 |
and guard the new | 2 |
she lieth in her | 2 |
fearing to think of | 2 |
dreams from the gods | 2 |
him of being a | 2 |