Comparative mythology corpus

Living Or Animated Speech

1 appearances across 1 tradition groups.

Evidence

Each row links back to the complete public-domain source text and the structured extraction record.

TraditionSourcePassageConfidenceEvidenceRecord
Greek The Iliad CONCLUDING NOTE. / INTRODUCTION. / THEODORE ALOIS BUCKLEY. / POPES PREFACE TO THE ILIAD OF HOMER; lines 1471-1552 medium Homer is praised for bright imagination, called father of poetical diction and first teacher of the language of the gods to men; Aristotle is cited on his living words, and examples include an impatient arrow and blood-thirsting weapon. record