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Works and days

HesiodStallings, A. E.(Translated by)
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The ancient Greeks revered Hesiod, believing he had beaten Homer in a singing contest and that after his dead body was thrown to sea, it was brought back by dolphins.

His 'Works and Days' is one of the most important early works of Greek poetry.

Ostensibly written by the poet to chide his lazy brother, it recounts the story of Pandora's box and humanity's decline since the Golden Age, and can be read as a celebration of rural life and a hymn to work.

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£16.50
Product Details
Penguin
0141970669 / 9780141970660
eBook (EPUB)
881.01
01/02/2018
England
English
212 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Translated from the Ancient Greek Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.