Epic __ |
Long poem |
Long tale |
Epic poem |
Homer hit |
War story |
Homer work |
Homer poem |
Early epic |
Homer opus |
Greek epic |
Homer epic |
Homer title |
Homer wower |
Trojan epic |
Troy's saga |
Trojan saga |
Troy story? |
Homer output |
Homeric saga |
Homeric work |
Long account |
24-book epic |
Ancient epic |
Ancient yarn |
Classic epic |
Epic of note |
24-book poem |
Epic account |
Homer's epic |
Epic of Troy |
Homer's work |
Homeric poem |
24-part epic |
Tale of Troy |
Homeric epic |
Old war story |
Achilles epic |
Homerian work |
Story of Troy |
Epic by Homer |
Homer classic |
Long narrative |
A tale of Troy |
Achilles spiel |
Achilles story |
Long, old yarn |
Noted war poem |
Paris is in it |
Work with Ajax |
Tale of Paris? |
Series of woes |
Trojan War epic |
24-book classic |
24-part classic |
Ancient classic |
Epic from Homer |
Noted war story |
Epic Greek poem |
Trojan War tale |
Trojan War saga |
Greek epic poem |
Homeric classic |
An epic of woes. |
Homer's "homer"? |
Homer's war epic |
Long Greek story |
Opus set in Troy |
Old battle story |
Trojan War verse |
Troy's war story |
Work set in Troy |
Greek masterwork |
Homeric war epic |
Poem in 24 books |
Story of a siege |
Tale of Achilles |
Trojan War story |
It's a long story |
24-book epic poem |
Hector dies in it |
Homer's epic poem |
Homeric narrative |
Classic war story |
Epic tale of Troy |
Poem about Paris? |
Classics 101 text |
Story of Achilles |
Epic about a siege |
Epic tale by Homer |
Paris fights in it |
Epic with Achilles |
Trojan War classic |
Trojan War account |
Work with 24 books |
Ancient Greek epic |
Epic poem by Homer |
Siege of Troy epic |
24-book Greek epic |
A long tale of woe. |
Homeric masterpiece |
Troy story in verse |
Venerable war story |
Series of disasters |
High-school reading |
Long series of woes |
The ___," Greek epic |
Odyssey" predecessor |
Epic poem from Homer |
Paris is found in it |
Poem having 24 books |
Trojan War chronicle |
War tale in 24 parts |
One of Homer's epics |
Classic tale of Troy |
A series of disasters |
Classic with Achilles |
Homer's first episode |
Long poem about a war |
Story featuring Paris |
Story involving Paris |
Collection of 24 books |
Epic of the Trojan War |
Trojan War masterpiece |
War story, Greek-style |
Epic starring Achilles |
Pitt movie inspiration |
Tale of the Trojan War |
Account of tribulations |
Ancient Greek epic poem |
Homer's Achilles spiel? |
Homer's epic about Troy |
Homeric epic, with "The |
Paris is featured in it |
Epic featuring Achilles |
Partner of the "Odyssey |
Work translated by Pope |
Homer's Trojan War epic |
Epic translated by Pope |
Epic containing 24 books |
Epic featuring Agamemnon |
Epic involving Agamemnon |
It covers Hector's death |
Story with Helen of Troy |
Tale of an ancient siege |
Achilles vs. Hector epic |
Tale about Paris, et al. |
'Odyssey' companion piece |
Epic poem set in Anatolia |
Poem about Paris, in part |
Poem about the Trojan War |
Precursor of the "Odyssey |
Story Achilles appears in |
Story of Achilles' wrath. |
Book about the Trojan War |
Epic centered on Achilles |
Poem on the seige of Troy |
Epic about the Trojan War |
King Priam" is based on it |
Epic in dactylic hexameter |
Epic poem featuring Hector |
Epic with a very big horse |
It's divided into 24 books |
Work translated by Chapman |
A long series of woes, etc. |
Ancient Greek class reading |
Tale with a memorable horse |
The "Odyssey" is its sequel |
Twenty-four-book Greek epic |
Epic poem of the Trojan War |
24-book Bronze Age narrative |
Greek epic spanning 24 books |
Classic in dactylic hexameter |
Tale of the wrath of Achilles |
This features Achilles' wrath |
Epic in which Hector is slain |
It ends with Hector's funeral |
Classics 101 text (with "The") |
Epic about the death of Hector |
Epic involving Achilles' wrath |
Epic poem about the Trojan War |
Epic set during the Trojan War |
Epic with a Catalogue of Ships |
Hector dies near the end of it |
Tale of Achilles and Agamemnon |
Epic including the Trojan Horse |
Epic relating the siege of Troy |
Homer doesn't say "D'oh!" in it |
Narrative set in the Bronze Age |
Poem whose first word is "wrath |
Epic poem in dactylic hexameter |
Epic Greek tale written by Homer |
Epic with more than 15,000 lines |
Its opening line mentions Peleus |
Trojan War epic written by Homer |
Epic poem with about 16,000 lines |
Epic translated by Alexander Pope |
Homer's epic about the Trojan War |
Poem describing the siege of Troy |
Epic about Achilles, Hector et al. |
Epic poem written in Homeric Greek |
It concludes with Hector's funeral |
It contains the Catalogue of Ships |
Epic that includes the Teichoscopia |
Its first word translates as "wrath |
Story featuring divine intervention |
Work often read before the "Odyssey |
Where to read about Achilles' wrath |
Greek epic poem about the Trojan War |
Poem with approximately 16,000 lines |
Epic that ends with Hector's funeral |
Troilus and Cressida" source, in part |
Epic featuring the Catalogue of Ships |
Epic including the Catalogue of Ships |
Inspiration for "Troilus and Cressida |
Required reading for a classics major |
Homer's epic poem about the Trojan War |
Greek poem describing the siege of Troy |
Epic work with a kleos (glory) theme |
Literary work in which Paris is featured |
Poem that ends with the funeral of Hector |
When many Trojans were used as protection |
It begins "Sing, goddess, the wrath of ... |
It ends with Hector being burned on a pyre |
Poem in which Paris plays a prominent part |
24-book epic poem of more than 15,000 lines |
Literary source for Broadway's "The Golden Apple |
Zeus remains largely neutral during its narrative |
Alexander Pope translation acclaimed by Dr. Johnson |
It starts "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son... |
It begins "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son ... |
Nowadays it might be called "Achilles' Wrath: The Poem |
It ends "...and peaceful slept the mighty Hector's shade |
Work that begins with an invocation to the Muses, with "The |
Work that begins "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son ... |
Source of "The glorious gifts of the gods are not to be cast aside |
Whence the line "Beauty, terrible beauty! A deathless goddess - so she strikes our eyes! |