Sách nói: Wisdom of the Ancients, A Series of Mythological Fables
- Download Preface audio
- Download Cassandra, Or Divination audio
- Download Typhon, Or A Rebel audio
- Download The Cyclops, Or The Ministers Of Terror audio
- Download Narcissus, Or Self-Love audio
- Download The River Styx, Or Leagues audio
- Download Pan, Or Nature audio
- Download Perseus, Or War audio
- Download Endymion, Or a Favorite audio
- Download The Sister Of The Giants, Or Fame audio
- Download Acteon And Pentheus, Or A Curious Man audio
- Download Orpheus, Or Philosophy audio
- Download Cœlum, Or Beginnings audio
- Download Proteus, Or Matter audio
- Download Memnon, Or A Youth Too Forward audio
- Download Tythonus, Or Satiety audio
- Download Juno’s Suitor, Or Baseness audio
- Download Cupid, Or An Atom audio
- Download Diomed, Or Zeal audio
- Download Dædalus, Or Mechanical Skill audio
- Download Ericthonius, Or Imposture audio
- Download Deucalion, Or Restitution audio
- Download Nemesis, Or The Vicissitude Of Things audio
- Download Achelous, Or Battle audio
- Download Dionysus, Or Bacchus audio
- Download Atalanta And Hippomenes, Or Gain audio
- Download Prometheus, Or The State Of Man audio
- Download Icarus And Scylla And Charybdis, Or The Middle Way audio
- Download Sphinx, Or Science audio
- Download Proserpine, Or Spirit audio
- Download Metis, Or Counsel audio
- Download The Sirens, Or Pleasures audio
Thể loại sách nói
Tác giả
Giới thiệu
"Now I suppose most people will think I am but entertaining myself with a toy, and using much the same kind of licence in expounding the poets’ fables which the poets themselves did in inventing them; and it is true that if I had a mind to vary and relieve my severer studies with some such exercise of pleasure for my own or my reader’s recreation, I might very fairly indulge in it. But that is not my meaning. Not but that I know very well what pliant stuff fable is made of, how freely it will follow any way you please to draw it, and how easily with a little dexterity and discourse of wit meanings which it was never meant to bear may be plausibly put upon it. Neither have I forgotten that there has been old abuse of the thing in practice; that many, wishing only to gain the sanction and reverence of antiquity for doctrines and inventions of their own, have tried to twist the fables of the poets into that sense; and that this is neither a modern vanity nor a rare one, but old of standing and frequent in use; that Chrysippus long ago, interpreting the oldest poets after the manner of an interpreter of dreams, made them out to be Stoics; and that the Alchemists more absurdly still have discovered in the pleasant and sportive fictions of the transformation of bodies, allusion to experiments of the furnace." - Summary from Bacon's Preface
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