| Gregory A. Page - 1997 - 248 str.
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| Rob Morris - 1997 - 420 str.
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| William Wordsworth - 1997 - 520 str.
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| William Gerber - 1997 - 252 str.
...mother (the author reported) pondered gloomily as follows about Sisera' s failure to return home: (765) "Why is his chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariot?" Homer quoted the following speech of Achilles to Odysseus regarding death: (766) Nay, speak... | |
| Dan Urian, Efraim Karsh - 1999 - 300 str.
...the mother of Sisera in Deborah's Song reveals an unusual concern for the defeated enemy at war: (2Sl The mother of Sisera looked out at a window, and cried...the lattice, Why is his chariot so long in coming? Wby tarry the wheels of his chariots? (29l Her wise ladies answered her, yea, she returned answer to... | |
| Richard W. Cogley - 1999 - 376 str.
...last noun bears mention because of a legend that Eliot translated the word "lattice" in Judges 5:28 ("The mother of Sisera looked out at a window and cried through the lattice") as "eelpot" because such was the closest Massachusett equivalent. Trumbull, who exposed the legend's... | |
| 1999 - 458 str.
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