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James Johnson Sweeney expresses it in a Homeric simile of art as a bus that doesn't stop for us.
As well as frequent use of standard similes, he used Homeric similes, or elaborate and detailed comparisons.
The Artistry of the Homeric Simile.
To accomplish this, he plasters his heroes and his landscapes with Homeric similes and epithets.
Trojan and Greek alike, their lives are given shining meaning, set against the swirling beauty of Oswald’s reinterpretations of Homeric similes.
Homeric simile, also called an epic simile is a detailed comparison in the form of a simile that is many lines in length.
Behind the immaculate prose rhythms shimmer allusions and echoes - Virgil reaching back to encourage the timid Dante; Homeric similes.
In the words of Peter Jones, Homeric similes "are miraculous, redirecting the reader's attention in the most unexpected ways and suffusing the poem with vividness, pathos and humor".
On the other hand, William Clyde Scott, in his book The Oral Nature of the Homeric Simile, suggests that Homer's similes are original based on the similarities of the similes and their surrounding narrative text.
Abounding in metaphors and Homeric similes, introduced by the poet himself for the first time in Kannada, the epic brings home the truth that all beings, even the most wicked and sinful, are destined to evolve and ultimately attain perfection.
Epic similes often occur in clusters, as they do here.
To do this, he makes use of another classical device, the epic simile.
The transformation looks like an explosion, as the epic simile tells you.
We won't discuss all the epic similes in the Aeneid, but you can have fun trying to spot them.
In about half the cases, technical, agrarian descriptions are adapted into epic similes.
Virgil also follows epic tradition in using many epic similes and epithets.
Virgil describes the scene in the first of the famous "epic similes" in the Aeneid.
Use of the epic simile.
No longer is the poet out to dazzle his readers with bombastic verse and lengthy epic similes.
His epic simile continues:
This is fitting, as the stuff of many epic similes is rooted in the natural and domestic worlds from which epic heroes are cut off.
Notice how the epic simile makes a kind of double image: you see the ugly bird and Satan superimposed on one another, sharing the same characteristics.
NOTE: The description of Dido as a wounded deer is another epic simile.
There aren't many epic similes or classical allusions in this book (which is one-third shorter than Book II).
Inger Merete Hobbelstad here called it a "cornucopia of a novel", where one was "struck by the long, almost epic similes".
Milton reminds us that angels are creatures with wings by using an epic simile that compares them to bees assembling outside their hive.
An epic simile tells us that as he travels, he looks like a sailing ship so far away that it seems to be hanging in the clouds.
In one of Virgil's most beautiful epic similes, Virgil compares Aeneas to a giant oak tree that no wind or storm can knock down.
In an epic simile, Eve is described as more lovely than Pandora, who in classical myth opened a box which brought sin and trouble to mankind.
Her effect on Satan is expressed in a long and very famous epic simile, beginning with the line "As one who long in populous city pent."
The second epic simile of the Iliad of Homer relates the Greek force to great waves on the Icarian sea.
Homeric simile, also called an epic simile is a detailed comparison in the form of a simile that is many lines in length.
THE EPIC SIMILES.
In order to put himself in the epic tradition of The Odyssey and The Aeneid, Milton uses devices like the invocation, epic similes, and catalogs.
NOTE: An epic simile is a poetic device in which one thing, such as a storm at sea, is compared to another thing, such as a civil war.