Bucolica: Georgica ; et Æneis : accedunt clavis metrica, notulae Anglicæ, et quæstiones, nec non index vocabulorum uberrimaSumptibus Cummings, Hilliard, 1826 - 809 pagine |
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Pagina
... poets , it unquestionably is the habit of using an order of construction , or an interpretation . The use of these pernicious helps not only prevents those who rely on them from ever acquiring the power of reading with ease and pleasure ...
... poets , it unquestionably is the habit of using an order of construction , or an interpretation . The use of these pernicious helps not only prevents those who rely on them from ever acquiring the power of reading with ease and pleasure ...
Pagina 403
... poet ; since , on the one hand , the word Ten- uis cannot otherwise be made to furnish the concluding spondee , and ... poets , we might surely expect to find some examples less questionable than those where the I or the V is concerned ...
... poet ; since , on the one hand , the word Ten- uis cannot otherwise be made to furnish the concluding spondee , and ... poets , we might surely expect to find some examples less questionable than those where the I or the V is concerned ...
Pagina 422
... poet and accomplished scholar was born at Andes , avillage near Mantua , on the fifteenth of October , in the six hundred and eighty - fourth year of Rome , and about seventy years before Christ . In the Life of Virgil , purporting to ...
... poet and accomplished scholar was born at Andes , avillage near Mantua , on the fifteenth of October , in the six hundred and eighty - fourth year of Rome , and about seventy years before Christ . In the Life of Virgil , purporting to ...
Pagina 423
... poet attempts to prove the Julian family lineally descended from the founder of Lavinium , that , in the virtuous and heroic Eneas , he means to describe the amiable qualities of his illustrious patron . In the sixth book he attempts to ...
... poet attempts to prove the Julian family lineally descended from the founder of Lavinium , that , in the virtuous and heroic Eneas , he means to describe the amiable qualities of his illustrious patron . In the sixth book he attempts to ...
Pagina 424
... poet for each verse referring to her son . Virgil had spent seven years on the six books then written . In about four years more he finished the twelve books , and intended to revise and correct the whole at his leisure , and then to ...
... poet for each verse referring to her son . Virgil had spent seven years on the six books then written . In about four years more he finished the twelve books , and intended to revise and correct the whole at his leisure , and then to ...
Parole e frasi comuni
according account Achates Æneæ Ænean Æneas æquora æthera agmina Anchises ancient Andromache antè Apollo applied Ardea arma armis Ascanius auras Baccho Bacchus bees book Cæsar cæsura cætera called circum cœlo cœlum Columella contrà corpora death deûm deus dextrâ Dido divûm ECLOGUE elision Eneas ENEID fata ferro first fœm fortè Galatea give given gods Greek hæc Haud hîc Hinc ille ingens Italy Jamque Juno Jupiter latè Latio Lavinia littora longè made Mantua means Menalcas mihi monia name neque nequidquam neut nunc omnibus order pater pectore plur poet prælia primùm probably pugnæ Pyrrhus quâ quæ quàm quò quum regna represented river Rutuli sæpè same sanguine sanguis saxa says Serv Servius sidera sine subject taken tantùm tela tellus terræ Teucros tibi time trees Troja Trojans Turnus understood undis urbem used Venus verò verse vertice Virgil Voss
Brani popolari
Pagina 7 - Nunc ego (namque super tibi erunt qui dicere laudes, Vare, tuas cupiant et tristia condere bella) agrestem tenui meditabor harundine Musam.
Pagina 171 - ... in somnis ferus Aeneas, semperque relinqui sola sibi, semper longam incomitata videtur ire viam et Tyrios deserta quaerere terra...
Pagina 285 - Talia dicta dabat ; sed viribus ensis adactus Transabiit costas et candida pectora rumpit. Volvitur Euryalus leto, pulchrosque per artus It cruor, inque...
Pagina 486 - But because it was necessary for the reader to know what had happened to him in the taking of Troy, and in the preceding parts of his voyage, Virgil makes his hero relate it by way of episode in the second and third books of the ^ZEneid.
Pagina 94 - Tres Notus abreptas in saxa latentia torquet (saxa vocant Itali mediis quae in fluctibus Aras...
Pagina 34 - Jam varias pelagi volucres, et quae Asia circum Dulcibus in stagnis rimantur prata Caystri...
Pagina 221 - Haec ubi dicta dedit, lacrimantem et multa volentem 790 dicere deseruit, tenuesque recessit in auras. Ter conatus ibi collo dare bracchia circum ; ter frustra comprensa manus effugit imago, par levibus ventis volucrique simillima somno.
Pagina 167 - ... si bene quid de te merui, fuit aut tibi quicquam dulce meum, miserere domus labentis, et istam — oro, si quis adhuc precibus locus — exue mentem.
Pagina 9 - Phoebi chorus assurrexerit omnis ; ut Linus haec illi divino carmine pastor floribus atque apio crines ornatus amaro dixerit: 'Hos tibi dant calamos, en accipe, Musae, 'Ascraeo quos ante seni, quibus ille solebat 70 'cantando rigidas deducere montibus ornos. 'His tibi Grynei nemoris dicatur origo, 'ne quis sit lucus, quo se plus iactet Apollo.