The Bucolics of VergilOxford University Press, 1935 - 220 sider |
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Side 20
... poem ; but poets and lovers being no slaves to logic , Corydon's distraction is made the more manifest by this natural disorder of thought . The subject of the poem is not wholly acceptable to modern poetic taste , but was perfectly in ...
... poem ; but poets and lovers being no slaves to logic , Corydon's distraction is made the more manifest by this natural disorder of thought . The subject of the poem is not wholly acceptable to modern poetic taste , but was perfectly in ...
Side 68
... poem stand in spite of later events . The poem is a mass of allegory in any view , and that Vergil was justified in not revising his prophecy is at least suggested by the fact that scholars have never been able to identify the child ...
... poem stand in spite of later events . The poem is a mass of allegory in any view , and that Vergil was justified in not revising his prophecy is at least suggested by the fact that scholars have never been able to identify the child ...
Side 169
... poem late in 38 or early in 37 . The descriptions of the hardships to be endured by Lycoris certainly point to winter as the time of her desertion of Gallus , and Vergil doubtless wrote the poem soon afterward . If the composition of ...
... poem late in 38 or early in 37 . The descriptions of the hardships to be endured by Lycoris certainly point to winter as the time of her desertion of Gallus , and Vergil doubtless wrote the poem soon afterward . If the composition of ...
Indhold
Introduction 19 Text 23 Notes | 26 |
Introduction 39 Text 42 Notes | 47 |
GENERAL VOCABULARY | 181 |
Copyright | |
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Ablative Accus Aeneid Alexis allegory altaria Amaryllis amoebean amor Amyntas Apollo Arcadia atque Boeotia Bucolic Caesar canibus carmina Codrus conj contest Corydon Damoetas Damon Daphnis Dative Dative of Reference deity Ducite eris erit flock Galatea Gallus Greek haec heifer herba hinc honor Idyl Incipe inis Introd Iollas ipse Italian itum īvi lament Latin literally lover Lycidas Lycoris Maenalus Mantua mecum Meliboeus Menalcas mihi Moeris Mopsus Muses neque Nisa nobis nunc Nymphs Octavian omnia ōnis ōris Orpheus Palaemon Pasiphaë pastoral poetry pecori phrase pipe poem poet Pollio prep puer quae quid quod Roman Rome rustic saepe shepherd Sicily Silenus sing singer song SOURCES AND IMITATIONS Subjunctive subst tamen tantum thee Theocritean Theocritus thou Thyrsis tibi tion Tityrus translate tree umbra verb Vergil verse word