Selections from the less known latin poetsClarendon Press, 1869 - 552 sider |
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Side v
... Virgil and Horace . For any appreciation of the Golden Age itself some acquaintance with the Elegiac and earlier Lyric schools , as represented by Catullus and Tibullus , Pro- pertius and Ovid , is scarcely less indispensable than ...
... Virgil and Horace . For any appreciation of the Golden Age itself some acquaintance with the Elegiac and earlier Lyric schools , as represented by Catullus and Tibullus , Pro- pertius and Ovid , is scarcely less indispensable than ...
Side 1
... Virgil . In the early part of his gay and extravagant youth he went on the staff of the Praetor Memmius , Lucretius ' patron , to Bithynia , in company perhaps with his beloved brother , whose death in the Troad he deplores so ...
... Virgil . In the early part of his gay and extravagant youth he went on the staff of the Praetor Memmius , Lucretius ' patron , to Bithynia , in company perhaps with his beloved brother , whose death in the Troad he deplores so ...
Side 2
... Virgil in correctness and flow , yet they display a mar- vellous improvement on those of Lucretius and Ennius ; though his Elegiac couplets are often awkward and inharmonious , it must be remembered that he was the first composer of ...
... Virgil in correctness and flow , yet they display a mar- vellous improvement on those of Lucretius and Ennius ; though his Elegiac couplets are often awkward and inharmonious , it must be remembered that he was the first composer of ...
Side 4
... Virgil ; yet for an hundred and thirty consecutive lines ( vv . 120-254 ) not one is found . Lucre- tius , who did not form his verses upon the Greek model so much as Catullus , uses these spondaic terminations more sparingly . See on ...
... Virgil ; yet for an hundred and thirty consecutive lines ( vv . 120-254 ) not one is found . Lucre- tius , who did not form his verses upon the Greek model so much as Catullus , uses these spondaic terminations more sparingly . See on ...
Side 6
... Virgil's vague- ness about Pharsalia and Philippi , G. 1.490 . 36. Crannonisque domos . 35 40 45 The best conjectures that could be made from the confusions of the MSS . Crannon and Larissa were the two most important towns of Thessaly ...
... Virgil's vague- ness about Pharsalia and Philippi , G. 1.490 . 36. Crannonisque domos . 35 40 45 The best conjectures that could be made from the confusions of the MSS . Crannon and Larissa were the two most important towns of Thessaly ...
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adjective Amor Apoll aqua arma atque Ausonius Bentley best MSS Burmann Caesar Callimachus caput carmina Catull Catullus Cicero Claudian common Compare conjecture cura dative deos Dissen editions Elegy emendation Ennius erat fata foll fuit Greek haec Haupt Heinsius Hinc hunc ignes illa imitated Inque ipsa ipse Kuinoel Lachm Lachmann Livy Lucan Lucr Lucretius manus Martial mean mihi modo mollia Muretus Nemesianus nulla numina nunc omnia opus Orelli Ovid Paley passage Phaedrus Plautus poem poenas poet's Prop Propertius Prudentius puella quae quam quid quis quod quoque quotes reading refers Roman Rome sacra Saepe Scaliger seems semper Seneca sense sibi Silius Silv Stat Statius sunt tamen tantum tellus terra Theseus tibi Tibull Tibullus tion turba ulla umbra unda verb Virg Virgil vita vultus Weber word
Populære passager
Side 483 - Saepe mihi dubiam traxit sententia mentem curarent superi terras an nullus inesset rector et incerto fluerent mortalia casu.
Side 66 - Te - memini - et puro secubuisse toro? Nunc, dea, nunc succurre mihi - nam posse mederi Picta docet templis multa tabella tuis...
Side 40 - LUGETE, o Veneres Cupidinesque, et quantum est hominum venustiorum. passer mortuus est meae puellae, passer, deliciae meae puellae, quem plus illa oculis suis amabat.
Side 30 - O misero frater adempte mihi, Tu mea tu moriens fregisti commoda, frater, Tecum una tota est nostra sepulta domus, Omnia tecum una perierunt gaudia nostra, Quae tuus in vita dulcis alebat amor.
Side 223 - Carmina cum primum populo juvenilia legi, Barba resecta mihi bisve semelve fuit. Moverat ingenium totam cantata per Urbem Nomine non vero dicta Corinna mihi.
Side 125 - QUICUMQUE ille fuit, puerum qui pinxit Amorem, nonne putas miras hunc habuisse manus? is primum vidit sine sensu vivere amantes, et levibus curis magna perire bona. idem non frustra ventosas addidit alas, 5 fecit et humano corde volare deum: scilicet alterna quoniam iactamur in unda, nostraque non ullis permanet aura locis.
Side 264 - Suspicione si quis errabit sua, Et rapiet ad se, quod erit commune omnium, Stulte nudabit animi conscientiam. Huic excusatum me velim nihilominus : Neque enim notare singulos mens est mihi, Verum ipsam vitam et mores hominum ostendere.
Side 196 - IN nova fert animus mutatas dicere formas corpora ; di, coeptis (nam vos mutastis et illas) adspirate meis primaque ab origine mundi ad mea perpetuum deducite tempora carmen...
Side 121 - Quod mihi das flendi, Cynthia, principium ? Qui modo felices inter numerabar amantes, Nunc in amore tuo cogor habere notam. Quid tantum merui ? quae te mihi crimina mutant ? An nova tristitiae causa puella tuae ? Sic mihi te referas levis, ut non altera nostro Limine formosos intulit ulla pedes.
Side 120 - HAEC certe deserta loca et taciturna querenti, et vacuum Zephyri possidet aura nemus. hic licet occultos proferre impune dolores, si modo sola queant saxa tenere fidem.