The Poetry of the Aeneid: Four Studies in Imaginative Unity and Design |
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Page 53
... Nisus does break clear , however ( lines 386-89 ) : Nisus abit ; iamque imprudens evaserat hostis atque locos qui post Albae de nomine dicti Albani ( tum rex stabula alta Latinus habebat ) , ut stetit et frustra absentem respexit amicum ...
... Nisus does break clear , however ( lines 386-89 ) : Nisus abit ; iamque imprudens evaserat hostis atque locos qui post Albae de nomine dicti Albani ( tum rex stabula alta Latinus habebat ) , ut stetit et frustra absentem respexit amicum ...
Page 55
... Nisus with a series of questions . Orpheus asks ( G. IV , 504 ) quid faceret ? quo se rapta bis coniuge ferret ? What should he do , whither betake himself , now that his wife has been twice torn from him ? Nisus , too , asks ( lines ...
... Nisus with a series of questions . Orpheus asks ( G. IV , 504 ) quid faceret ? quo se rapta bis coniuge ferret ? What should he do , whither betake himself , now that his wife has been twice torn from him ? Nisus , too , asks ( lines ...
Page 59
... Nisus and Euryalus ' ardorem mentibus ( IX , 184 ) , the yearning for heroism , which takes explicit form in the necessity of passing through the Rutulian camp before reaching Aeneas at Pallan- teum . Nisus and Euryalus are so ...
... Nisus and Euryalus ' ardorem mentibus ( IX , 184 ) , the yearning for heroism , which takes explicit form in the necessity of passing through the Rutulian camp before reaching Aeneas at Pallan- teum . Nisus and Euryalus are so ...
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid Aeolus Amata Anchises appears atque belly Book VIII Book XII book's bough Cacus CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ calm cave clash Creusa CRUZ The University dark death destiny destruction Dido Dido's doom epic episode escape Evander Evander's fate final fire flames force Furor future Georgic glides golden bough Greeks Gyas Hercules hero imagery initial journey Juno Juturna land Laocoön Latinus Latium Lavinia looks Lucretius madness Menoetes metaphor Mnestheus Neptune Nisus and Euryalus Odysseus offer omen once opening lines Orpheus Palinurus Pallas parallels past pastoral pattern phrase poet poet's Priam Pyrrhus race rage recall Rome Rutulian sacrifice SANTA CRUZ seems Sergestus ships shore Sibyl simile Sinon sleep snakes Somnus symbolic Tenedos Tiber tion Trojans Troy Troy's turn Turnus underworld University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA Venus verb violence Virgil Vulcan winds wooden horse words wound wrath