Aeneidea, Or, Critical, Exegetical, and Aesthetical Remarks on the Aeneis: With a Personal Collation of All the First Class Mss., Upwards of One Hundred Second Class Mss., and All the Principal Editions, Volume 1Williams and Norgate, 1873 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 69
Page vii
... thought I had , some- thing new to say ; ( b ) never to leave my meaning liable to be misunderstood so long as I saw a possibility of making it clear by further explanation , but always to prefer laborious , old- fashioned , and even ...
... thought I had , some- thing new to say ; ( b ) never to leave my meaning liable to be misunderstood so long as I saw a possibility of making it clear by further explanation , but always to prefer laborious , old- fashioned , and even ...
Page x
... thought were undergoing continual change . There never yet was , there never can be writer , who , treating the same subject for a long series of years , is always consistent with himself , continues always to take the same view of the ...
... thought were undergoing continual change . There never yet was , there never can be writer , who , treating the same subject for a long series of years , is always consistent with himself , continues always to take the same view of the ...
Page xvii
... thought also , actual readings of MSS . with readings which - found , or asserted to be found , in MSS . by certain original collators have , in their transmission from critic to critic , suffered so much by various accidents as ...
... thought also , actual readings of MSS . with readings which - found , or asserted to be found , in MSS . by certain original collators have , in their transmission from critic to critic , suffered so much by various accidents as ...
Page xxii
... thought that noble no less than tender - hearted Dido ever proffered her own mors - nay , was not deterred by the mere omen of the word from ever proffering her own mors- as reward for the petty service she implored at the hands of her ...
... thought that noble no less than tender - hearted Dido ever proffered her own mors - nay , was not deterred by the mere omen of the word from ever proffering her own mors- as reward for the petty service she implored at the hands of her ...
Page lxi
... thought it expedient to give of the MSS . constituting the first and second cate- gories , all of them more or less , some of them extremely , difficult of access , and- those of the second category in par- ticular - either so wholly ...
... thought it expedient to give of the MSS . constituting the first and second cate- gories , all of them more or less , some of them extremely , difficult of access , and- those of the second category in par- ticular - either so wholly ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneas's AENEIDEA Aeneis Aeolus aequor alto ARMA VIRUMQUE arva atque autem avena Cerda Compare Conington corpora deos Dido enim erat etiam exactly expression fatis fistula Flacc fluctus Forbiger fuit genus Georg Georgic GRACILI gurges gurgite haec Heins Heroid Heyne ILLE EGO inter ipse ITALIAM Juno Juno's Jupiter Latio latus LECT less Lucan manu Manut mare meaning mihi Neptune neque numen numine nunc omnes omnia Ovid parchm passage Pierius pietas poem poet Priscian quae quam quid quod quoque quoted quum reader rerum Ribb Ribbeck Roman saxa scopulis Senec sense Servius sinus Stat sunt tamen terras Theb Thiel tibi Timavo Trojans unda venti vento Venus verse Virg Virgil Virgilian virum volvere Voss Wagn Wagner words Zumpt γαρ δε εν επι και μεν τε