The Birds of the Latin Poets |
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... pain Say , will it never heal ? -MATTHEW ARNOLD . Quis volucrum species numeret , quis nomina discat ? Mille avium cantus , vocum discrimina mille . -Anth . Lat . 733- PREFACE In the following pages I have attempted to present.
... pain Say , will it never heal ? -MATTHEW ARNOLD . Quis volucrum species numeret , quis nomina discat ? Mille avium cantus , vocum discrimina mille . -Anth . Lat . 733- PREFACE In the following pages I have attempted to present.
Page 9
... Anth . Lat . 762 , 24 . Accipitres pipant milvus hiansque lupit . Cf. also Anth . Lat . 733 , 6 ; Wackernagel , op . cit . , p . 50 . Cf. Hark , the sharp , insistent cry , Where the hawk patrols the sky . - ROBERTS . There shrieks the ...
... Anth . Lat . 762 , 24 . Accipitres pipant milvus hiansque lupit . Cf. also Anth . Lat . 733 , 6 ; Wackernagel , op . cit . , p . 50 . Cf. Hark , the sharp , insistent cry , Where the hawk patrols the sky . - ROBERTS . There shrieks the ...
Page 13
... voces Absurdoque sono fontis et stagna cietis . -CIC . , De Div . I , 9 . -Anth . Lat . 762 , 64 . Garrula limosis rana coaxat aquis . ( De Philomela . ) In this connection certain references to frogs in the American ACREDULA 13.
... voces Absurdoque sono fontis et stagna cietis . -CIC . , De Div . I , 9 . -Anth . Lat . 762 , 64 . Garrula limosis rana coaxat aquis . ( De Philomela . ) In this connection certain references to frogs in the American ACREDULA 13.
Page 14
... Anth . Lat . 762 , 15 . Vere calente novos componit acredula cantus Matutinali tempore rurirulans . ( De Philomela . ) The interpretation of Isid . , Orig . 12 , 7 , 37 : Luscinia avis inde nomen sumpsit , quod cantu suo significare ...
... Anth . Lat . 762 , 15 . Vere calente novos componit acredula cantus Matutinali tempore rurirulans . ( De Philomela . ) The interpretation of Isid . , Orig . 12 , 7 , 37 : Luscinia avis inde nomen sumpsit , quod cantu suo significare ...
Page 23
... Anth . Lat . 383 . The more truly traditional conception of the halcyon , with nest and young unharrassed by storms , is portrayed in the following lines : Cum sonat alcyones cantu , nidosque natantes Immota gestat , sopitis fluctibus ...
... Anth . Lat . 383 . The more truly traditional conception of the halcyon , with nest and young unharrassed by storms , is portrayed in the following lines : Cum sonat alcyones cantu , nidosque natantes Immota gestat , sopitis fluctibus ...
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Common terms and phrases
acalanthis aethera ALBERT PIKE ales ALEXANDER WILSON American parallels ANNE BRADSTREET anser Anth AQUILA atque avem aves avis Baehrens bird blackbird bubo cantus Carm ciconia columba cornix corvus crane crow cuckoo CYCNUS dove doves Duyckinck eagle Fable flight Fowler Geor goose Greek Griswold haec halcyon hawk Hermit Thrush heron hirundo illa inter Iovis Ital Kettell lark Latin poets luscinia MART metamorphosis mihi mocking-bird myth nest nidum nightingale noctua nunc o'er Ovid palumbes Passer pennas pennis perdix Philomela Phoenix PLAUT Plin plumas Progne quae quam Quid quod raven reference Robin Roman saepe SARAH HELEN WHITMAN sibi Silv sing song Sparrow spring Stat Stedman stork Stymphalian bird swallow swan tamen Tereus Theb Thompson thou Thrush tibi turdus turtur Verg volucres vulture Wackernagel Warde Fowler whip-poor-will wild wings wood-thrush
Popular passages
Page 87 - It ceased; yet still the sails made on A pleasant noise till noon, A noise like of a hidden brook In the leafy month of June, That to the sleeping woods all night Singeth a quiet tune.
Page 37 - In summo custos Tarpeiae Manlius arcis Stabat pro templo et Capitolia celsa tenebat, Romuleoque recens horrebat regia culmo. Atque hic auratis volitans argenteus anser 655 Porticibus Gallos in limine adesse canebat...
Page 26 - I'm nobody! Who are you? Are you nobody, too? Then there's a pair of us — don't tell! They'd banish us, you know. How dreary to be somebody ! How public, like a frog, To tell your name the livelong day To an admiring bog!
Page 119 - These are the days when birds come back, A very few, a bird or two, To take a backward look. These are the days when skies put on The old, old sophistries of June, A blue and gold mistake.
Page 211 - A haze on the far horizon, The infinite, tender sky, The ripe, rich tint of the cornfields, And the wild geese sailing high; And all over upland and lowland, The charm of the goldenrod — Some of us call it Autumn, And others call it God.
Page 65 - Apollo, ne, si forte suas repetitum venerit olim grex avium plumas, moveat cornicula risum furtivis nudata coloribus.
Page 87 - Haud secus atque alto in luco cum forte catervae Consedere avium, piscosove amne Padusae Dant sonitum rauci per stagna loquacia cycni. 'Immo,' ait, 'o cives,' arrepto tempore Turnus, ' Cogite concilium, et pacem laudate sedentes : 460 'Illi armis in regna ruunt.
Page 73 - Tum liquidas corvi presso ter gutture voces 410 aut quater ingeminant, et saepe cubilibus altis nescio qua praeter solitum dulcedine laeti inter se in foliis strepitant...
Page 184 - Ossa tegit tumulus, tumulus pro corpore magnus, Quo lapis exiguus par sibi carmen habet: „Colligor ex ipso dominae placuisse sepulcro; Ora fuere mihi plus ave docta loqui.
Page 99 - And consider green and violet and the tufted crown intentional, And do not call the tortoise unworthy because she is not something else, And the jay in the woods never studied the gamut, yet trills pretty well to me, And the look of the bay mare shames silliness out of me.