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 4Williams and Norgate, 1889 - Aeneas (Legendary character) in literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 24
Page 18
... ship stormed the city of Sparta . " ADULTER is the key to EXPUGNAVIT and DUCE - plainly expresses the act , which DUCE and EXPUGNAVIT express only figuratively . " Took Sparta , carried Sparta , " viz . by his adultery . ME DUCE ? —The ...
... ship stormed the city of Sparta . " ADULTER is the key to EXPUGNAVIT and DUCE - plainly expresses the act , which DUCE and EXPUGNAVIT express only figuratively . " Took Sparta , carried Sparta , " viz . by his adultery . ME DUCE ? —The ...
Page 27
... ship of his own , viz . the ship in which he had ascended the Tiber . This ship , which had come from Troy , had very naturally a Trojan parasemon , and is , with special propriety , styled AENEIA PUPPIS ; not merely the ship which ...
... ship of his own , viz . the ship in which he had ascended the Tiber . This ship , which had come from Troy , had very naturally a Trojan parasemon , and is , with special propriety , styled AENEIA PUPPIS ; not merely the ship which ...
Page 30
... ship ( " ingentem remis Centaurum promovet " ) ; and thirdly , in how very similar terms the myth of Phaethon has been touched by Claudian in his account of the emblems inwoven in the palla of Eridanus ( Sext . Cons . Honor . 169 ) ...
... ship ( " ingentem remis Centaurum promovet " ) ; and thirdly , in how very similar terms the myth of Phaethon has been touched by Claudian in his account of the emblems inwoven in the palla of Eridanus ( Sext . Cons . Honor . 169 ) ...
Page 34
... ships , and to Cybele herself ; while it was no affront to suppose that some of them were less good speakers , less eloquent than others . To mermaids - half fishes themselves , at least living among mute fishes , accustomed " aevum ...
... ships , and to Cybele herself ; while it was no affront to suppose that some of them were less good speakers , less eloquent than others . To mermaids - half fishes themselves , at least living among mute fishes , accustomed " aevum ...
Page 37
... ship , each with a nymph at its stern , pushing it on , had been in the highest degree awkward and unpoetical , had represented Aeneas's ships as too indifferent sailers . The miraculous acce- leration of the admiral's vessel gives a ...
... ship , each with a nymph at its stern , pushing it on , had been in the highest degree awkward and unpoetical , had represented Aeneas's ships as too indifferent sailers . The miraculous acce- leration of the admiral's vessel gives a ...
Other editions - View all
Aeneidea, Or, Critical, Exegetical, And Aesthetical Remarks On The Aeneis ... James Henry No preview available - 2023 |
Popular passages
Page 133 - The enemies of my lord the king, and all that rise against thee to do thee hurt, be as that young man is." "And the king was much moved, and went up to the chamber over the gate and wept ; and as he went, thus he said, 0 my son Absalom ! my son, my son Absalom ! would God I had died for thee, 0 Absalom, my son, my son!
Page 306 - Thou sun of this great world, both eye and soul, Acknowledge him thy greater, sound his praise In thy eternal course, both when thou climb'st, And when high noon hast gain'd, and when thou fall'st.
Page 130 - miserande puer, cum laeta veniret, invidit Fortuna mihi, ne regna videres nostra neque ad sedes victor veherere paternas? Non...
Page 132 - ... hune ego te, Euryale, aspicio ? tune ille senectae sera meae requies, potuisti linquere solam, crudelis? nee te sub tanta pericula missum adfari extremum miserae data copia matri?
Page 201 - Luceriam ferebant viae, altera praeter oram superi maris, patens apertaque, sed quanto tutior, tanto fere 50 longior, altera per Furculas Caudinas, brevior ; sed ita natus locus est : Saltus duo alti, angusti silvosique, sunt, montibus circa perpetuis inter se iuncti.
Page 175 - At nunc videre est per eoos 2 omnes tractus violenta et rapacissima genera hominum, per fora omnia volitantium, et subsidentium divites domus, 1 Boeotia sugg. by Clark ; Euboea, WAG ; eubda, V.
Page 199 - ... furta paro belli convexo in tramite silvae, ut bivias armato obsidam milite fauces. tu Tyrrhenum equitem collatis excipe signis ; tecum acer Messapus erit turmaeque Latinae, Tiburnique manus : ducis et tu concipe curam.
Page 123 - These must be the limbs of the lion, still fighting while being eaten ; but the phrase is strange. felices leti, pietas quos addidit umbris ! optabunt similes venientia saecula fratres, aeternumque decus memori celebrabitur aevo, si modo ferre diem serosque videre nepotes carmina nostra valent, nee famam invidit Apollo.
Page 57 - Vide le genti e l' arme, abbassò l' asta; Bd uno in quella e poscia un altro messe, E un altro e un altro, che sembrar di pasta : E fino a sei ve n' infilzò ; e li resse Tutti una lancia : e perch' ella non basta A più capir, lasciò il settimo fuore Ferito sì che di quel colpo muore.