P. Vergili Maronis opera: The first six books of the AeneidWhittaker & Company, 1876 - Aeneas (Legendary character) |
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Page 31
... Virg.'s previous poems . - In commencing withcano ' he has followed his own ex- ample in the Georgics , rather than that of Homer , who at once invokes the Muse ; and the Latin Epic writers have followed Virg . The earlier commentators ...
... Virg.'s previous poems . - In commencing withcano ' he has followed his own ex- ample in the Georgics , rather than that of Homer , who at once invokes the Muse ; and the Latin Epic writers have followed Virg . The earlier commentators ...
Page 52
... Virg.'s brevity in narration . 6 195. ] The order seems to be deinde dividit vina quae , ' & c . , as there is no other way of making sense of deinde . ' There are other passages in Virg . where ' deinde ' may be regarded as out of ...
... Virg.'s brevity in narration . 6 195. ] The order seems to be deinde dividit vina quae , ' & c . , as there is no other way of making sense of deinde . ' There are other passages in Virg . where ' deinde ' may be regarded as out of ...
Page 53
... Virg.'s words : ' we shall remember these things ' ( i . e . we shall live to think of them as past , and recall them as we are now recalling previous perils , which is the meaning of Od . 12. 212 ) , and ' we shall remember them with ...
... Virg.'s words : ' we shall remember these things ' ( i . e . we shall live to think of them as past , and recall them as we are now recalling previous perils , which is the meaning of Od . 12. 212 ) , and ' we shall remember them with ...
Page 70
... Virg.'s love of recondite half - allusions to tradi- tions which he does not expressly adopt is unquestionable ; but where , as here , there is no more than a possibility of such a re- ference , we may perhaps make the ques- tion one of ...
... Virg.'s love of recondite half - allusions to tradi- tions which he does not expressly adopt is unquestionable ; but where , as here , there is no more than a possibility of such a re- ference , we may perhaps make the ques- tion one of ...
Page 89
... Virg.'s mean- ing when the passage can be explained without it , and the simpler view is con- firmed by the language of the parallel 7 . 225-227 . Silius ( 15. 334 ) has imitated these words in a way which seems to show that he ...
... Virg.'s mean- ing when the passage can be explained without it , and the simpler view is con- firmed by the language of the parallel 7 . 225-227 . Silius ( 15. 334 ) has imitated these words in a way which seems to show that he ...
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P. Vergili Maronis Opera: The Aeneid John Conington,Henry Nettleship,Virgil No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
Achilles Aeneas Aeneid aequora Aesch aether Anchises animi Apoll Apollo appears arma Ascanius atque auras caelo caelum Carthage Catull Cerda circum comp Creusa cursus Dardanus Deiphobus Dict Dido Dido's Donatus doubtless Ennius epithet explained expression fata favour foll Forb Forc fragm give gods Gossrau Greek haec Heins Helenus hendiadys Henry Heyne Heyne remarks hinc Homeric imitated inter ipse Juno latter litora Livy Lucr lumina Madv manu meaning mentioned mihi Mnestheus moenia notion numine nunc omnis parallel passage pater perhaps Pierius poet poetical Priam Priscian probably quae quam quid quod quoted reading reference Ribbeck rightly Roman says seems sense Serv Sibyl suppose terra thinks thought tibi tion Troia Trojans Troy Ulysses urbem Venus Virg Virg.'s Virgil viri Wagn words Wund δὲ καὶ τε