P. Vergili Maronis opera: The first six books of the AeneidWhittaker & Company, 1876 - Aeneas (Legendary character) |
From inside the book
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Page 7
... regarded " . " Let them try to steal for themselves as they say I have stolen for myself , and they will find that it is easier to rob Hercules of his club than to rob Homer of a single verse . " It was an act of high - handed ...
... regarded " . " Let them try to steal for themselves as they say I have stolen for myself , and they will find that it is easier to rob Hercules of his club than to rob Homer of a single verse . " It was an act of high - handed ...
Page 10
... regarded her during the siege we are not told ; he may have shared the mixed feeling of admiration and disapproval which the old men on the wall express in their hour of respite ; he may have partaken of the sense of repulsion with ...
... regarded her during the siege we are not told ; he may have shared the mixed feeling of admiration and disapproval which the old men on the wall express in their hour of respite ; he may have partaken of the sense of repulsion with ...
Page 14
... regarded by one who wishes to estimate the surrounding circum- stances which told upon the genius of the Augustan poet . The expec- tation of an unknown birth which should be greater than the Iliad was doubtless the vision which ...
... regarded by one who wishes to estimate the surrounding circum- stances which told upon the genius of the Augustan poet . The expec- tation of an unknown birth which should be greater than the Iliad was doubtless the vision which ...
Page 22
... regarded as the future founder of the Trojan nation ; the voyages are sufficiently diversified , but the object of every event is to illustrate the action of the contending powers whose strife keeps the prince of Ithaca from his home ...
... regarded as the future founder of the Trojan nation ; the voyages are sufficiently diversified , but the object of every event is to illustrate the action of the contending powers whose strife keeps the prince of Ithaca from his home ...
Page 27
... regarded in the gross , Homer is mature and articu- late , while Ennius is still crude and infantine , and it was not to be expected that the large utterance of the divine foretime of Greece should come mended to Virgil's ear when ...
... regarded in the gross , Homer is mature and articu- late , while Ennius is still crude and infantine , and it was not to be expected that the large utterance of the divine foretime of Greece should come mended to Virgil's ear when ...
Other editions - View all
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