Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 99Association, 1968 - Classical philology Beginning with v. 31, the proceedings and papers of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast are included. |
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Page 109
... proem has its function and that all the different aspects ( including the prayer for an effective form and favorable conditions ) are aimed at the listener : to prepare him , to introduce him to the subject , to assure him of its ...
... proem has its function and that all the different aspects ( including the prayer for an effective form and favorable conditions ) are aimed at the listener : to prepare him , to introduce him to the subject , to assure him of its ...
Page 530
... proem , not an attack on Simonides , but a message for Thrasybulus . Bury believed that Pindar could not have so emphatically preferred the ancient to the modern practice , un- less he intended to act in accordance with his preference ...
... proem , not an attack on Simonides , but a message for Thrasybulus . Bury believed that Pindar could not have so emphatically preferred the ancient to the modern practice , un- less he intended to act in accordance with his preference ...
Page 531
... proem . Gilbert Norwood rightly abandoned the existing interpretations and sought to conceive the poem in an entirely different way . He took it to be a verse epistle composed with " mannered elegance " in a rollicking , convivial ...
... proem . Gilbert Norwood rightly abandoned the existing interpretations and sought to conceive the poem in an entirely different way . He took it to be a verse epistle composed with " mannered elegance " in a rollicking , convivial ...
Contents
My Tongue Swore But My Mind | 19 |
Cosmological Myth and the Tuna | 37 |
77 | 59 |
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Aeneas Aeneid Alcibiades appears argument Aristotle Athenian Athens Attis Augustus Caesar Calif Callimachus Canada Catullus Chorus Cicero Circe Circe's Clas Classics Dept Committee Conn contrast Cybele's Cymaean Cyme Demosthenes Diodorus Directors discussion emotion Ephorus epic Epicurean epistle Euripides fact Greek Hellenistic Heracles Hermesianax hero hexameter Hippolytus Homer Horace Horace's human interpretation John Josephus knights Latin Library lines literary Lorsch Lucretius manuscripts Mass mean-dispositions meaning Medea Mindarus Monograph moral nature Odysseus Ovid Oxford parallel passage passion pastoral pathê pattern pentameter perhaps Petronius Phaedra Philological Association philosophical phrase Pindar Plato play poem poet poetic poetry present Princeton Prof Prudentius Pyth reference Rhet rhetoric Roman satire Satyricon says seems Seneca sics simile statement strophe suggests symbol Telesicrates theme Thrasybulus tion tradition Trebatius University Vergil verse Wilamowitz words Xenophon York δὲ καὶ