... eyes — many as are the leaves that drop and fall in the woods in autumn's early cold, or many as are the birds that flock massed together from the deep to the land, when the wintry year drives them over sea to tenant a sunnier clime. There they... The Poems of Virgil - Page 248by Virgil - 1884 - 424 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Conington - Classical philology - 1872 - 510 pages
...Scyllas, and Briareus, the hundred-handed, and the portent of Lerna, hissing fearfully, and Chimaera in her panoply of flames, Gorgons, and Harpies, and...dread maiden, what means this concourse to the stream ? Of what are these spirits in quest ? What choice decides that these shall retire from the shore,... | |
| John Conington - 1872 - 558 pages
...panoply of flames, Gorgons, and Harpies, and the semblance of the three-bodied spectre. At once .ZEneas grasps his sword, in the haste of sudden alarm, and...drives away, and bars them from the river's brink. xEneas, cries as a man perplexed and startled by the tumult : ' Tell me, dread maiden, what means this... | |
| John Conington - Classical philology - 1872 - 510 pages
...life, boys and unwedded maidens, and youths laid on the pile of death in their parents' eyes — jnany as are the leaves that drop and fall in the •woods...drives away, and bars them from the river's brink. xEneas, cries as a man perplexed and startled by the tumult : ' Tell me, dread maiden, what means this... | |
| Publius Vergilius Maro - 1882 - 446 pages
...life, boys and unwedded maidens, and youths laid on the pile of death in their parents' eyes—many as are the leaves that drop and fall in the woods...drives away, and bars them from the river's brink, .ffineas cries as a man perplexed and startled by the tumult: ' Tell me, dread maiden, what means this... | |
| Virgil - 1917 - 398 pages
...are the birds that flock massed together from the deep to the land, when the wintry year drives 20 them over sea to tenant a sunnier clime. There they...those, while others he drives away, and bars them 35 from the river's brink. jEneas cries as a man perplexed and startled by the tumult: "Tell me, dread... | |
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