Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 102Association, 1971 - 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 415
... Propertius ' opening statement in 2.1.3-4 : Non hacc Calliope , non haec mihi cantat Apollo . Ingenium nobis ipsa puella facit . Immediately , in an effective Propertian contrast , we read Quaeris ( 2.31.1 ) and remember the opening ...
... Propertius ' opening statement in 2.1.3-4 : Non hacc Calliope , non haec mihi cantat Apollo . Ingenium nobis ipsa puella facit . Immediately , in an effective Propertian contrast , we read Quaeris ( 2.31.1 ) and remember the opening ...
Page 428
... Propertius ' feelings about Augustus , this detachment must be the first fact of weight . Propertius did not care for the man who had cast the shadow of unhappiness over his childhood years , and he differs pointedly with the Princeps ...
... Propertius ' feelings about Augustus , this detachment must be the first fact of weight . Propertius did not care for the man who had cast the shadow of unhappiness over his childhood years , and he differs pointedly with the Princeps ...
Page 438
... Propertius does not write about the battle at Actium itself first and foremost , nor does he dedicate the elegy so much to a celebration of Augustus ' arms , as he addresses his thoughts to the male , Octavian , and his success in ...
... Propertius does not write about the battle at Actium itself first and foremost , nor does he dedicate the elegy so much to a celebration of Augustus ' arms , as he addresses his thoughts to the male , Octavian , and his success in ...
Contents
Ovids Epistle from Sappho to Phaon Heroides | 20 |
Correction ? to P Mich Inv 3163 | 39 |
Dies Alliensis | 49 |
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