Works, Volume 1Clarendon Press, 1877 |
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Page xiii
... expression in Horace , we find light thrown upon it by more or less certain imitations of it in Ovid , or in the later Roman poets . Lastly , we have numerous quotations , chiefly in the grammatical authors General Introduction.
... expression in Horace , we find light thrown upon it by more or less certain imitations of it in Ovid , or in the later Roman poets . Lastly , we have numerous quotations , chiefly in the grammatical authors General Introduction.
Page xxi
... the Scholia have value , independently of any doubt as to their writer's precise date or 1 Preface to Messrs . Munro and King's edition . personal acquaintance with Roman life , from the fact that THE SCHOLIASTS . xxi.
... the Scholia have value , independently of any doubt as to their writer's precise date or 1 Preface to Messrs . Munro and King's edition . personal acquaintance with Roman life , from the fact that THE SCHOLIASTS . xxi.
Page xxii
Horace. personal acquaintance with Roman life , from the fact that they bear evidence of having been composed by men who had in their hands early authorities which are otherwise lost to us . These are sometimes referred to by name , as ...
Horace. personal acquaintance with Roman life , from the fact that they bear evidence of having been composed by men who had in their hands early authorities which are otherwise lost to us . These are sometimes referred to by name , as ...
Page xxvi
... Roman virtues , Od . 1. 22 . 13 , 2. I. 34 , 3. 5. 9 , 16. 26 , Epod . 2. 42 . Parentage.- ' Libertino patre natus , ' Sat. 1. 6. 6 and 45 ; cp . Od . 2 . 20. 6 and Epp . 1. 20. 21. Horace himself was ' ingenuus , ' i . e . born after ...
... Roman virtues , Od . 1. 22 . 13 , 2. I. 34 , 3. 5. 9 , 16. 26 , Epod . 2. 42 . Parentage.- ' Libertino patre natus , ' Sat. 1. 6. 6 and 45 ; cp . Od . 2 . 20. 6 and Epp . 1. 20. 21. Horace himself was ' ingenuus , ' i . e . born after ...
Page 3
... Roman empire , the remote- ness of its frontiers , the immense charge which Caesar has taken on himself . And the names of distant and unknown places and tribes had a spell in ancient times which they have lost in days of maps and ...
... Roman empire , the remote- ness of its frontiers , the immense charge which Caesar has taken on himself . And the names of distant and unknown places and tribes had a spell in ancient times which they have lost in days of maps and ...
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Common terms and phrases
adjective Aesch Alcaeus altered Apollo Apulia Archytas Asclepiad atque Augustus Bacchus Bentley Books i-iii Caesar Cicero clause Compare consul contrast cura death deorum Dill domos Edition Ennius epithet Epod expression Faunus foll Gelonos genitive gives Greek Hadriae haec Horace Horace's imply inter interpretation Introd Iovis Keller Line lyra Madv Maecenas manus mare meaning metaphor metre mihi nefas neque nunc omnes Orelli Ovid pater perhaps poem poet poetry Porph probably puer quae quam quibus quid quis quod quotes reading reference Ritter Roman Rome Schol Scholia Scholiasts seems semper sense Sextus Pompeius Soph stanza suggested Tarentum Telephus Teucer thinks tibi Tibur tion unda Venus verb verse Virg Virgil wine word δὲ ἐν ΙΟ καὶ μὲν τε τὸ