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Nec spatium evasit totum, neque pertulit ictum.
Ac velut in somnis, oculos ubi languida pressit
Nocte quies, nequiquam avidos extendere cursus
Velle videmur, et in mediis conatibus aegri
Succidimus; non lingua valet, non corpore notae
Sufficiunt vires, nec vox aut verba sequuntur:
Sic Turno, quacumque viam virtute petivit,
Successum dea dira negat. Tum pectore sensus
Vertuntur varii; Rutulos adspectat et urbem,
Cunctaturque metu, telumque instare tremescit;
Nec, quo se eripiat, nec, qua vi tendat in hostem,
Nec currus usquam videt aurigamque sororem.
Cunctanti telum Aeneas fatale coruscat,
Sortitus fortunam oculis, et corpore toto
Eminus intorquet. Murali concita numquam
Tormento sic saxa fremunt, nec fulmine tanti
Dissultant crepitus. Volat atri turbinis instar
Exitium dirum hasta ferens, orasque recludit
Loricae et clipei extremos septemplicis orbis.

910

915

920

925

Per medium stridens transit femur. Incidit ictus
Ingens ad terram duplicato poplite Turnus.
Consurgunt gemitu Rutuli totusque remugit
Mons circum, et vocem late nemora alta remittunt.
Ille humilis supplexque oculos dextramque precan-

tem

Protendens, Equidem merui, nec deprecor, inquit ;
Utere sorte tua. Miseri te si qua parentis
Tangere cura potest, oro,-fuit et tibi talis
Anchises genitor-Dauni miserere senectae,
Et me, seu corpus spoliatum lumine mavis,
Redde meis. Vicisti, et victum tendere palmas
Ausonii videre; tua est Lavinia coniunx:
Ulterius ne tende odiis.

Stetit acer in armis

Aeneas, volvens oculos, dextramque repressit;

Et iam iamque magis cunctantem flectere sermo
Coeperat, infelix humero cum adparuit alto
Balteus et notis fulserunt cingula bullis
Pallantis pueri, victum quem volnere Turnus
Straverat atque humeris inimicum insigne gerebat.
Ille, oculis postquam saevi monumenta doloris
Exuviasque hausit, furiis accensus, et ira

VERG.

Z

930

935

940

945

Terribilis: Tune hinc spoliis indute meorum
Eripiare mihi? Pallas te hoc volnere, Pallas
Immolat, et poenam scelerato ex sanguine sumit.
Hoc dicens ferrum adverso sub pectore condit
Fervidus. Ast illi solvuntur frigore membra,
Vitaque cum gemitu fugit indignata umbras.

950

CANTABRIGIAE: TYPIS ACADEMICIS.

Bibliotheca Classica.

A SERIES OF GREEK AND LATIN

AUTHORS.

WITH ENGLISH NOTES. 8vo.

EDITED BY VARIOUS SCHOLARS, UNDER THE DIRECTION OF G. LONG, ESQ. M.A. CLASSICAL LECTURER OF BRIGHTON COLLEGE AND THE REV. A. J. MACLEANE, M.A. HEAD MASTER OF KING EDWARD'S SCHOOL,

BATH.

Juvenal and Persius. By the late REV. A. J. MACLEANE, M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge. 148.

Terence. By the REV. E. ST. J. PARRY, M.A. Balliol College, Oxford. 188.

Herodotus. By the REV. J. W. BLAKESLEY, B.D. late Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. 2 vols. 328. The Clio separately, 58.

Cicero's Orations. Edited by G. LONG, ESQ. M.A. 4 vols. Vol. I. 168.; Vol. II. 148.; Vol. III. 168.; Vol. IV. 188.

Horace. By the late REV. A. J. MACLEANE,

M.A. 188.

Eschylus. By F. A. PALEY, M.A. 18s.

Euripides. By F. A. PALEY, M.A. Vols. I. and II. 16s. each. Vol. III. in the press.

Virgil. By J. CONINGTON, M.A. Professor of Latin at Oxford. Vol. I. containing the Bucolics and Georgics. 128. Vol. II. preparing.

Sophocles. By the REV. F. H. BLAYDES, M.A.

Plato.

66

[Preparing.

Vol. I. containing "The Gorgias," "Phædrus," and "Symposium." By the REV. W. H. THOMPSON, M.A. Regius Professor of Greek in the University of Cambridge.

[Preparing. Tacitus. By the REV. G. BUTLER, M.A. Exeter College, Oxford.

[Preparing. Demosthenes. By the REV. R. WHISTON, M.A.

Head Master of Rochester Grammar School. Vol. I. 16s.

A COMPLETE GREEK GRAMMAR.

SECOND EDITION, VERY MUCH ENLARGED,

AND ADAPTED FOR THE USE OF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS.

BY THE REV. J. W. DONALDSON, D.D.
8vo. 168.

This enlarged Edition has been prepared with the intention of placing within the reach of Students at the Universities, and in the highest classes at Schools, a Manual of Instruction and Reference, which without exceeding the limits of the most popular Works of the kind would exhibit a more exact and philosophical arrangement of the materials than any similar book; would connect itself more immediately with the researches of comparative Philologers; and would contain the sort of information which the Author's long experience as a Teacher and Examiner has indicated to him as most likely to meet the actual wants of those who are engaged in the critical study of the best Greek authors.

Without being formally based on any German Work, it has been written with constant reference to the latest and most esteemed of Greek Grammars used on the Continent.

CAMBRIDGE: DEIGHTON, BELL AND CO.
LONDON: BELL AND DALDY.

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