Virgil's Æneid |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 99
Page xvi
... Æneas , whom Virgil sought to ennoble in the eyes of his countrymen . Possessed , as depicted by the poet , of unquestionably noble traits , and human in all his acts , still his treatment of the lovely queen , Dido , was simply ...
... Æneas , whom Virgil sought to ennoble in the eyes of his countrymen . Possessed , as depicted by the poet , of unquestionably noble traits , and human in all his acts , still his treatment of the lovely queen , Dido , was simply ...
Page xvii
... Æneas stands before us throughout the Æneid as an object of admiration , not always indeed the highest , but always commanding the respect and prompt obedience of his comrades ; and so winning an interest , and often carrying with him ...
... Æneas stands before us throughout the Æneid as an object of admiration , not always indeed the highest , but always commanding the respect and prompt obedience of his comrades ; and so winning an interest , and often carrying with him ...
Page xviii
... Æneas , or Turnus , or the vacillating Latinus . Even her indignantly scornful bearing on meeting Æneas , her destroyer , in the under - world , is in perfect keeping with her queenly spirit , as so truthfully and graphi- cally depicted ...
... Æneas , or Turnus , or the vacillating Latinus . Even her indignantly scornful bearing on meeting Æneas , her destroyer , in the under - world , is in perfect keeping with her queenly spirit , as so truthfully and graphi- cally depicted ...
Page xxi
... Æneas was the portraiture of Augustus , does not militate against its being drafted from the poet's own self - hood , in an effort to delineate what a sovereign ought to be , rather than what he really was . Virgil , as a poet - artist ...
... Æneas was the portraiture of Augustus , does not militate against its being drafted from the poet's own self - hood , in an effort to delineate what a sovereign ought to be , rather than what he really was . Virgil , as a poet - artist ...
Page xxix
Virgil. ANALYSIS . BOOK L ÆNEAS STRANDED AT CARTHAGE , THE poem opens in the seventh year after the fall of Ilium , with the hero , Æneas , a wanderer , exiled by fate , and under the ban of Juno's wrath : the Muse invoked to reveal its ...
Virgil. ANALYSIS . BOOK L ÆNEAS STRANDED AT CARTHAGE , THE poem opens in the seventh year after the fall of Ilium , with the hero , Æneas , a wanderer , exiled by fate , and under the ban of Juno's wrath : the Muse invoked to reveal its ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acestes Æneas Æneid æther afar altars Anchises Apollo armor arms Ascanius Ausonian battle bespeaks billows blood body bosom breezes buckler Camilla cavern charger chariot clamor comrades Danaäns Dardan Dardanian death deep deities Dido earth Eneas Eryx Euryalus Evander exclaims eyes fates father Æneas Faunus flames flitting foemen fortune gaze goddess gods grove hath heaven Helenus helmet Hence hero hexameter hither honor Ilian Italia Iülus Juno Jupiter Juturna land Latins Latium lofty maiden mansions Meanwhile Messapus Mezentius midst mighty Mnestheus monarch mother mountains Nisus o'er ocean offspring once Pallas Pergamus Phrygian pious Æneas pity plains ponderous Priam ramparts right hand river round rushing Rutulians sabre sails Sergestus shalt shores shoulders sister slaughter slumber soul Spake spear spirit squadron steeds summons surges Tarchon temples Teucrans thee thine thou threshold Trojan Turnus Tyrrhenian uttered valor Venus vessels Virgil wafted war-spear warfare warriors weapons winds wound
Popular passages
Page xiv - Virgilius in Latin is indefensible ; but, while we write Vergilius only, it may be long before the Italians give up their long-cherished Virgilio, the French their Virgile, and we English our familiar VIRGIL.1 1 Prof.
Page 105 - But thou, O Roman, remember to govern the tribes of thy Empire : These be thine arts to impose the conditions of peace on the conquered, Sparing the captives in war, and crushing the haughty in battle.
Page xxxvi - Tender attachments ; and long he the deed concealed, and the pining Lover the villain, by many a pretext, wheedled with empty Hope : but the ghost of her husband unburied itself in her night-dreams Came to her, lifting before her its visage amazingly pallid : Ghastly the altars it laid, and its bosom all gashed with the dagger...
Page xxxvi - Naked to view, and uncovered each hidden misdeed of the household : Then it exhorts her to hasten escape, and depart from the country ; And, as an aid for her journey, in earth it discloses her ancient Treasures, an unaccountable weight both of gold and of silver. Dido, incited by these, was preparing her flight and companions...
Page 66 - And now, if I err not, the day is at hand which I shall keep (such, O gods, was your will) ever as a day of grief, ever as of honour. Were I spending it in exile in the Gaetulian Syrtes, or caught on the Argolic sea or in Mycenae's town, yet would I perform the yearly vow with rites of solemn ordinance exsequerer strueremque suis altaria donis.
Page xxxvi - Fleeing her brother. The tale of her grievance is lengthy, and lengthy Too, are its mazes ; but I will the main trails trace of its outlines. She had a husband, Sychaeus, the richest in landed possessions Known of Phoenicians, and loved by her lorn with a passionate fondness. Virgin...
Page xxxvi - Thence to these haunts they have come, where now thou seest yon stately Ramparts and rising castle of recently colonized Carthage. Ground they have purchased, and named it, from terms of the bargain, the BYRSA, Just so much it should be as they could enclose with a bull's hide.