Virgil's Æneid |
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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
Virgil. attempts to justify Æneas in his conduct in the case , on the score of honor or morality ; but he simply ( though unsuccessful , as he himself must have felt ) strives to enlist in his readers ' minds , a counter sympathy for his ...
Virgil. attempts to justify Æneas in his conduct in the case , on the score of honor or morality ; but he simply ( though unsuccessful , as he himself must have felt ) strives to enlist in his readers ' minds , a counter sympathy for his ...
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 xxix
Virgil. : ANALYSIS . BOOK I. ÆNEAS STRANDED AT CARTHAGE . Vienos Aeneas is VENTSSON THE poem opens in the seventh year after the fall of Ilium , with the hero , Eneas , a wanderer , exiled by fate , and under the ban of Juno's wrath ...
Virgil. : ANALYSIS . BOOK I. ÆNEAS STRANDED AT CARTHAGE . Vienos Aeneas is VENTSSON THE poem opens in the seventh year after the fall of Ilium , with the hero , Eneas , a wanderer , exiled by fate , and under the ban of Juno's wrath ...
Page xxx
... Æneas , and tells him all is over ; and warns him to flee : 268-297 . Aroused from slumber , and hearing a great commotion , he ascends to the roof of his house , and with consternation and horror sees the city in a blaze and tumult ...
... Æneas , and tells him all is over ; and warns him to flee : 268-297 . Aroused from slumber , and hearing a great commotion , he ascends to the roof of his house , and with consternation and horror sees the city in a blaze and tumult ...
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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 Carthage cavern charger chariot chieftains comrades Creüsa Danaäns Dardan Dardanian death deep deities Dido earth Eneas Euryalus Evander exclaims eyes fates father Æneas Faunus flames fleet flits foemen forests fortune goddess gods gold grove hast hath heaven Helenus helmet Hence hero hexameter hither honor Ilian Italia Iülus Juno Jupiter Juturna land Latins Latium lofty mansions Meanwhile Messapus Mezentius midst mighty Mnestheus monarch mother mountains night Nisus o'er ocean offspring once Pallas Pergamus Phoebus Phrygian pity plains 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 Virgil wafted war-spear warfare warriors weapons winds wound