P. Vergili Maronis Aeneidos liber i. (-x./xii.) ed. with Engl. notes by A. Sidgwick, Volumes 7-8 |
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Page 14
... seems here to have developed a new branch of his art - of various kinds : the royal courteous style ( 195 ) , the indignant outcry of Juno ( 293 ) , of Amata ( 359 ) , and the bitter taunts of the Fury ( 421 ) . We have a splendid ...
... seems here to have developed a new branch of his art - of various kinds : the royal courteous style ( 195 ) , the indignant outcry of Juno ( 293 ) , of Amata ( 359 ) , and the bitter taunts of the Fury ( 421 ) . We have a splendid ...
Page 15
... seems to give to his lines a power to haunt the memory and a significance beyond the immediate application : this book will supply instances , if not so richly as the sixth , still certainly without stint . A word must be said , finally ...
... seems to give to his lines a power to haunt the memory and a significance beyond the immediate application : this book will supply instances , if not so richly as the sixth , still certainly without stint . A word must be said , finally ...
Page 20
... least doubtful . His character seems to have been most simple , pure , and loveable ; and his poetic fame was well established even before his death . P. VERGILI MARONIS AENEIDOS LIBER SEPTIMUS . Tu quoque litoribus 20 INTRODUCTION .
... least doubtful . His character seems to have been most simple , pure , and loveable ; and his poetic fame was well established even before his death . P. VERGILI MARONIS AENEIDOS LIBER SEPTIMUS . Tu quoque litoribus 20 INTRODUCTION .
Page 47
... the Albunea in the text . But Tibur was thirty miles off : the mephitim seems to refer to sulphur springs , which are not found at Tibur : and altogether we shall be probably right in following Mr Burn ( ' Rome NOTES . 47.
... the Albunea in the text . But Tibur was thirty miles off : the mephitim seems to refer to sulphur springs , which are not found at Tibur : and altogether we shall be probably right in following Mr Burn ( ' Rome NOTES . 47.
Page 52
... seems to be , that the Romans worshipped Ianus as ' god of beginnings ' : hence of gates , as entrances and beginnings of expeditions : and of the morning . It was like the Romans , as Mommsen ( 1. 173 ) remarks , with their worship of ...
... seems to be , that the Romans worshipped Ianus as ' god of beginnings ' : hence of gates , as entrances and beginnings of expeditions : and of the morning . It was like the Romans , as Mommsen ( 1. 173 ) remarks , with their worship of ...
Common terms and phrases
17 Paternoster Row adeo Aeneas Aeneid aethera Allecto Amata Anchises arma atque Augustus aurea bello caelo called Cambridge Warehouse cloth coniunx constr Dardanus Demy 8vo Demy Octavo Edited English Notes enim epic erat Euander facias Fellow of Trinity gods Greek haec haud hendiadys Hercules Himella hinc Homer huic Hunc iamque imitation ingens inter Ipse Italy Iulus Iuno Iuppiter iuventus king late Fellow Latin Latium litora lumina M. T. Ciceronis manu meaning Mezentius mihi nomen nunc nymph obliq Octavo omnes Pallas pater phrase poem poet poetic Praeneste Price Professor quae Quam quid quin quod Roman Rome Rutuli Sabine sanguine sense Sicani simile St John's College story style subj tecta Tiber tibi Trinity College Trojan war Trojans Troy Turnus Tuscan University of Cambridge urbem urbes verb Vergil Vergilian Vulcan word Zeus
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