Tristia, Book 1Clarendon Press, 1885 - 115 pages |
From inside the book
Page v
... friends , will tend to throw light upon and kindle an interest in not only this but others of Ovid's writings . If the notes seem somewhat lengthy I must plead in excuse ( 1 ) that a short dog- matic note , which rules without giving a ...
... friends , will tend to throw light upon and kindle an interest in not only this but others of Ovid's writings . If the notes seem somewhat lengthy I must plead in excuse ( 1 ) that a short dog- matic note , which rules without giving a ...
Page ix
... Friends and Patrons of Ovid addressed in the Tristia and Pontic Epistles . xxvii IV . The cause of Ovid's banishment xlix § V. The Literary Value of the Tristia liv lix § VI . The Text of the Tristia TEXT NOTES APPENDIX INDEX I 33 103 ...
... Friends and Patrons of Ovid addressed in the Tristia and Pontic Epistles . xxvii IV . The cause of Ovid's banishment xlix § V. The Literary Value of the Tristia liv lix § VI . The Text of the Tristia TEXT NOTES APPENDIX INDEX I 33 103 ...
Page xiii
... friend and fellow poet Macer , visiting Greece and the famous cities of Asia Minor , and staying for nearly a year in Sicily in the course of his return * . Having thus finished his education after the approved mode he settled down at ...
... friend and fellow poet Macer , visiting Greece and the famous cities of Asia Minor , and staying for nearly a year in Sicily in the course of his return * . Having thus finished his education after the approved mode he settled down at ...
Page xiv
... friendship of many powerful men ; the circle of his personal friends and acquaintances was a very wide one o . He was the centre of a brilliant literary society , which numbered in its ranks all the poets of the day of any consideration ...
... friendship of many powerful men ; the circle of his personal friends and acquaintances was a very wide one o . He was the centre of a brilliant literary society , which numbered in its ranks all the poets of the day of any consideration ...
Page xvi
... friend of the Empress Livia . Consequently this marriage seemed to promise great material advantages , and more especially the favour of the Imperial house , though we are hardly justified in supposing with Boissier that it was a mere ...
... friend of the Empress Livia . Consequently this marriage seemed to promise great material advantages , and more especially the favour of the Imperial house , though we are hardly justified in supposing with Boissier that it was a mere ...
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Common terms and phrases
addressed Amatoria Appendix aquas Augustus banishment Caesar carmina Catullus cett Cicero cloth Cotta Crown 8vo death Demy 8vo elegy erat exile Fabius Maximus friends fuit Graeber Greek haec Homer Ibis illa illi infr inque Introduction and Notes Ionian sea ipse jussive Latin Lorentz Lörs Lucian Müller M.A. Extra fcap M.A. Second Edition malis Merkel Messalla Messallinus mihi miseris Nettleship nisi nostris nunc omnes Ovid Ovid's pauci dett poem poet poet's poetic Pompeius Pontic Epistles probably quae quam quamlibet quamvis quid quis quod quoque Roman Rome Samothrace Sextus Pompeius ship subj sunt supr Tacitus tamen tempora thee Third Edition thou Thrace Tiberius tibi Tibullus Tomi Tristia Tuticanus Verg viii W. W. Skeat wife word καὶ
Popular passages
Page 49 - Africo 5 antennaeque gemant ac sine funibus vix durare carinae possint imperiosius aequor? non tibi sunt Integra lintea, non di, quos iterum pressa voces malo.
Page 33 - Or Neptune's ire, or Juno's, that so long Perplex'd the Greek and Cytherea's son...
Page 3 - Crown 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d. A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. By J. Clerk Maxwell, MA, FRS, Professor of Experimental Physics in the University of Cambridge.
Page 7 - This preservation photocopy was made and hand bound at BookLab, Inc., in compliance with copyright law. The paper is Weyerhaeuser Cougar Opaque Natural, which exceeds ANSI Standard Z39.48-1984.
Page 36 - Of all the days that's in the week I dearly love but one day — And that's the day that comes betwixt A Saturday and Monday...
Page 12 - ... morae spatium nox praecipitata negabat, versaque ab axe suo Parrhasis arctos erat. quid facerem ? blando patriae retinebar amore : ultima sed iussae nox erat ilia fugae. 50 a! quotiens aliquo dixi properante 'quid urgues? vel quo festines ire, vel unde, vide !
Page 11 - Qui modo de multis unus et alter erant. Uxor amans flentem flens acrius ipsa tenebat, Imbre per indignas usque cadente genas ; Nata procul Libycis aberat diversa sub oris, Nec poterat fati certior esse mei.
Page 10 - Cum subit illius tristissima noctis imago, Qua mihi supremum tempus in Urbe fuit, Cum repeto noctem, qua tot mihi cara reliqui, Labitur ex oculis nunc quoque gutta meis.
Page 11 - Troiae, cum caperetur, erat. iamque quiescebant voces hominumque canumque Lunaque nocturnos alta regebat equos. hanc ego suspiciens et ab hac Capitolia cernens, quae nostro frustra iuncta fuere Lari, >Numina vicinis habitantia sedibus...
Page 45 - Nunc fateor — volui revocare, animusque ferebat ; substitit auspicii lingua timore mali. cum foribus velles ad Troiam exire paternis, pes tuus offenso limine signa dedit. ut vidi, ingemui, tacitoque in pectore dixi : " signa reversuri sint, precor, ista viri...