Ovid: Selections for the Use of Schools, with Introductions and Notes and an Appendix on the Roman CalendarClarendon Press, 1868 - 372 pages |
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Page viii
... whole of the notes to the Ovid , and in an en- riched rather than an impoverished form . The only decided alteration I have ventured to make is in the matter of orthography , as to the true principles of which so much progress has been ...
... whole of the notes to the Ovid , and in an en- riched rather than an impoverished form . The only decided alteration I have ventured to make is in the matter of orthography , as to the true principles of which so much progress has been ...
Page xvi
... whole blame upon his unlucky poem ; at another he insinuates , with little concealment , that this was used merely as a pretext . It would be vain to enumerate the various hypotheses which have been proposed , the greater number of ...
... whole blame upon his unlucky poem ; at another he insinuates , with little concealment , that this was used merely as a pretext . It would be vain to enumerate the various hypotheses which have been proposed , the greater number of ...
Page xxiv
... whole year , although there is no reason to believe that he ever completed his design . Opposite conclusions , however , upon this point have been deduced from Trist . 2. 549 ' Sex ego Fastorum scripsi totidemque libellos , Cumque suo ...
... whole year , although there is no reason to believe that he ever completed his design . Opposite conclusions , however , upon this point have been deduced from Trist . 2. 549 ' Sex ego Fastorum scripsi totidemque libellos , Cumque suo ...
Page xxv
... whole of these were produced at Tomi , with the exception of those forming the first book of the Tristia , which appear to have been written on the journey thither . They are entirely occupied with the lamentations of the poet over his ...
... whole of these were produced at Tomi , with the exception of those forming the first book of the Tristia , which appear to have been written on the journey thither . They are entirely occupied with the lamentations of the poet over his ...
Page xxvii
... whole of these , in such a manner as to determine the age , accuracy , and authority of each . The scholar who first established the text of Ovid upon a satisfactory basis was N. Heinsius , who published two editions at Amsterdam ...
... whole of these , in such a manner as to determine the age , accuracy , and authority of each . The scholar who first established the text of Ovid upon a satisfactory basis was N. Heinsius , who published two editions at Amsterdam ...
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Common terms and phrases
according Amor ancient Anna Perenna anno Apollo Apollodorus aquas atque Augustus best MSS Caesar Calendar called celebrated Censorin Censorinus Cicero conj Cybele daughter deity diem enim epithet erat erit Fast Fasti Faunus fcap festival Festus Four MSS fuit Grecian Greek habet haec hence Hesiod hinc Homer honour Ianuarius Ides Idus illa Inque intercalary intercalations ipse Kalendas Lares Livy lunar months Luperci lustrum Macrob Macrobius manus meis mensis mihi Minerva modo multa nomen Nonas numina nunc Nymphs Occasus omne Ortus Ovid passage pater Penates Pleiades Pliny Pliny H. N. Plutarch poets Protesilaus quae quam quid quod quoque Robigo Roman Rome Romulus sacra sacrifice Saepe signifies sunt tamen terra Three MSS tibi tibicines Trist tunc Varro Veiovis verba Vesta Virg Virgil words Zeus
Popular passages
Page 299 - The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the falling together; and a little child shall lead them.
Page 185 - The birds their quire apply ; airs, vernal airs, Breathing the smell of field and grove, attune The trembling leaves, while universal Pan, Knit with the Graces and the Hours in dance, Led on the eternal Spring.
Page 132 - Linus, huic mater quamvis atque huic pater adsit, Orphei Calliopea, Lino formosus Apollo.
Page 298 - Ecce Sabinorum prisco de sanguine magnum agmen agens Clausus magnique ipse agminis instar, Claudia nunc a quo diffunditur et tribus et gens per Latium, postquam in partem data Roma Sabinis.
Page 232 - Congesta cremantur turea dona, dapes, fuso crateres olivo. 225 postquam conlapsi cineres et flamma quievit, reliquias vino et bibulam lavere favillam, ossaque lecta cado texit Corynaeus ae'no. idem ter socios pura circumtulit unda, spargens rore levi et ramo felicis olivae, 230 lustravitque viros, dixitque novissima verba.
Page 221 - ... nam veneror, seu stipes habet desertus in agris seu vetus in trivio florida serta lapis: et quodcumque mihi pomum novus educat annus, libatum agricolae ponitur ante deo.
Page 369 - Mathematical and Physical Papers. By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., DCL, FRS, Professor of Natural Philosophy, in the University of Glasgow. Collected from different Scientific Periodicals from May, 1841, to the present time.
Page 115 - Est in conspectu Tenedos, notissima fama insula, dives opum, Priami dum regna manebant, nunc tantum sinus et static male fida carinis; hue se provecti deserto in litore condunt.
Page 118 - Orci visat vastasque lacunas 115 an pecudes alias divinitus insinuet se, Ennius ut noster cecinit qui primus amoeno detulit ex Helicone perenni fronde coronam...
Page 323 - Sabellicus exacuit sus, 255 et pede prosubigit terram, fricat arbore costas, atque hinc atque illinc umeros ad volnera durat. quid iuvenis, magnum cui versat in ossibus ignem durus amor ? nempe abruptis turbata procellis nocte natat caeca serus freta; quem super ingens 260 porta tonat caeli, et scopulis inlisa reclamant aequora; nee miseri possunt revocare parentes, nee moritura super crudeli funere virgo.