Aeneidos Liber II. |
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Page 5
... Vergil's licences and peculiarities of expression , which help him so much in producing rhetorical and poetical effects . Further , in several of the harder passages and phrases , an attempt has been made to help the student in ...
... Vergil's licences and peculiarities of expression , which help him so much in producing rhetorical and poetical effects . Further , in several of the harder passages and phrases , an attempt has been made to help the student in ...
Page 6
... Vergil , that it is obvious that every student must be under great obligation to him . Besides these , the books of which I have made most use are the following , to which my acknowledgments are due : Ribbeck's Vergil , 1860 . Gossrau's ...
... Vergil , that it is obvious that every student must be under great obligation to him . Besides these , the books of which I have made most use are the following , to which my acknowledgments are due : Ribbeck's Vergil , 1860 . Gossrau's ...
Page 7
... Vergil's peculiarities of style . Note on the imitations of Homer and others in Vergil . Outline of Vergil's life . At the end of the book will be found Appendices , with the parallel passages from Homer , and a scheme of the Latin sub ...
... Vergil's peculiarities of style . Note on the imitations of Homer and others in Vergil . Outline of Vergil's life . At the end of the book will be found Appendices , with the parallel passages from Homer , and a scheme of the Latin sub ...
Page 8
... Vergil , in point of execution , may be said to be centuries in advance of his predecessors . The subject and purpose of the Poem . The main idea of the Aeneid is the national greatness of Rome . Several causes combined to make Vergil ...
... Vergil , in point of execution , may be said to be centuries in advance of his predecessors . The subject and purpose of the Poem . The main idea of the Aeneid is the national greatness of Rome . Several causes combined to make Vergil ...
Page 9
... Vergil transplanted and naturalised in his own stately and melodious verse . Moreover , by going back to Aeneas and the tale of Troy , he raised the destinies of Rome to the old heroic level in the imaginations of men . But however much ...
... Vergil transplanted and naturalised in his own stately and melodious verse . Moreover , by going back to Aeneas and the tale of Troy , he raised the destinies of Rome to the old heroic level in the imaginations of men . But however much ...
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Common terms and phrases
ACCORDING TO ST Achilles Adparent Aeneas Aeneid Anchises animi arma atque Ave Maria Lane caelo Calchas Cambridge Warehouse Catalogue circum cloth coniunx Coroebus Creusa Crown 8vo Crown Octavo Danai Danaum Demy 8vo Demy Octavo deum dextra divom domus Edition Editor English Notes enim Fellow of Trinity flammae gods GOSPEL ACCORDING Greek haec Hector Homer horse Iamque Introduction and Notes ipse Iuppiter king Laocoon Laomedon Latin limina LL.D M. T. Ciceronis M.A. Price magna manu Maps meaning mihi moenia muros Mycenas Neoptolemus numina nunc Octavo omnes Oratio P. G. TAIT Pallas Panthus patria phrase poem poenas poet poetic Priam Price 25 Professor Pyrrhus quae Quarto quid quod Revised Roman sanguine sense St John's College summa tela Teucri tibi translation Trinity College Troia Trojans Troy Ulixes ultro University of Cambridge urbi verb Vergil Vergilian word
Popular passages
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