Aeneidos Liber II. |
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Page 9
... gods , the single combats , the royal feasts and funerals , the splendid scenes and similes - all these things , which charmed the educated Romans so much in the Greek epics , Vergil transplanted and naturalised in his own stately and ...
... gods , the single combats , the royal feasts and funerals , the splendid scenes and similes - all these things , which charmed the educated Romans so much in the Greek epics , Vergil transplanted and naturalised in his own stately and ...
Page 10
... gods when Troy is captured , and Homer clearly conceives him as reigning at Troy after the departure of the Greeks . The later stories recount his wanderings about Europe after the fall of Troy : and these Vergil adopts , making many ...
... gods when Troy is captured , and Homer clearly conceives him as reigning at Troy after the departure of the Greeks . The later stories recount his wanderings about Europe after the fall of Troy : and these Vergil adopts , making many ...
Page 11
... gods interfere , and Turnus , king of the Rutules , who is a suitor of Lavinia , induces Latinus to join him in war against the Trojans . Aeneas meanwhile sails up the Tiber , and makes alliance with the Arcadian Euander , who is king ...
... gods interfere , and Turnus , king of the Rutules , who is a suitor of Lavinia , induces Latinus to join him in war against the Trojans . Aeneas meanwhile sails up the Tiber , and makes alliance with the Arcadian Euander , who is king ...
Page 14
... gods against it : the dramatic irony of the Greek fraud through which the city fell , whereby the Trojans are made to assist in their own destruction : the disregarded prophecies and tragic fates of Laocoon and Cassandra ; the humbling ...
... gods against it : the dramatic irony of the Greek fraud through which the city fell , whereby the Trojans are made to assist in their own destruction : the disregarded prophecies and tragic fates of Laocoon and Cassandra ; the humbling ...
Page 16
... gods them- selves destroying his city , after the capture of the citadel , the sack of the palace , the death of the king . Creusa , it is true , is lost but the poet takes the greatest care that he shall not be chargeable with this ...
... gods them- selves destroying his city , after the capture of the citadel , the sack of the palace , the death of the king . Creusa , it is true , is lost but the poet takes the greatest care that he shall not be chargeable with this ...
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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
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