Virgil: The EcloguesValpy, 1830 |
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Výsledky 1 - 5 z 37.
Strana viii
... thing but the name their king . This monarchical form of government must naturally be apt to displease the people . Virgil seems to have laid the plan of his poem to recon- cile them to it . He takes advantage of their reli- gious turn ...
... thing but the name their king . This monarchical form of government must naturally be apt to displease the people . Virgil seems to have laid the plan of his poem to recon- cile them to it . He takes advantage of their reli- gious turn ...
Strana 4
... things contained in these Eclogues ) from Theocritus . " 6 Some commentators fancifully conceive that under the names of Amaryllis ' and Galatea ' the poet allegorises Rome and Mantua . Yet why , as De la Rue asks , this invo- lution ...
... things contained in these Eclogues ) from Theocritus . " 6 Some commentators fancifully conceive that under the names of Amaryllis ' and Galatea ' the poet allegorises Rome and Mantua . Yet why , as De la Rue asks , this invo- lution ...
Strana 5
... things I measured by the mean ! But high o'er other cities Rome is seen , As the tall cypress o'er the osier's shoot . 2-3 25 30 35 Mel . And what to Rome seduced your vagrant foot ? Tit . Freedom : who , though her visit late she paid ...
... things I measured by the mean ! But high o'er other cities Rome is seen , As the tall cypress o'er the osier's shoot . 2-3 25 30 35 Mel . And what to Rome seduced your vagrant foot ? Tit . Freedom : who , though her visit late she paid ...
Strana 21
... things ! Warton , after Catrou , conceives it to have been composed in honor of the nuptials of Antony and Octavia , and Martyn leans the same way ; adding , that Virgil had dexterously availed himself of the current Sibylline prophecy ...
... things ! Warton , after Catrou , conceives it to have been composed in honor of the nuptials of Antony and Octavia , and Martyn leans the same way ; adding , that Virgil had dexterously availed himself of the current Sibylline prophecy ...
Strana 49
... . 5 To him , since thus her wheel dame Fortune plies , These kids - ill luck go with them ! -sad I bear . Lyc . I heard , indeed — and , oh , would such things were ! VIR . VOL . I. D That where yon hills slope gently to the plain , -MORIS.
... . 5 To him , since thus her wheel dame Fortune plies , These kids - ill luck go with them ! -sad I bear . Lyc . I heard , indeed — and , oh , would such things were ! VIR . VOL . I. D That where yon hills slope gently to the plain , -MORIS.
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Achilles Æneas Æneid ancient arms Augustus Augustus Cæsar Bacchus bear bees behold beneath betwixt breathe cæsura called Carthage Columella courser Creüsa crown'd Daphnis death deep Dido divine earth Eclogue Eneid ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear fire flame flocks flood foes fruit Georgics give goddess gods golden Grecian grove heav'n herds hero Homer honor imitate Italy Jove Julius Cæsar Juno Jupiter king labor land light Lille lordship Mantua Martyn mead Mopsus mountain night numbers nymphs o'er Ovid plain plants Pliny plough poem poet poetry Pollio pow'r praise Priam queen race Roman Rome round sacred says Segrais shade shepherds shore sire skies soil song spread spring Stawell steed strain streams swain sweet swell tempests thee Theocritus Thessaly thou Tityrus toil tow'rs translation trees Trojan Troy Turnus Tyrian verse vines Virgil wave whence wild winds wine woes wood words wound