Virgil's Aeneid: books I-XII |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 62.
Strana 19
Secondly , it was a Roman instinct to honor great individuals , men who achieved success in arms in the interest of the Roman state . Accordingly the Roman singled out foremost leaders whom he glorified and whose name he perpetuated .
Secondly , it was a Roman instinct to honor great individuals , men who achieved success in arms in the interest of the Roman state . Accordingly the Roman singled out foremost leaders whom he glorified and whose name he perpetuated .
Strana 1
... the desire of the husbandman , however greedy ( i.e. made his labors fruitful through the teachings of my poems on husbandry ) , a work ( of song ) acceptable to the tillers of the soil : yet now sing the bristling arms of Mars .
... the desire of the husbandman , however greedy ( i.e. made his labors fruitful through the teachings of my poems on husbandry ) , a work ( of song ) acceptable to the tillers of the soil : yet now sing the bristling arms of Mars .
Strana 2
The exordium : “ Arms I sing , and the man , driven by fate from his native Ilium : who endured many hardships of land and sea and war , until he founded in Latium the kingdom from which sprang mighty Rome . ” Thus are indicated briefly ...
The exordium : “ Arms I sing , and the man , driven by fate from his native Ilium : who endured many hardships of land and sea and war , until he founded in Latium the kingdom from which sprang mighty Rome . ” Thus are indicated briefly ...
Strana 11
118. rari : here and there ' ; referring to the voyagers seen struggling in the sea , less numerous than the arms , planks , and valuables floating all about Note the spondees , in strong contrast with the dactyls of the preceding line ...
118. rari : here and there ' ; referring to the voyagers seen struggling in the sea , less numerous than the arms , planks , and valuables floating all about Note the spondees , in strong contrast with the dactyls of the preceding line ...
Strana 13
Observe the caesura here in the fourth foot . arma : their fury leads them to seize such arms as stones and firebrands only . No citizen was allowed to carry warlike weapons Fig . 4. - A Triton ( l . 144 ) within the walls of Rome .
Observe the caesura here in the fourth foot . arma : their fury leads them to seize such arms as stones and firebrands only . No citizen was allowed to carry warlike weapons Fig . 4. - A Triton ( l . 144 ) within the walls of Rome .
Čo hovoria ostatní - Napísať recenziu
Na obvyklých miestach sme nenašli žiadne recenzie.
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
ablative accusative Aeneas ancient Apollo arma armis arms atque ātus āvi bear body bring called carry cause circum cover dative death descend Dido direct entis et al expression fall fate father freq give gods Greek haec hand Haud Hinc honor horse inter ipse Italy itus join Jupiter king land Latin look manus means mihi mind multa nunc omnes one's oris õrum pass pater present quae quam Quid quis quod refers river Roman round sail ships side subst super temple terras things tibi town Trojan Troy turn Turnus urbem Virgil wind