The enchanted light which lingers over it is hardly distinguishable from that which saturates the Georgics. ... It is not so much a vision of a golden age as Nature herself seen through a medium of strange gold." We have been led astray, he tells us,... Harvard Studies in Classical Philology - Strana 17podľa Harvard University - 1903Úplné zobrazenie - O tejto knihe
| John William Mackail - 1895 - Počet stránok 310
...of daily weather, like the Omnia flenis rura natantfossis atque omnis navita ponto vmida vela legit; not so much a vision of a golden age as Nature herself seen through a medium of strange gold. Or again, in the tenth Eclogue, where the masque of shepherds and gods passes before the sick lover,... | |
| Joseph Bickersteth Mayor, William Warde Fowler - 1907 - Počet stránok 168
...deepest students of Virgil who have thought him unworthy of that divine ministry. THE CHILD OF THE POEM BY W. WARDE FOWLER IT is now some years since Mr Mackail...round which the crystallisation of the poem began." 1 Latin Literature (1895), p. 94. This is not so much the judgment of a student as of a scholar and... | |
| Joseph Bickersteth Mayor, William Warde Fowler - 1907 - Počet stránok 172
...is hardly distinguishable from that which saturates the Georgics. ... It is not so much a vision-of a golden age as Nature herself seen through a medium...round which the crystallisation of the poem began." 1 Latin Literature (1895), p. 94. This is not so much the judgment of a student as of a scholar and... | |
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