Catullum, etc., 1577. risere parentes," and the resulting false notion that the smile was the mother's and not the child's. As regards the sense, no doubt it is harshly expressed : ridere with the accusative meaning to smile on, and qui followed by hunc,... Harvard Studies in Classical Philology - Strana 29podľa Harvard University - 1903Úplné zobrazenie - O tejto knihe
| Joseph Bickersteth Mayor - 1907 - Počet stránok 172
...(as I take it to be) into " cui non 1 Ed. Lindsay, p. 237. 8 Castigationes in Catullum, etc., 1577. risere parentes," and the resulting false notion that...Virgil is here alluding to a passage in the eleventh Odyssey, 1 where Herakles is described as having joy at the banquet (mensa) among the deathless gods,... | |
| Joseph Bickersteth Mayor, Robert Seymour Conway, William Warde Fowler - 1907 - Počet stránok 170
...(as I take it to be) into "cm non 1 Ed. Lindsay, p. 237. a Castigationes in Catullum, etc., 1577. K risere parentes," and the resulting false notion that...still more serious difficulty in the last line of all, Nee deus hunc mensa dea nee dignata cubili est. It is wonderful how far afield interpreters have gone... | |
| Joseph Bickersteth Mayor, William Warde Fowler - 1907 - Počet stránok 168
...it is harshly expressed : ridere with the accusative meaning to smile on, and qui followed by fiunc, are between them quite enough to frighten timid scholars...still more serious difficulty in the last line of all, Nee deus hunc mensa dea nee dignata cubili est. It is wonderful how far afield interpreters have gone... | |
| Harvard University - 1903 - Počet stránok 256
...But Dr. Postgate contends that Quintilian's copy of Virgil was a bad one. 3 Ed. Lindsay, p. 237. > Castigationes in CatuUum, etc., 1577. with the sense,...still more serious difficulty in the last line of all, Nee deus hunc mensa dea nee dignata cubili est. It is wonderful how far afield interpreters have gone... | |
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