Virgil: The EcloguesValpy, 1830 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 6 - 10 z 35.
Strana 179
... Queen , had his action been finished , or had been one ; and Milton , if the devil had not been his hero , instead of Adam ; if the giant had not foiled the knight , and driven him out of his stronghold , to wander through the world ...
... Queen , had his action been finished , or had been one ; and Milton , if the devil had not been his hero , instead of Adam ; if the giant had not foiled the knight , and driven him out of his stronghold , to wander through the world ...
Strana 200
... queen , who had obliged him : but he knew the Romans were to be his readers ; and them he bribed , perhaps at the expense of his hero's honesty ; but he gained his cause , however , as plead- ing before corrupt judges . They were ...
... queen , who had obliged him : but he knew the Romans were to be his readers ; and them he bribed , perhaps at the expense of his hero's honesty ; but he gained his cause , however , as plead- ing before corrupt judges . They were ...
Strana 221
... queens and goddesses . Virgil is never frequent in those turns , like Ovid , but much more sparing of them in his Æneid than in his Pastorals and Georgics . Ignoscenda quidem , scirent si ignoscere manes . That turn is beautiful indeed ...
... queens and goddesses . Virgil is never frequent in those turns , like Ovid , but much more sparing of them in his Æneid than in his Pastorals and Georgics . Ignoscenda quidem , scirent si ignoscere manes . That turn is beautiful indeed ...
Strana 230
... Queen ; and even those few might be occasioned by his unhappy choice of so long a stanza . Mr. Cowley had found out that no kind of staff is proper for a heroic poem , as being all too lyrical : yet though he wrote in couplets , where ...
... Queen ; and even those few might be occasioned by his unhappy choice of so long a stanza . Mr. Cowley had found out that no kind of staff is proper for a heroic poem , as being all too lyrical : yet though he wrote in couplets , where ...
Strana 239
... queen- Dido , by a device of Venus , begins to have a passion for him , and , after some discourse with him , desires the his- tory of his adventures since the siege of Troy , which is the subject of the two following books . ARMS and ...
... queen- Dido , by a device of Venus , begins to have a passion for him , and , after some discourse with him , desires the his- tory of his adventures since the siege of Troy , which is the subject of the two following books . ARMS and ...
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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