All were attentive to the godlike man, When from his lofty couch he thus began: 'Great queen, what you command me to relate, Renews the sad remembrance of our fate... Virgil: The Eclogues - Strana 263podľa Virgil - 1834Úplné zobrazenie - O tejto knihe
| British poets - 1822 - Počet stránok 268
...general rendezvous, be finds a great confluence of people, but misses his wife, whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and tells him the land which was designed...our fate: An empire from its old foundations rent, And every woe the Trojans underwent; A peopled city made a desert place; All that I saw, and part of... | |
| British poets - 1822 - Počet stránok 272
...general rendezvous, he finds a great confluence of people, but misses his wife, whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and tells him the land which was designed...attentive to the godlike man, When from his lofty conch he thus began— ' Great queen, what you command me to relate, Renews the sad remembrance of... | |
| William Scott - 1823 - Počet stránok 396
...and gods, compar'd to Jore." XIII. — JEneas to Queen Dido, giving an Account of the Sack of Troy. ALL were attentive to the godlike man, When from his...: — Great Queen ! What you command me to relate, Renew s the sad remembrance of our fate ; An empire from its old foundations rent, And every wo the... | |
| Virgil - 1825 - Počet stránok 294
...general rendezvous, he finds a great confluence of people, but misses his wife, whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and tells him the land which was designed for him. ALL were attentive to the godlike man, _>, When from his lofty couch he thus began : " Great queen, what you command me to relate, Renews... | |
| William Scott - 1829 - Počet stránok 420
...par "d to Jove." XIII. — /E/i.trs to Queen Dido, giving an Account of t Sack of Troy. — VIRGIL. ALL were attentive to the godlike man, When, from...our fate ; An empire from its old foundations rent, And every woe the Trojans underwent ; A pop'lous city made a desert place; All that I saw and part... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - Počet stránok 436
...thunderer's stroke it from the root is rent, So rare the blows which from high heaven are sent. Co-why. : What you command me to relate. Renews the sad remembrance...our fate, An empire from its old foundations rent. Dryden. Thou viper Hast cancelled kindred, made a rent in nature, And through her holy bowels gnawed... | |
| Virgil - 1830 - Počet stránok 348
...general rendezvous, he finds a great confluence of people, but misses his wife, whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and tells him the land which was designed for him. ALL were attentive to the god like man, When from his lofty couch he thus began : ' Great queen, what you command me to relate... | |
| John Dryden, John Mitford - 1836 - Počet stránok 488
...general rendezvous, he finds a great confluence of people, but misses his wife, whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and tells him the land which was designed...our fate. An empire from its old foundations rent, And every wo the Trojans underwent; A peopled city made a desert place ; Ail that I saw and part of... | |
| John Horne Tooke - 1840 - Počet stránok 806
...tell. Dryden has endeavoured to avoid the word which the language would not permit him to translate : " Great queen, what you command me to relate, Renews the sad remembrance of our fate." In the Old Batchelor, when Nol Bluffe had been kicked, he says, (act 3. sc. 9.) " Bluff. By heav'n,... | |
| P. Sadler - 1841 - Počet stránok 362
...goggle on (populaire), fixer, rcgarder fixement. (6) Bless me ! Dieu me benisse. (7) Godlike, divin. When from his lofty couch he thus began : Great Queen...our fate ; An empire from its old foundations rent (1), And every woe (he Trojans underwent; A pop'lous city made a desert place ; All that I saw , and... | |
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