Immortalis ego? Aut quicquam mihi dulce meorum Te sine, frater, erit? O quæ satìs ima dehiscat Terra mihi, Manesque deam demittat ad imos !" Tantum effata, caput glauco contexit amictu, Multa gemens, et se fluvio dea condidit alto.
Eneas instat contrà, telumque coruscat Ingens arboreum, et sævo sic pectore fatur :- Quæ nunc deinde mora est? aut quid jam, Turne, retractas?
Non cursu, sævis certandum est cominùs armis: 890 Verte omnes tete in facies, et contrahe quicquid Sive animis, sive arte, vales; opta ardua pennis Astra sequi, clausumque cavâ te condere terrâ. Ille, caput quassans :- "Non me tua fervida terrent Dicta, ferox: Dî me terrent, et Jupiter hostis." 895 Nec plura effatus, saxum circumspicit ingens, (Saxum antiquum, ingens, campo quod fortè jacebat Limes agro positus, litem ut discerneret arvis); Vix illud lecti bis sex cervice subirent, Qualia nunc hominum producit corpora tellus : Ille manu raptum trepidâ torquebat in hostem Altior insurgens, et cursu concitus heros. Sed neque currentem se, nec cognoscit euntem, Tollentemve manu saxumque immane moventem; Genua labant, gelidus concrevit frigore sanguis: 903 Tum lapis ipse viri, vacuum per inane volutus, Nec spatium evasit totum, nec pertulit ictum. Ac velut in somnis, oculos ubi languida pressit Nocte quies, nequicquam avidos extendere cursus Velle videmur, et in mediis conatibus ægri Succidimus; non lingua valet, non corpore notæ Sufficiunt vires, nec vox nec verba sequuntur : Sic Turno, quâcunque viam virtute petivit, Successum dea Dira negat. Tum pectore sensus Vertuntur varii: Rutulos aspectat et urbem, Cunctaturque metu, telumque instare tremiscit : Nec quò se eripiat, nec quâ vi tendat in hostem, Nec currus usquam videt, aurigamque sororem.
Cunctanti telum Eneas fatale coruscat, Sortitus fortunam oculis; et corpore toto Eminùs intorquet: murali concita nunquam Tormento sic saxa fremunt, nec fulmine tanti Dissultant crepitus. Volat, atri turbinis instar, Exitium dirum hasta ferens; orasque recludit Loricæ, et clypei extremos septemplicis orbes : Per medium stridens transit femur. Incidit ictus Ingens ad terram duplicato poplite Turnus. Consurgunt gemitu Rutuli; totusque remugit Mons circùm, et vocem latè nemora alta remittunt. Ille, humilis supplexque, oculos dextramque pre-
Protendens," Equidem merui, nec deprecor," in- "Utere sorte tuâ: miseri te si qua parentis Tangere cura potest, oro (fuit et tibi talis Anchises genitor) Dauni miserere senectæ ; Et me, seu corpus spoliatum lumine mavis, Redde meis. Vicisti; et victum tendere palmas Ausonii vidêre ; tua est Lavinia conjux : Ulteriùs nè tende odiis." Stetit acer in armis Æneas, volvens oculos, dextramque repressit : Et jam jamque magis cunctantem flectere sermo Cœperat, infelix humero cùm apparuit alto Balteus, et notis fulserunt cingula bullis Pallantis pueri; victum quem vulnere Turnus Straverat, atque humeris inimicum insigne gerebat. Ille, oculis postquam sævi monumenta doloris Exuviasque hausit, furiis accensus et irâ Terribilis,-Tune hinc spoliis indute meorum Eripiare mihi? Pallas te hoc vulnere, Pallas Immolat, et pœnam scelerato ex sanguine sumit." Hoc dicens, ferrum adverso sub pectore condit Fervidus ast illi solvuntur frigore membra; Vitaque cum gemitu fugit indignata sub umbras.
PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM PICKERING, 177, PICCADILLY.
PICKERING'S DIAMOND CLASSICS, beautifully printed, the smallest editions ever published.
HORATIUS, 48mo. cloth boards, 6s. | TERENTIUS, 48mo. cloth boards, VIRGILIUS,48mo. cloth boards, 8s. CATULLUS, TIBULLUS, et PROPER- TIUS, 48mo. 6s.
CICERO DE OFFICIIS, &c. 48mo. cloth boards, 5s.
'OMHPOY FIAIAΣ Littera Digamma restituta ad Metri Leges redegit et Notatione brevi illustravit THOMAS SHAW BRANDRETH, A.M. S.R.S. SS. T.C. olim S. 2 vols. 8vo. 1l. 1s.
JUVENAL et PERSIUS, ex Recensione et cum Notis Ruperti et Koenig, 8vo. new edition, boards, 14s.
LUCRETIUS, ex Recensione et cum Notis Creech et Bentleii, 8vo. just published, 12s.
WORKS PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM PICKERING.
NEW ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARIES OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE.
I.-In Two large Quarto Volumes, price Five Guineas, cloth. This work consists of two large quarto volumes, upon the composition of which the author has been employed for more than 20 years: and though the expense of publication has exceeded the sum of 6000l. it is published at the moderate price of 5 guineas. The two volumes contain nearly 2300 pages of 3 columns each, closely, yet clearly and beautifully printed. In this Dictionary equal care has been bestowed upon the Etymologies and Explanation; and also upon the copious selection of quotations in illustration of both:-these are arranged in Chronological series from Wiclif and Chaucer to Burke and Cowper.
II.-Abridged in One large Volume Octavo, price Eighteen Shillings, cloth. This Dictionary comprises, as equally essential, the two departments of Etymology and Explanation: the former most carefully and elaborately investigated, and the latter founded, with equal care and labour, upon such results as investigation may discover. This combination, unattempted in all other English dictionaries, will, it is hoped, entitle the book to the character of a Scholar's Manual: and at the same time pre-eminently distinguish it as a book of common refe
JOHNSON and WALKER'S DICTIONARY of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE combined, with the Pronunciation greatly simplified, revised, corrected, and enlarg d, with the addition of several thousand words, by R. S. J. MESON, ESQ. 8vo. third edition, 12s.
THE POETICAL WORKS of VINCENT BOURNE, Latin and English. A New Edition, with a Life of the Author, edited by the REV. JOHN MITFORD, in foolscap, 8vo. 5s.
BACON'S ESSAYS and WISDOM of the ANCIENTS. Edited by BASIL MONTAGU. Foolscap 8vo. 5s.
BACON'S ADVANCEMENT of LEARNING, Edited by BASIL MONTAGU. Foolscap 8vo. 5s.
BACON'S NOVUM ORGANUM, or True Suggestions for the Interpretation of Nature. Foolscap 8vo. 5s.
« AnteriorContinuar » |