Virgil's Aeneid: Books I, II and VI., Livros 1-2University Press, 1911 - 136 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 18
Página v
... later editions of the poem , and with the text in Scott's Dryden ( ed . Saintsbury , 1882 ) . The readings of 1697 , discarded in later editions , have been preserved , where they appear to have remained unaltered during Dryden's life ...
... later editions of the poem , and with the text in Scott's Dryden ( ed . Saintsbury , 1882 ) . The readings of 1697 , discarded in later editions , have been preserved , where they appear to have remained unaltered during Dryden's life ...
Página xii
... later , to Sir Walter Scott . In the verse of Virgil the names of men and places have that echo of intimate love and knowledge , so appealing to the imagination of the reader , which is the chief quality of Scott's poetical style ...
... later , to Sir Walter Scott . In the verse of Virgil the names of men and places have that echo of intimate love and knowledge , so appealing to the imagination of the reader , which is the chief quality of Scott's poetical style ...
Página xiv
... later age ; and its phrases , detached from their context and often with their meaning twisted , were as familiar to the clerks of the Middle Ages as those of the Bible . The phrases of the fourth eclogue , written in honour of xiv ...
... later age ; and its phrases , detached from their context and often with their meaning twisted , were as familiar to the clerks of the Middle Ages as those of the Bible . The phrases of the fourth eclogue , written in honour of xiv ...
Página xv
... later Middle Ages , nevertheless , is manifested by one circumstance which puts his legendary reputation entirely in the shade . Dante , recognising him as the master on whom his own style was modelled , and choosing him , in the Divina ...
... later Middle Ages , nevertheless , is manifested by one circumstance which puts his legendary reputation entirely in the shade . Dante , recognising him as the master on whom his own style was modelled , and choosing him , in the Divina ...
Página 96
... later form of the story , told by Ovid , makes Zeus assume the form of an eagle . Cf. Croxall's lines in the translation of Ovid by Dryden and others : ' He serves the nectar at th ' Almighty's feast , To slighted Juno an unwelcome ...
... later form of the story , told by Ovid , makes Zeus assume the form of an eagle . Cf. Croxall's lines in the translation of Ovid by Dryden and others : ' He serves the nectar at th ' Almighty's feast , To slighted Juno an unwelcome ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
abodes Achates Achilles Æneas Æneid altar Anchises appears arms Ascanius Assaracus Augustus behold blood Cæsar Calchas called Carthage Chimæra coast Cocytus command Creüsa cries crowned Dardanus daughter death descend Dido dire divine Dryden Eneid Eriphyle eyes fame fatal fate father fear fight fire flames flood foes friends fury gate Georgics Geryon ghost Goddess Gods Grecian Greeks grove hands Heaven Hecate Hector hero holy Homer honour Iliad Italy Iülus Jove king labours land Latian Latin Latium Lilybæum limbs Marcellus mind mother night note on Book o'er Pallas Pasiphaë passage Phoebus pious poem poets Priam prince Pyrrhus queen race rage Roman Rome ruin sacred shades ships shore Sibyl sight Simoïs sire skies slain soul spoils stood Stygian sword tears temple Teucer thee Theseus thou throne toils towers town translation trembling Trojan Troy Tyrian Ulysses unhappy Virgil Virgil says walls wandering wife winds word wretched Zeus