Virgil's Aeneid: Books I, II and VI., Livros 1-2University Press, 1911 - 136 páginas |
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Página xv
... lost souls , was the pure and blameless poet who , though a pagan , looked with a sentiment almost Christian to the future life ; and , although Dante accepted stories like that of the conversion of Statius by the reading of Virgil , he ...
... lost souls , was the pure and blameless poet who , though a pagan , looked with a sentiment almost Christian to the future life ; and , although Dante accepted stories like that of the conversion of Statius by the reading of Virgil , he ...
Página xx
... endeavoured to graff on it ; but most of them are of necessity to be lost , because they will not shine in any but their own . Yet I may presume to say . that , taking ... ... all the materials of this divine author , I have XX ...
... endeavoured to graff on it ; but most of them are of necessity to be lost , because they will not shine in any but their own . Yet I may presume to say . that , taking ... ... all the materials of this divine author , I have XX ...
Página xxii
... mind and the circumstances of the age in which they lived , were totally unalike ; and inevi- tably something was lost in the translation . But in Dryden we have a translator whose peculiar command of xxii INTRODUCTION.
... mind and the circumstances of the age in which they lived , were totally unalike ; and inevi- tably something was lost in the translation . But in Dryden we have a translator whose peculiar command of xxii INTRODUCTION.
Página 1
... lost , and receives a kind entertainment from the queen . Dido , by a device of Venus , begins to have a passion for him , and , after some discourse with him , desires the history of his adventures since the siege of Troy , which is ...
... lost , and receives a kind entertainment from the queen . Dido , by a device of Venus , begins to have a passion for him , and , after some discourse with him , desires the history of his adventures since the siege of Troy , which is ...
Página 6
... lost . And here and there above the waves were seen Arms , pictures , precious goods , and floating men . The stoutest vessel to the storm gave way , And sucked through loosened planks the rushing sea . Ilioneus was her chief : Aletes ...
... lost . And here and there above the waves were seen Arms , pictures , precious goods , and floating men . The stoutest vessel to the storm gave way , And sucked through loosened planks the rushing sea . Ilioneus was her chief : Aletes ...
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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