Virgil's Aeneid: Books I, II and VI., Livros 1-2University Press, 1911 - 136 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 21
Página xiii
... tears . ' The permanence of poetry depends on the closeness of its relation to the great principles of life , the fundamental problems which have agitated the minds of men in every age . As a poem in celebration of the greatness of Rome ...
... tears . ' The permanence of poetry depends on the closeness of its relation to the great principles of life , the fundamental problems which have agitated the minds of men in every age . As a poem in celebration of the greatness of Rome ...
Página xix
... tears of Calypso for being left to the fury and death of Dido ? Where is there the whole process of her passion , and all its violent effects to be found , in the languishing episode of the Odysses ? If this be to copy , let the critics ...
... tears of Calypso for being left to the fury and death of Dido ? Where is there the whole process of her passion , and all its violent effects to be found , in the languishing episode of the Odysses ? If this be to copy , let the critics ...
Página 9
... tears , her heavenly sire bespoke : ' O King of Gods and men , whose awful hand Disperses thunder on the seas and land , Disposing all with absolute command : How could my pious son thy power incense , Or what , alas ! is vanished ...
... tears , her heavenly sire bespoke : ' O King of Gods and men , whose awful hand Disperses thunder on the seas and land , Disposing all with absolute command : How could my pious son thy power incense , Or what , alas ! is vanished ...
Página 18
... tears a ready passage find , Devouring what he saw so well designed ; And with an empty picture fed his mind : For there he saw the fainting Grecians yield , And here the trembling Trojans quit the field , Pursued by fierce Achilles ...
... tears a ready passage find , Devouring what he saw so well designed ; And with an empty picture fed his mind : For there he saw the fainting Grecians yield , And here the trembling Trojans quit the field , Pursued by fierce Achilles ...
Página 29
... I was : Not even the hardest of our foes could hear , Nor stern Ulysses tell , without a tear . And now the latter watch of wasting night , IO And setting stars , to kindly rest invite . But The Second Book of the Æneis.
... I was : Not even the hardest of our foes could hear , Nor stern Ulysses tell , without a tear . And now the latter watch of wasting night , IO And setting stars , to kindly rest invite . But The Second Book of the Æneis.
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