Ovid: The Metamorphoses, Book X-XV. The EpistlesA. J. Valpy, 1833 |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-5 av 58
Sida 26
... Falls at his feet , and , with a seeming sense , Implores his pardon for its late offence . 10 15 20 20 But now their frantic rage unbounded grows , Turus all to madness , and no measure knows : Yet this the charms of music might subdue ...
... Falls at his feet , and , with a seeming sense , Implores his pardon for its late offence . 10 15 20 20 But now their frantic rage unbounded grows , Turus all to madness , and no measure knows : Yet this the charms of music might subdue ...
Sida 46
... fall , to court the wind , and catch the gales . By this the vessel half her course had run , And as much rested till the rising sun ; Both shores were lost to sight , when at the close Of day a stiffer gale at east arose : 635 640 645 ...
... fall , to court the wind , and catch the gales . By this the vessel half her course had run , And as much rested till the rising sun ; Both shores were lost to sight , when at the close Of day a stiffer gale at east arose : 635 640 645 ...
Sida 48
... falling one , the heavens and sea Meet at their confines , in the middle way ; 705 710 715 720 725 The sails are ... falls , no succor near 48 OVID .
... falling one , the heavens and sea Meet at their confines , in the middle way ; 705 710 715 720 725 The sails are ... falls , no succor near 48 OVID .
Sida 49
... falls , than if some giant tore Pindus and Athos with the freight they bore , 765 And toss'd on seas , press'd with the ponderous blow , Down sinks the ship within the abyss below ; Down with the vessel sink into the main The many ...
... falls , than if some giant tore Pindus and Athos with the freight they bore , 765 And toss'd on seas , press'd with the ponderous blow , Down sinks the ship within the abyss below ; Down with the vessel sink into the main The many ...
Sida 50
... falling billow stops his breath , Breaks o'er his head , and whelms him under- neath . Bright Lucifer unlike himself appears 790 That night , his heavenly form obscured with tears , And since he was forbid to leave the skies , He ...
... falling billow stops his breath , Breaks o'er his head , and whelms him under- neath . Bright Lucifer unlike himself appears 790 That night , his heavenly form obscured with tears , And since he was forbid to leave the skies , He ...
Vanliga ord och fraser
Achilles Acontius Æneas Ajax arms bear behold betray'd birds bless'd blood bore breast Briseis Cæneus call'd centaur Ceyx charms cried crime Cycnus CYPARISSUS dart death Diomed dreadful earth Ev'n eyes face fair fame fatal fate father fear field fierce fight fill'd fire fix'd flame fled flew flies flood goddess gods grace Grecian grief hair hand haste heart heaven Hector Hecuba hero Hippomenes honor join'd Jove king Latian Lemnos light limbs live Macareus maid Menelaus mighty mind Mopsus mourn night nymph o'er once OVID pass'd Peleus Philoctetes Phoebus Pirithous plain prayers prey Priam Protesilaus purple queen race rage rise sacred sails Sappho Scylla seas seem'd shade shore sight sire skies slain soft soul stood streams sword tears thee Theseus thine thou Thracian trembling Trojan Troy turn'd Twas Ulysses Venus Vertumnus virgin vows waves wife winds wound wretch youth
Populära avsnitt
Sida 154 - But suffer inmate souls secure to dwell, Lest from their seats your parents you expel ; With rabid hunger feed upon your kind, Or from a beast dislodge a brother's mind.
Sida 86 - Forc'd him t' exert the king for common good, And pay our ransom with his daughter's blood. Never was cause more difficult to plead, Than where the judge against himself decreed: Yet this I won by dint of argument ; The wrongs his injur'd brother underwent, And his own office, sham'd him to consent.
Sida 75 - Dost thou not blush, to spend thy shafts in vain On a degenerate and ignoble train ? If fame, or better vengeance, be thy care, There aim : and, with one arrow, end the war.
Sida 167 - To inclose his body, and his soul expel. Ill customs by degrees to habits rise, 111 habits soon become exalted vice : What more advance can mortals make in sin, So near perfection, who with blood begin ? Deaf to the calf that lies beneath the knife, Looks up, and from her butcher begs her life...
Sida 155 - And as the fountain still supplies her store, The wave behind impels the wave before; Thus in successive course the minutes run, And urge their predecessor minutes on...
Sida 168 - Kill noxious creatures, where 'tis sin to save ; This only just prerogative we have : But nourish life with vegetable food, And shun the sacrilegious taste of blood.
Sida 78 - And he who shunn'd all honors gain the best ; And let me stand excluded from my right, Robb'd of my kinsman's arms, who first appear'd in fight. Better for us, at home...
Sida 152 - And plough'd with pains, thy else ungrateful field ? From his yet reeking neck to draw the yoke, That neck, with which the surly clods he broke ; And to the hatchet yield thy husbandman, , Who finish'd Autumn, and the Spring began J Nor this alone ! but Heav'n itself to bribe, We to the gods our impious acts ascribe : First recompense with death their creatures...
Sida 86 - There in the midst of arms, I plead our cause, Urge the foul rape, and violated laws ; Accuse the foes, as authors of the strife, Reproach the ravisher, demand the wife. Priam, Antenor, and the wiser few...
Sida 88 - Were promis'd to the spy for his nocturnal deeds : And let dull Ajax bear away my right, When all his days outbalance this one night. Nor fought I darkling still : the sun beheld With...