Poetical Works, Utgåva 1Houghton Mifflin, 1950 - 1095 sidor |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 85
Sida 498
... Virgil , or have read him slightly ; otherwise they would not raise an objection so easy to be answer'd . " Hereupon he gives so many instances of the hero's valor , that to repeat them after him would tire your Lordship , and put me to ...
... Virgil , or have read him slightly ; otherwise they would not raise an objection so easy to be answer'd . " Hereupon he gives so many instances of the hero's valor , that to repeat them after him would tire your Lordship , and put me to ...
Sida 710
... Virgil has made a collection of many scattering passages which he had translated from Theocritus , and here he has bound them into a nosegay . GEORGIC I. The poetry of this book is more sublime than any part of Virgil , if I have any ...
... Virgil has made a collection of many scattering passages which he had translated from Theocritus , and here he has bound them into a nosegay . GEORGIC I. The poetry of this book is more sublime than any part of Virgil , if I have any ...
Sida 714
... Virgil borrow'd this imagination from Ho- mer , Odysses the 19th , line 562. The translation gives the reason why true prophetic dreams are said to pass thro ' the gate of horn , by adding the epithet transparent , which is not in Virgil ...
... Virgil borrow'd this imagination from Ho- mer , Odysses the 19th , line 562. The translation gives the reason why true prophetic dreams are said to pass thro ' the gate of horn , by adding the epithet transparent , which is not in Virgil ...
Innehåll
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH | xvii |
PROLOGUE TO THE UNIVERSITY | xxix |
73 | xlviii |
Upphovsrätt | |
60 andra avsnitt visas inte
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
Absalom Absalom and Achitophel Achitophel arms bear beauty better betwixt bold Cæsar call'd crimes critics dare death design'd Dido Duke's Company edition English Ennius EPILOGUE Ev'n ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear fire flames foes forc'd Georgics give gods grace Grecian hand happy haste Heav'n heroic honor Horace John Dryden Jove Juvenal kind king King's Company land lines live Lord Lucilius Lucretius Mac Flecknoe mighty mind Muse nature never night noble numbers o'er once Ovid pain Persius plain play pleas'd poem poet poetry pow'r praise prince PROLOGUE rage rais'd reign Religio Laici rest rhyme rise Roman sacred satire SATIRE OF JUVENAL Shadwell shew shore song soul sweet thee Theocritus Thomas Shadwell thou thought thro translation Trojan true us'd verse Virgil virtue Whig winds words write youth