Ovid, Volym 2Harper & brothers, 1836 |
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Resultat 1-5 av 86
Sida 12
... thee , to pastures fresh , he oft was led , By thee oft water'd at the fountain's head ; 194 His horns with garlands , now , by thee were tied , And , now , thou on his back wouldst wanton ride ; Now here , now there , wouldst bound ...
... thee , to pastures fresh , he oft was led , By thee oft water'd at the fountain's head ; 194 His horns with garlands , now , by thee were tied , And , now , thou on his back wouldst wanton ride ; Now here , now there , wouldst bound ...
Sida 14
... thee too , Hyacinth , design'd A place among the gods , had fate been kind : Yet this he gave : as oft as wintry rains Are pass'd , and vernal breezes soothe the plains , From the green turf a purple flower you rise , And with your ...
... thee too , Hyacinth , design'd A place among the gods , had fate been kind : Yet this he gave : as oft as wintry rains Are pass'd , and vernal breezes soothe the plains , From the green turf a purple flower you rise , And with your ...
Sida 15
... thee , or but with thee , die ! But cruel fates to me that power deny : Yet on my tongue thou shalt for ever dwell ; Thy name my lyre shall sound , my verse shall tell ; And to a flower transform'd , unheard of yet , Stamp'd on thy ...
... thee , or but with thee , die ! But cruel fates to me that power deny : Yet on my tongue thou shalt for ever dwell ; Thy name my lyre shall sound , my verse shall tell ; And to a flower transform'd , unheard of yet , Stamp'd on thy ...
Sida 20
... boar , And trembles at the lion's hungry roar . Thee too , Adonis , with a lover's care , 450 455 She warns , if warn'd , thou wouldst avoid the snare : 461 465 " To furious animals advance not nigh ; 20 OVID . Story of Venus and Adonis.
... boar , And trembles at the lion's hungry roar . Thee too , Adonis , with a lover's care , 450 455 She warns , if warn'd , thou wouldst avoid the snare : 461 465 " To furious animals advance not nigh ; 20 OVID . Story of Venus and Adonis.
Sida 21
... thee unfold , 470 475 How the fell monsters rose from crimes of old : 480- But by long toils I faint . See ! wide display'd , A grateful poplar courts us with a shade ; The grassy turf , beneath , so verdant shows , We may secure ...
... thee unfold , 470 475 How the fell monsters rose from crimes of old : 480- But by long toils I faint . See ! wide display'd , A grateful poplar courts us with a shade ; The grassy turf , beneath , so verdant shows , We may secure ...
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Achilles Acontius Ajax Anaxarete arms bear behold betray'd bless'd blood bore breast Briseis call'd Ceyx charms cried crime cursed Cycnus Cydippe CYPARISSUS dart dear death dreadful earth Ev'n eyes face fair fame fatal fate father fear fierce fight fill'd fire fix'd flame flood goddess gods grace Grecian Greece grief hair hand haste heart heaven Hector Hecuba hero Hippolytus Hippomenes honour hope join'd Jove kind king Latian Lemnos light limbs live Macareus maid Medea Menelaus mighty mind mourn night nuptial nymph o'er once pass'd Peleus Phoebus pious Pirithous plain prayers prey Priam PROTESILAUS race rage sacred sails Sappho Scylla seas seem'd shade shame shore sight sire skies slain soft soul stood streams sword tears tender thee Theseus thine thou Thracian trembling Trojan Troy Twas Ulysses Venus Vertumnus vows waves wife winds wound wretch yield youth
Populära avsnitt
Sida 156 - 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 154 - 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 153 - And gorge the' ungodly maw with meats obscene. ' Not so the golden age, who fed on fruit, Nor durst with bloody meals their mouths pollute. Then birds in airy space might safely move, And timorous hares on heaths securely rove: Nor needed fish the guileful hooks to fear, For all was peaceful; and that peace sincere.
Sida 155 - To think of death, as but an idle thing. Why thus affrighted at an empty name, A dream of darkness, and fictitious flame ? Vain themes of wit, which but in poems pass...
Sida 63 - Receive of fresh reports a flowing tide; A thousand crannies in the walls are made; Nor gate nor bars exclude the busy trade. 'Tis built of brass, the better to diffuse The spreading sounds, and multiply the news; Where echoes in repeated echoes play: A mart for ever full, and open night and day. 70 Nor silence is within, nor voice express, But a deaf noise of sounds that never cease; Confused, and chiding, like the hollow roar Of tides, receding from the insulted shore.
Sida 156 - 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 83 - Then when he saw the promised hour was near, He thus bespoke the god, that guides the year : — Immortal offspring of my brother Jove, My brightest nephew, and whom best I love, Whose hands were join'd with mine, to raise the wall Of...
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 53 - And mock their forms, the leaves on trees not more, Nor bearded ears in fields, nor sands upon the shore.
Sida 71 - The hero snatch'd it up, and toss'd in air Full at the front of the foul ravisher. He falls ; and falling vomits forth a flood Of wine, and foam, and brains, and mingled blood. Half roaring, and half neighing through the hall, Arms, arms...