Catullus, Bände 1-2Harvard University Press, 1893 - 273 Seiten |
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Seite xvi
... indicate that at no time was the family home at Verona broken up in favor of a new one at Rome . EDUCATION . 12. Doubtless to the care of some friend of the family at Rome the youth was entrusted . And there were many - Transpadanes at ...
... indicate that at no time was the family home at Verona broken up in favor of a new one at Rome . EDUCATION . 12. Doubtless to the care of some friend of the family at Rome the youth was entrusted . And there were many - Transpadanes at ...
Seite xxiv
... indicate the course of his struggle with himself , it may be well to pause here a few moments longer to ask who this Lesbia was . That we have in the poems of Catullus a real and not an imaginative sketch of a love - episode cannot be ...
... indicate the course of his struggle with himself , it may be well to pause here a few moments longer to ask who this Lesbia was . That we have in the poems of Catullus a real and not an imaginative sketch of a love - episode cannot be ...
Seite xxvii
... indicates that Catullus made this return voyage in a small vessel of Amastriac build purchased by him for this purpose . It almost seems from his account as if it were built to his order , and that he embarked in it at Amastris rather ...
... indicates that Catullus made this return voyage in a small vessel of Amastriac build purchased by him for this purpose . It almost seems from his account as if it were built to his order , and that he embarked in it at Amastris rather ...
Seite xl
... indicated by Cicero , and there seems to be no good reason to doubt that he is the Cornificius rhetor not infrequently quoted by Quintilian . With but slightly less probability may be attributed to him the work on xl INTRODUCTION .
... indicated by Cicero , and there seems to be no good reason to doubt that he is the Cornificius rhetor not infrequently quoted by Quintilian . With but slightly less probability may be attributed to him the work on xl INTRODUCTION .
Seite xlii
... indicates no intimate friendship with his petitioner , whose much greater age and high position gave him , however , the power to become an influential patron . That the friendship made no progress seems to be indicated by the ...
... indicates no intimate friendship with his petitioner , whose much greater age and high position gave him , however , the power to become an influential patron . That the friendship made no progress seems to be indicated by the ...
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adjective amores animi apparently atque Avantius Baehrens Bergk Bithynia bona Cæsar Calvus caput Carm Catul Catullus choliambic Cicero corrected Currite Cybele dative Ellis Epod etiam filled in G Flac Froehlich Furius G with title Geor Greek haec Haupt Heinsius hunc Hymen Hymen Hymenaee Idalium illa interval Intr ipse Iuppiter Juventius Lachmann Lesbia Lucr magis mala Mamurra marginal title Mart mente meos Metre mihi modo multa Muretus neque nihil nobis nulla nunc oculis omitted omnes omnia paragraph mark passion pede Peleus perhaps Phalaecean Plaut Plin poem poet Prop puella quae quam Quare quid quis quod reference Riese Roman Rome saepe satis Scaliger Schwabe simul Sirmio Statius sunt tamen Theseus tibi tion Trist uirgo uiro uita Verg Verona verse word