Selections from the Poems of OvidD. Appleton, 1882 - 238 Seiten |
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Seite iii
... poetic Latin , before he comes to the statelier numbers and the loftier diction of Vergil . And , certainly , in respect to the subjects treated by the two poets , it seems fitting that those immortal stories from the Greek and Roman ...
... poetic Latin , before he comes to the statelier numbers and the loftier diction of Vergil . And , certainly , in respect to the subjects treated by the two poets , it seems fitting that those immortal stories from the Greek and Roman ...
Seite vii
... poet has repeatedly recorded in verse . # His father lived to the advanced age of ninety ; and Ovid , while mentioning this fact , || as well as the death of his mother , and the grief he felt for their loss , yet counted himself happy ...
... poet has repeatedly recorded in verse . # His father lived to the advanced age of ninety ; and Ovid , while mentioning this fact , || as well as the death of his mother , and the grief he felt for their loss , yet counted himself happy ...
Seite viii
... poetic instincts ; and , as we learn from the rhetorician Seneca , t his prose diction had in it something of the ... poet Macer , # and especially resorting to Athens , || and there quickening his genius and increasing his lit- erary ...
... poetic instincts ; and , as we learn from the rhetorician Seneca , t his prose diction had in it something of the ... poet Macer , # and especially resorting to Athens , || and there quickening his genius and increasing his lit- erary ...
Seite ix
... poet , not only with the people , but also with all his brother - poets then living in Rome , to most of whom he became united by ties of personal as well as of literary companionship . These he mentions in an interesting passage in ...
... poet , not only with the people , but also with all his brother - poets then living in Rome , to most of whom he became united by ties of personal as well as of literary companionship . These he mentions in an interesting passage in ...
Seite x
... poet in that highly cultivated Roman society , unless it be that of Horace , shows the traces of a more assiduous culture , of more patient toil in the exercise of his art , than that of Ovid in all the various efforts of his Muse . In ...
... poet in that highly cultivated Roman society , unless it be that of Horace , shows the traces of a more assiduous culture , of more patient toil in the exercise of his art , than that of Ovid in all the various efforts of his Muse . In ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achelous agrees Alcyone allusion Apollo auras back Boeotia bracchia Cadmus caelo caelum called changed conjunx corpore course Cyclops daughter death Delos Deucalion deus earth elegiac English Eurydice expresses expression fabled father first form Galatea given goddess gods golden Grammar great Greek HARKNESS'S heavens hence Hercules Hippomenes Horace illa ille Inque Jamque Juno Juppiter king last Latin Latona life limits line lines literally Livy long love lower world Lucifer lumina made makes meaning means Metamorphoses mihi name Niobe Notes object Observe Orpheus oscula Ovid Ovid's Paradise Lost pectora perhaps Perque Phaethon Phoebus place poem poet poetic poetry poets Propertius prose referring refers represents river Roman Rome Romulus same See Gr see note seems sense sine story Styx subject tamen tellus terrae Tethys thing thought three tibi Tibullus town Tristia unda undas undis used Utque Vergil verse vultus whole word words
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 216 - Blessings be with them — and eternal praise, Who gave us nobler loves, and nobler cares — The Poets, who on earth have made us heirs Of truth and pure delight by heavenly lays ! Oh ! might my name be numbered among theirs, Then gladly would I end my mortal days.
Seite 10 - Nympha, precor, Peneï, mane ! non insequor hostis ; nympha, mane ! sic agna lupum, sic cerva leonem, 505 sic aquilam penna fugiunt trepidante columbae, hostes quaeque suos. Amor est mihi causa sequendi.
Seite 134 - ... me sollicitae taedia lucis habent, gratia, Musa, tibi : nam tu solacia praebes, tu curae requies, tu medicina venis. tu dux et comes es, tu nos abducis ab Histro, in medioque mihi das Helicone locum ; 120 tu mihi, quod rarum est, vivo sublime dedisti nomen, ab exequiis quod dare fama solet.
Seite 34 - Thisbes 115 tollit, et ad pactae secum fert arboris umbram, utque dedit notae lacrimas, dedit oscula vesti, "accipe nunc" inquit "nostri quoque sanguinis haustus!" quoque erat accinctus, demisit in ilia ferrum, nec mora, ferventi moriens e vulnere traxit 120 et iacuit resupinus humo: cruor emicat alte non aliter, quam cum vitiato fistula plumbo scinditur et tenui stridente foramine longas eiaculatur aquas atque ictibus aera rumpit.
Seite 18 - Occupat ille levem iuvenali corpore currum, statque super, manibusque datas contingere habenas gaudet et invito grates agit inde parenti. interea volucres Pyrois et Eous et Aethon, Solis equi, quartusque Phlegon hinnitibus auras flammiferis inplent pedibusque repagula pulsant.
Seite 112 - ... lamque opus exegi, quod nee lovis ira nee ignis nee poterit ferrum nee edax abolere vetustas. cum volet, ilia dies, quae nil nisi corporis huius ius habet, incerti spatium mihi finiat aevi: parte tamen meliore mei super alta perennis astra ferar, nomenque erit indelebile nostrum, quaque patet domitis Romana potentia terris, ore legar populi, perque omnia saecula fama, siquid habent veri vatum praesagia, vivam.
Seite 67 - ... imposita est, geminas opifex libravit in alas ipse suum corpus motaque pependit in aura. instruit et natum, ' Medio ' que ' ut limite curras, Icare,' ait 'moneo, ne, si demissior ibis, unda gravet pennas, si celsior, ignis adurat : 205 inter utrumque vola.
Seite xxii - ... orbem. sic ubi dispositam, quisquis fuit ille deorum, congeriem secuit sectamque in membra redegit : principio terram, ne non aequalis ab omni parte foret, magni speciem glomeravit in orbis.
Seite 132 - Carmina cum primum populo juvenilia legi, Barba resecta mihi bisve semelve fuit. Moverat ingenium totam cantata per Urbem Nomine non vero dicta Corinna mihi.
Seite 113 - ... ingrato vocem prostituisse foro? Mortale est, quod quaeris, opus; mihi fama perennis quaeritur, in toto semper ut orbe canar. Vivet Maeonides, Tenedos dum stabit et Ide, dum rapidas Simois in mare volvet aquas...