Latin: Fourth YearSilver, Burdett, 1931 - 439 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 88
Página 88
... gods of the two peoples par- ticipated ; hence , socii Penātēs ; trans . an ancient ally of Troy and one with friendly gods . 16. Feror hûc : Vergil allows us to assume that by this time the Greeks had departed . 18. Aeneadās nomen ...
... gods of the two peoples par- ticipated ; hence , socii Penātēs ; trans . an ancient ally of Troy and one with friendly gods . 16. Feror hûc : Vergil allows us to assume that by this time the Greeks had departed . 18. Aeneadās nomen ...
Página 350
... God , but the mortal Merops . Phaethon proceeded to the abode of the god and was identified as his son . Betrayed by a sacred promise to allow him any privilege for which he might ask , the Sun - God lent him his chariot for a day with ...
... God , but the mortal Merops . Phaethon proceeded to the abode of the god and was identified as his son . Betrayed by a sacred promise to allow him any privilege for which he might ask , the Sun - God lent him his chariot for a day with ...
Página 374
... Gods Unawares Pirithous at a banquet had made fun of the gods ; he had claimed that their power over mortal affairs was grossly exaggerated . Lelex , one of the heroes in the Calydonian boar hunt , thereupon told the story of a pure ...
... Gods Unawares Pirithous at a banquet had made fun of the gods ; he had claimed that their power over mortal affairs was grossly exaggerated . Lelex , one of the heroes in the Calydonian boar hunt , thereupon told the story of a pure ...
Contenido
THE TECHNIQUE OF POETRY | xviii |
RHETORICAL TERMS AND FIGURES | xxix |
THE LIFE AND WORKS OF VERGIL | xl |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 27 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Aeneas Aeneid aequis aequor aethere altō Anchises animō Apollo arma Ascanius atque Augustus aurās caelō caput Catullus circum coniunx Dardanus death Dido domus erat fāta fuit genus gods Greek haec hanc haud hendiadys hinc Hippomenes Horace hunc Iamque illa ille ingēns inque Introd ipsa ipse Italiam Italy Iuppiter Juno Jupiter king Latin Latium litora lower world magnō manu manūs Metre mihi moenia neque nōn nōs nunc oculis Odes omnia omnis ōra ōre Ovid pater poem poet poetry procul Proserpina quae quam quid quis quō quod quoque rēgna Roman Rome Rutuli Rutulians sẽ sēsē simul spondee super syllable tālia tamen tantō tantum terra terrās tibi Tibullus tmesis trans Trojans Troy Turnus umbrās undās urbem Venus Vergil vērō verse vēstīgia virum voltūs vōs word