A history of Roman literature, tr. by W. Wagner, Volume 1 |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 58
Page 28
... Virgil , Jahn's Archiv II p . 558 sqq . 20. A heroic epic was impossible at Rome in its original state , the Italian gods being mere abstractions , and godlike heroes unknown to the people . When , therefore , towards the end of the ...
... Virgil , Jahn's Archiv II p . 558 sqq . 20. A heroic epic was impossible at Rome in its original state , the Italian gods being mere abstractions , and godlike heroes unknown to the people . When , therefore , towards the end of the ...
Page 29
... Virgil's Aeneid , in which an indigenous legend is told in a historic and psychological manner , and this became the pattern of poetical composition to the subsequent poets . After the victory of Christianity subjects taken from the ...
... Virgil's Aeneid , in which an indigenous legend is told in a historic and psychological manner , and this became the pattern of poetical composition to the subsequent poets . After the victory of Christianity subjects taken from the ...
Page 30
... Virgil who in his Georgics treated a well - chosen subject with warmth and perfect art . Ovid employed the elegiac metre in the playful didactic treatment of erotic subjects ( Ars amandi , Remedia amoris , Medicamina faciei ) , and of ...
... Virgil who in his Georgics treated a well - chosen subject with warmth and perfect art . Ovid employed the elegiac metre in the playful didactic treatment of erotic subjects ( Ars amandi , Remedia amoris , Medicamina faciei ) , and of ...
Page 34
... Virgil and , in his peculiar fashion , also Horace . But on the whole the Romans were too well acquainted with country - life to idealise it . Virgil , who had grown up in the country , in his youth at first chanced upon this species ...
... Virgil and , in his peculiar fashion , also Horace . But on the whole the Romans were too well acquainted with country - life to idealise it . Virgil , who had grown up in the country , in his youth at first chanced upon this species ...
Page 35
... Virgil's Georg . see espec . II 448 sqq . Horace ( S. II 6. Ep . I 10 ) cherishes and praises rustic life as healthful and independent . Macrob . Sat. III 98 , 19 : Suevius , vir longe doctissimus , in idyllio quod inscribitur Moretum ...
... Virgil's Georg . see espec . II 448 sqq . Horace ( S. II 6. Ep . I 10 ) cherishes and praises rustic life as healthful and independent . Macrob . Sat. III 98 , 19 : Suevius , vir longe doctissimus , in idyllio quod inscribitur Moretum ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
A History of Roman Literature, Tr. by W. Wagner Wilhelm Sigmund Teuffel Aucun aperçu disponible - 2015 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Aelius Aeneid apud atque auctor Augustus autem Berlin Bonn Brut Brutus Caes Caesar Cato Catullus century Charis Cicero comp Cons controv Cornelius Cornelius Nepos Drumann edition eius Ennius erat especially etiam fasti fragments fuit Gell Gellius Gracchi Gracchus Greek Haakh in Pauly's Hist Horace Hyginus iuris Jahn's Jahrb Latin Leipzig libri libro Lips Livy Lugd Macrob mentioned Messala metre Mommsen multa orationes orator Orelli Ovid Pauly's Encyclop perhaps period Philologus Plautus Plin Plut poems poeta poets Pollio praef praetor Priscian Propertius quae Quaest quam quibus quidem Quintil Quintilian quod quoted rerum Rhein rhetorical Ritschl Roman Rome saec Sallust Schol scripsit speeches style Suet Suetonius sunt tamen Teuffel Teuffel in Pauly's Tibullus Valerius Valgius Varro VIII Virgil vita vols writings wrote καὶ
Fréquemment cités
Page 345 - Pierides, sunt et mihi carmina, me quoque dicunt vatem pastores; sed non ego credulus illis. nam neque adhuc Vario videor nee dicere Cinna digna, sed argutos inter strepere anser olores.
Page 33 - Et tamen in illis veteribus nostris quae Menippum imitati, non interpretati, quadam hilaritate conspersimus, multa admixta ex intima philosophia, multa dicta dialectice ; quae cum1 facilius minus docti intellegerent iucunditate quadam ad legendum invitati* in laudationibus, in his ipsis antiquitatum prooemiis philosophis scribere voluimus, si modo consecuti sumus.
Page 78 - Praeneste in superiore fori parte circa hemicyclium in quo fastos a se ordinatos et marmoreo parieti incisos publicarat.
Page 443 - Me dolor et lacrimae merito fecere peritum: Atque utinam posito dicar amore rudis! Quid tibi nunc misero prodest grave dicere carmen, Aut Amphioniae moenia flere lyrae? 1o Plus in amore valet Mimnermi versus Homero: Carmina mansuetus lenia quaerit Amor. I quaeso et tristis istos compone libellos, Et cane, quod quaevis nosse puella velit.
Page 440 - Sacra recognosces annalibus eruta priscis, Et quo sit merito quaeque notata dies.
Page 434 - OVIDI Medea videtur mihi ostendere quantum ille vir praestare potuerit si ingenio suo imperare quam indulgere maluisset.
Page 36 - Musae haberet ; saepeque eum percontabantur quid de Anacreonte ceterisque id genus poetis sentiret et ecquis nostrorum poetarum tarn fluentes carminum delicias fecisset. "Nisi Catullus," inquiunt, "forte pauca et Calvus itidem pauca. Nam Laevius inplicata et Hortensius invenusta et Cinna inlepida et Memmius dura ac deinceps omnes rudia fecerunt atque absona.
Page 310 - Non verba autem sola, sed versus prope totos et locos quoque Lucreti plurimos sectatum esse Vergilium videmus.
Page 209 - Nam nos in nostra urbe peregrinantis errantisque tamquam hospites tui libri quasi domum deduxerunt, ut possemus aliquando qui et ubi essemus agnoscere. Tu aetatem patriae, tu descriptiones temporum, tu sacrorum iura, tu sacerdotum, tu domesticam, tu bellicam disciplinam, tu sedem regionum locorum, tu omnium divinarum humanarumque rerum nomina, genera, officia, causas aperuisti...
Page 420 - ... iure igitur lacrimas Celso libamus adempto, cum fugerem, vivo quas dedit ille mihi; carmina iure damus raros testantia mores, ut tua venturi nomina, Celse, legant.