The Works of the Greek and Roman Poets, 第 10 巻、第 1~2 部Suttaby, Evance, and Fox, 1813 |
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... turning it into an apotheosis of Julius Cæsar . The sixth is the Silenus . The seventh , another poetical dispute , first com- posed at Mantua . The eighth is the description of a despairing lover , and a magical charm . He sets the ...
... turning it into an apotheosis of Julius Cæsar . The sixth is the Silenus . The seventh , another poetical dispute , first com- posed at Mantua . The eighth is the description of a despairing lover , and a magical charm . He sets the ...
37 ページ
... turning out the right owners for having sided with his enemies . Virgil was a sufferer among the rest ; who afterwards recovered his estate by Mæcenas's inter- cession ; and , as an instance of his gratitude , composed the following ...
... turning out the right owners for having sided with his enemies . Virgil was a sufferer among the rest ; who afterwards recovered his estate by Mæcenas's inter- cession ; and , as an instance of his gratitude , composed the following ...
48 ページ
... turn'd , of beechen wood ; Both by divine Alcimedon were made ; To neither of them yet the lip is laid . The lids are ivy ; grapes in clusters lurk Beneath the carving of the curious work . Two figures on the sides emboss'd appear ...
... turn'd , of beechen wood ; Both by divine Alcimedon were made ; To neither of them yet the lip is laid . The lids are ivy ; grapes in clusters lurk Beneath the carving of the curious work . Two figures on the sides emboss'd appear ...
49 ページ
... turn your tuneful numbers bring ; By turns the tuneful Muses love to sing . DAMETAS . From the great father of the gods above My Muse begins ; for all is full of Jove ; To Jove the care of heaven and earth belongs ; My flocks he blesses ...
... turn your tuneful numbers bring ; By turns the tuneful Muses love to sing . DAMETAS . From the great father of the gods above My Muse begins ; for all is full of Jove ; To Jove the care of heaven and earth belongs ; My flocks he blesses ...
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... turn'd to gold . CORYDON . Fair Galatea , with thy silver feet , O , whiter than the swan , and more than Hybla sweet ! Tall as a poplar , taper as the pole ! Come , charm thy shepherd , and restore my soul . Come , when my lated sheep ...
... turn'd to gold . CORYDON . Fair Galatea , with thy silver feet , O , whiter than the swan , and more than Hybla sweet ! Tall as a poplar , taper as the pole ! Come , charm thy shepherd , and restore my soul . Come , when my lated sheep ...
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多く使われている語句
abode Æneas Æneid Æneïs altars Anchises ancient arms Augustus bear bees behold betwixt Cæsar Carthage clouds Corydon coursers Creüsa crown'd Daphnis death descend Dido divine earth Eclogues Eneïs eyes fate father fear fields fire flames flocks flood flowers foes fortune friends fruitful Georgic give gods Grecian Greeks ground hands happy haste heaven Helenus hero heroic Homer honour Italy JOHN DRYDEN Jove Julius Cæsar Jupiter king labour land leave length light limbs lord lordship LYCIDAS MENALCAS MOPSUS Muse night numbers o'er Ovid pains Pallas pastoral plain plough poem poet poetry praise Priam Priam's promis'd Pyrrhus queen race rage reign rising rocks Roman sacred scarce seas Ségrais shade sheep shepherd shore sight sing sire skies soil song spring streams swain sweet tempest tender thee Theocritus thou toils translation trees trembling Trojan Troy Turnus Tyrian unhappy verse vines Virgil watery winds wine woods words wretched youth
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126 ページ - Wet weather seldom hurts the most unwise ; So plain the signs, such prophets are the skies. The wary crane foresees it first, and sails Above the storm, and leaves the lowly vales...
86 ページ - I have endeavoured to graff on it ; but most of them are of necessity to be lost, because they will not shine in any but their own. Virgil has sometimes two of them in a line; but the scantiness of our heroic verse is not capable of receiving more than. one; and that, too must expiate for many others which have none.
158 ページ - Where yon disorder'd heap of ruin lies, Stones rent from stones; where clouds of dust arise — Amid that smother Neptune holds his place, Below the wall's foundation drives his mace, And heaves the building from the solid base.
47 ページ - Love has nothing of his own ; he borrows all from a greater master in his own profession, and which is worse, improves nothing which he finds. Nature fails him, and being forced to his old shift, he has recourse to witticism. This passes indeed with his soft admirers, and gives him the preference to Virgil in their esteem.
81 ページ - Segrais has distinguished the readers of poetry, according to their capacity of judging, into three classes. [He might have said the same of writers too, if he had pleased.] In the lowest form he places those whom he calls les petits...
93 ページ - If sounding Words are not of our growth and Manufacture, who shall hinder me to Import them from a Foreign Country? I carry not out the Treasure of the Nation, which is never to return: but what I bring from Italy, I spend in England : Here it remains, and here it circulates ; for if the Coyn be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I Trade both with the Living and the Dead, for the enrichment of our Native Language.
90 ページ - I found the difficulty of translation growing on me in every succeeding book: for Virgil, above all poets, had a stock, which I may call almost inexhaustible, of figurative, elegant, and sounding words. I, who inherit but a small portion of his genius, and write in a language so much inferior to the Latin, have found it very painful to vary phrases, when the same sense returns upon me. Even he himself, whether out of necessity or choice, has often expressed the same thing in the same words, and often...
44 ページ - I say nothing (for they were all machining work); but possession having cooled his love, as it increased hers, she soon perceived the change, or at least grew suspicious of a change. This suspicion soon turned to jealousy, and jealousy to rage; then she disdains and threatens, and again is humble and entreats: and, nothing availing, despairs, curses, and at last becomes her own executioner. See here the whole process of that passion, to which nothing can be added.
16 ページ - Art of Poetry; in both of which he observes no method that I can trace, whatever Scaliger the father, or Heinsius, may have seen, or rather think they had seen. I have taken up, laid down, and resumed as often as I pleased, the same subject : and this loose proceeding I shall use through all this prefatory dedication.
94 ページ - ... the next place, whether it will agree with the English idiom : after this, he ought to take the opinion of judicious friends, such as are learned in both languages : and lastly, since no man is infallible, let him use this licence very sparingly; for, if too many foreign words are poured in upon us, it looks as if they were designed, not to assist the natives, but to conquer them.