The works of Virgil, tr. into Engl. verse by mr. Dryden. Carey, 第 1 巻 |
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28 ページ
... the centurions ' lances took fire miraculously , is hinted in the like accident which befell Acestes , before the burning of the Trojan fleet in Sicily . The reader will easily find many more such in- stances 28 LIFE OF VIRGIL .
... the centurions ' lances took fire miraculously , is hinted in the like accident which befell Acestes , before the burning of the Trojan fleet in Sicily . The reader will easily find many more such in- stances 28 LIFE OF VIRGIL .
35 ページ
... fire , and running after- wards , like witches on their sabbat , into the woods . He bestows indeed some ornaments on the charac- ter of Camilla ; but soon abates his favour , by call- ing her aspera and horrenda virgo : he places her ...
... fire , and running after- wards , like witches on their sabbat , into the woods . He bestows indeed some ornaments on the charac- ter of Camilla ; but soon abates his favour , by call- ing her aspera and horrenda virgo : he places her ...
79 ページ
... fire . O could I find it now ! --- Would Virgil's shade But for a while vouchsafe to bear the light , To grace my numbers , and that Muse to aid , Who sings the poet that has done him right . It long has been this sacred author's fate ...
... fire . O could I find it now ! --- Would Virgil's shade But for a while vouchsafe to bear the light , To grace my numbers , and that Muse to aid , Who sings the poet that has done him right . It long has been this sacred author's fate ...
81 ページ
... fire destroy'd . But Nature , grown extravagantly kind , With all her treasures did adorn your mind . The diff'rent pow'rs were then united found , And you wit's universal monarch crown'd . Your mighty sway your great deserts secures ...
... fire destroy'd . But Nature , grown extravagantly kind , With all her treasures did adorn your mind . The diff'rent pow'rs were then united found , And you wit's universal monarch crown'd . Your mighty sway your great deserts secures ...
96 ページ
... fire Destroy the wretched neighbourhood around , No hostile arms approach your happy ground . Far diff'rent is fate : my my feeble goats With pains I drive from their forsaken cotes . And this , you see , I scarcely drag along , 6 10 15 ...
... fire Destroy the wretched neighbourhood around , No hostile arms approach your happy ground . Far diff'rent is fate : my my feeble goats With pains I drive from their forsaken cotes . And this , you see , I scarcely drag along , 6 10 15 ...
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Æneas Amyntas ancient arms Augustus Bacchus bear beauty beneath betwixt birth boughs browze Cæsar Carey Ceres charms Cicero Corydon crown'd DAMCETAS Daphnis divine Dryden earth Eclogues ENEIS Epicurus ev'ry fields fire flocks flood flow'rs fortune French fruitful Gallus Georgic goats gods grain Greek ground grove happy heav'n heav'nly herds Hesiod Homer honour Italy JOHN DRYDEN Jove judgement Julius Cæsar king lab'ring labour Latin leaves Livy LYCIDAS Mæcenas Mantua MELIBUS MENALCAS MOPSUS Muse nature neighb'ring night numbers nymphs o'er Octavius pains pastoral plain plant plough poem poet poetry Pollio pow'rs praise purple spring rage reader reign rhyme rise Roman Rome sacred seas seems sev'ral shade sheep shepherds shew shore show'rs Silenus sing skies soil song spring swain sweet Mænalian strain tender thee Theocritus Thermodon thou THYRSIS TITYRUS toil trees Varus verse vines Virgil voice wat❜ry winds wine woods words writer
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268 ページ - Happy the man, who, studying nature's laws, Through known effects can trace the secret cause — His mind possessing in a quiet state, Fearless of Fortune, and resigned to Fate!
187 ページ - A Georgic therefore is some part of the science of husbandry put into a pleasing dress, and set off with all the beauties and embellishments of poetry.
164 ページ - Here could I live, and love, and die with only you. Now I to fighting fields am sent afar, .And strive in winter camps with toils of war; While you (alas, that I should find it so!), To shun my sight, your native soil forego, 70 And climb the frozen Alps, and tread th
225 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...
228 ページ - With sharpen'd horns if glorious then she shine, Next day, not only that, but all the moon, Till her revolving race be wholly run, Are void of tempests...
264 ページ - But easy quiet, a secure retreat, A harmless life that knows not how to cheat, With home-bred plenty, the rich owner bless ; And rural pleasures crown his happiness.
133 ページ - His rosy wreath was dropt not long before, Borne by the tide of wine, and floating on the floor. His empty can, with ears half worn away, Was hung on high, to boast the triumph of the day. Invaded thus, for want...
99 ページ - Farewell, my pastures, my paternal stock, My fruitful fields, and my more fruitful flock! No more, my goats, shall I behold you climb The steepy cliffs, or crop the flowery thyme!
128 ページ - Alphesiboeus, tripping, shall advance, And mimic Satyrs in his antic dance. When to the nymphs our annual rites we pay, And when our fields with victims we survey ; While savage boars delight in shady woods, And finny fish inhabit in the floods ; While bees on thyme, and locusts feed on dew — Thy grateful swains these honours shall renew. Such honours as we pay to powers divine, To Bacchus and to Ceres, shall be thine.
222 ページ - And rocks the bellowing voice of boiling seas rebound. The father of the gods his glory shrouds, Involved in tempests, and a night of clouds; And, from the middle darkness flashing out, By fits he deals his fiery bolts about.