The Odes of Horace, tr. by J. Scriven |
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Seite 2
... dreading Afric's breeze , While struggling with Icarian seas , Though lauding then the leisure sweet Of his own rural town's retreat , His shatter'd bark will soon repair , -Want's pinching straits untaught to bear.- This man the ...
... dreading Afric's breeze , While struggling with Icarian seas , Though lauding then the leisure sweet Of his own rural town's retreat , His shatter'd bark will soon repair , -Want's pinching straits untaught to bear.- This man the ...
Seite 7
... dread the incursive Medes , While Cæsar's arm our warfare leads . ODE III . TO THE SHIP IN WHICH VIRGIL SAILED TO ATHENS . So may the queen of Cyprus ' isle , So Helen's radiant brothers smile , So Eolus waft thee o'er the seas , With ...
... dread the incursive Medes , While Cæsar's arm our warfare leads . ODE III . TO THE SHIP IN WHICH VIRGIL SAILED TO ATHENS . So may the queen of Cyprus ' isle , So Helen's radiant brothers smile , So Eolus waft thee o'er the seas , With ...
Seite 19
... dread the tempest's angry roar . Unsought the morrow's fate remain , But count the accorded day as gain ; Nor spurn the dance , nor love's sweet vows , While whiteness spares thy youthful brows . Now for the Campus , and the park ! The ...
... dread the tempest's angry roar . Unsought the morrow's fate remain , But count the accorded day as gain ; Nor spurn the dance , nor love's sweet vows , While whiteness spares thy youthful brows . Now for the Campus , and the park ! The ...
Seite 36
... throng , Whose greedy lust confounded right with wrong . Not thee unwilling - Bacchus , will I rouse , - Nor rites reveal , conceal'd by various boughs . Cease thy dread cymbals , and thy Phrygian horn , 36 BOOK I. ODES ODE XVIII. ...
... throng , Whose greedy lust confounded right with wrong . Not thee unwilling - Bacchus , will I rouse , - Nor rites reveal , conceal'd by various boughs . Cease thy dread cymbals , and thy Phrygian horn , 36 BOOK I. ODES ODE XVIII. ...
Seite 37
... lustre of her face . Venus deserts her Cyprian bowers , Invading me with all her powers ; Bids me no more of Scythians write , Or Parthian D 3 ODE XIX . 37 OF HORACE . Cease thy dread cymbals, and thy Phrygian horn, ...
... lustre of her face . Venus deserts her Cyprian bowers , Invading me with all her powers ; Bids me no more of Scythians write , Or Parthian D 3 ODE XIX . 37 OF HORACE . Cease thy dread cymbals, and thy Phrygian horn, ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adria's Alcides Apollo's Apulian arms Atrides Augustus Bacchus bard bear blest boasts bold breeze brow Cæsar's Carthage cask Chloë Colchian crime cruel dark dart delight disgrace doom'd dread earth Eurus fair Falernian wine fame fate Faunus fear fierce fiery fire flame flight flow Formian gentle Glycera gods gold grace groves Gyges hair heaven Henry honours Iapyx immortal impious Jove Latian lengthen'd Lord LYDIA lyre MECENAS Mede Muse numbers nymphs o'er ODE VII ODE XIV Orcus PHIDYLE Phoebus Pirithous pour'd praise pride proud race rage rapid Roman Rome sacred Scorning Scythian seas Serjt shade shalt shine shore shun sing sire Six copies smile song soul spurns Sthenelus strain stream strife sway sweet Telephus Teucer thee thine Thracian Three copies Thrice Tiber's tide toil trembling Trojan TYNDARIS Venus Vindelici virgin wanton waves Whate'er wine wouldst thou wreath youth
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 146 - How much." The quantum, "the due proportion." "His quantum of common sense," that is, "His amount
Seite 6 - TO THE SHIP IN WHICH VIRGIL SAILED TO ATHENS. So may the queen of Cyprus...
Seite 54 - ODE XXXI. TO APOLLO. WHAT asks the bard at Delos' shrine, Whose goblet pours its earliest wine ? Not the rich store of golden grain, Which gilds Sardinia's fertile plain ; Not flocks from hot Calabria's shore ; Not gold, nor India's ivory store ; Nor lands, where Liris' waters stray, And — silent — eat their banks away.