The Odes of HoraceW. Pickering, 1843 - 215 Seiten |
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Seite 1
... gods the soul , The gods who heaven and earth control ! B One seeks of three - fold honours proud The favour THE ...
... gods the soul , The gods who heaven and earth control ! B One seeks of three - fold honours proud The favour THE ...
Seite 3
... gods divine ; And shadowy groves exclude the throng Where Satyrs dance the nymphs among ; If still resound Euterpe's strains , ― Nor Polyhymnia's hand disdains , - Unkind the Lesbian harp to grace : - But if your poet's name you place ...
... gods divine ; And shadowy groves exclude the throng Where Satyrs dance the nymphs among ; If still resound Euterpe's strains , ― Nor Polyhymnia's hand disdains , - Unkind the Lesbian harp to grace : - But if your poet's name you place ...
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... god shall now the people's prayers Call to the ruin'd state's affairs ? What hymn the sacred virgins raise To Vesta - heedless of our lays ? To whom shall Jove assign the fate The crimes of B 3 ODE II . 5 OF HORACE . We've seen the ...
... god shall now the people's prayers Call to the ruin'd state's affairs ? What hymn the sacred virgins raise To Vesta - heedless of our lays ? To whom shall Jove assign the fate The crimes of B 3 ODE II . 5 OF HORACE . We've seen the ...
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Horace. ODE VIII . TO LYDIA . LYDIA , by all the gods above , Why ruin Sybaris with your love ? Why the hot Campus does he shun , So patient once of dust and sun ? Why now no more - as once - his pride Amid compatriot knights to ride ...
Horace. ODE VIII . TO LYDIA . LYDIA , by all the gods above , Why ruin Sybaris with your love ? Why the hot Campus does he shun , So patient once of dust and sun ? Why now no more - as once - his pride Amid compatriot knights to ride ...
Seite 18
... rivers cease to flow . Dissolve the cold : - with logs pil'd high Now plenteously the fire supply ; And from thy Sabine cask produce - Now four - old years - the mellow'd juice . Leave to the gods the rest : when they The 18 BOOK I. ODES.
... rivers cease to flow . Dissolve the cold : - with logs pil'd high Now plenteously the fire supply ; And from thy Sabine cask produce - Now four - old years - the mellow'd juice . Leave to the gods the rest : when they The 18 BOOK I. ODES.
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adria's Apollo's Apulian arms Atrides Augustus Bacchus bard bear bids blest boast bold breeze brow Cæsar's Carthage cask Chloë Colchian crime cruel dark dart delight dire disgrace dread earth fair Falernian wine fame fate FAUNUS fear fierce flame flight flow Formian gentle glow Glycera gods gold grace groves Gyges hair heaven Henry Hesperia's honours Iapyx immortal impious Jove Latian Lord LYDIA lyre Mæcenas Mede Muse numbers nymphs o'er ODE XIV Orcus PHIDYLE Phoebus Pirithous plain praise prayer pride proud race rage rapid Roman Rome sacred sail Scorning Scythian seas Serjt shade shalt shine shore shun sing sire Six copies smile song soul spurns steed Sthenelus strain stream strife string sway sweet Telephus Teucer thee thine Thracian Three copies Thrice Tiber's tide toils trembling Trojan TYNDARIS Venus Vindelici virgin wanton waves Whate'er William 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 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.