A Complete Edition of the Poets of Great Britain..: Cook's Hesiod. Fawke's Theocritus. Anacreon. Bion. Moschus. Sappho. Musaeus & Apollonius Rhodius. The Rape of Helen. Creech's Lucretius and Grainger's Tibullus |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 7
Sivu 4
Is the fame remark he fays, he thinks Hesiod debases the word in his application
of it, having fjoke of the ncccflitoui circumstances of his father in the following
hook. I have no doubr but Lc Clerc is right in the meaning of the word lm\ but at
the ...
Is the fame remark he fays, he thinks Hesiod debases the word in his application
of it, having fjoke of the ncccflitoui circumstances of his father in the following
hook. I have no doubr but Lc Clerc is right in the meaning of the word lm\ but at
the ...
Sivu 6
The man, with whom Hisiod lived at Locris, ravislied a maid in the fame house.
Hesiod, though entirely ignorant of the fact, was ma- lioiouiiv accused, as an
accomplice, 10 her brothers, who barbarously murdered him with his companion,
...
The man, with whom Hisiod lived at Locris, ravislied a maid in the fame house.
Hesiod, though entirely ignorant of the fact, was ma- lioiouiiv accused, as an
accomplice, 10 her brothers, who barbarously murdered him with his companion,
...
Sivu 410
But since the motion that proceeds from weight is tural, and keeps due on always
iu the fame tenor, it is no more favourable or conducive to liberty than the motion
caused by stroke. Nothing, therefore, can prevent the mind, which consists of ...
But since the motion that proceeds from weight is tural, and keeps due on always
iu the fame tenor, it is no more favourable or conducive to liberty than the motion
caused by stroke. Nothing, therefore, can prevent the mind, which consists of ...
Sivu 466
In these nine verses he explain! the fame argument more at large ; he who
hereafter shall live in misfortune?, must be, when those misfortunes fall 1 pon him
; But the dead bate ceased to he, and will never return from the grave. " Vestigia
nulla ...
In these nine verses he explain! the fame argument more at large ; he who
hereafter shall live in misfortune?, must be, when those misfortunes fall 1 pon him
; But the dead bate ceased to he, and will never return from the grave. " Vestigia
nulla ...
Sivu 508
Reason itself entirely depends upon the fenses : Shall one sense convince and
confute another .' This can never be ; for each fense has its proper objects : nor
does it care, or know what the other senses do : Shall the fame sense then
correct ...
Reason itself entirely depends upon the fenses : Shall one sense convince and
confute another .' This can never be ; for each fense has its proper objects : nor
does it care, or know what the other senses do : Shall the fame sense then
correct ...
Mitä ihmiset sanovat - Kirjoita arvostelu
Yhtään arvostelua ei löytynyt.
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Æneid Amycus Anacreon ancient animals Argo argument Aristotle arms atoms beauty body breast called Chalciope charms chief Cicero Colchian colour death delight divine dread earth Epicurean Epicurus EPIGRAM ev'ry eyes fair fame fate fays fear feeds fense fire flame foul give goddess gods golden grace Greek hand heart heaven Hercules heroes Hesiod Homer honour IDYLLIUM Iliad images immortal Jason join'd Jove Jupiter king labour likewise limbs live Lucretius maid manner Medea mighty mind mortal motion move muses nature night nymphs o'er observes opinion Ovid pain passage Phrixus plain Plutarch poem poet pow'r prove Ptolemy quod reason rife round sacred Sappho seeds shore sire sleep song soul spring streams strike swain sweet thee Theocritus things thou Thrace Tiphys translation Venus verses Virgil voice void whence wind wine words