The Claudian periodHarper & brothers, 1883 |
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Página 3
... kind of French abbé did in the seventeenth century . A Roman of rank who took an interest in his character kept a philosopher , as in later times serious nobles kept chaplains ; but , as it was not etiquette for Roman ladies to study ...
... kind of French abbé did in the seventeenth century . A Roman of rank who took an interest in his character kept a philosopher , as in later times serious nobles kept chaplains ; but , as it was not etiquette for Roman ladies to study ...
Página 32
... kind of lustreless tinder , like the dross we see purged off from iron ; but after the mass of sink- ing stone has heaved and bubbled for a little while , the liquid rises to a narrow crest ( as when stone is melted in a furnace , and ...
... kind of lustreless tinder , like the dross we see purged off from iron ; but after the mass of sink- ing stone has heaved and bubbled for a little while , the liquid rises to a narrow crest ( as when stone is melted in a furnace , and ...
Página 36
... kind of poetry most nearly alive ; and this goes with the spurious reputation of Marsus , the con- tinuator of Ovid , whose voluminous work upon the Amazons was well on the way to oblivion in the days of Martial , when Persius's ...
... kind of poetry most nearly alive ; and this goes with the spurious reputation of Marsus , the con- tinuator of Ovid , whose voluminous work upon the Amazons was well on the way to oblivion in the days of Martial , when Persius's ...
Página 42
... kind of earnestness . As has been said , he is too much in earnest for mythology ; though once , in sight of the legen- dary garden of the Hesperides , he breaks out into impatience at the spite which would hold a poet to bare 42 LATIN ...
... kind of earnestness . As has been said , he is too much in earnest for mythology ; though once , in sight of the legen- dary garden of the Hesperides , he breaks out into impatience at the spite which would hold a poet to bare 42 LATIN ...
Página 59
... kind that in later literature easily become trivial ; but a sort of praise is due to the poet who introduces such things first ; just as we admire Tintoret for the ass browsing palm- leaves in the picture of the " Crucifixion , " though ...
... kind that in later literature easily become trivial ; but a sort of praise is due to the poet who introduces such things first ; just as we admire Tintoret for the ass browsing palm- leaves in the picture of the " Crucifixion , " though ...
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admirable Annals Apuleius Arnobius Augustan History Augustin Augustus Aurelius Cæsar Catullus Christian Cicero Claudius Constantine consul contemporary course curious death Diocletian Domitian elder eloquent emperor empire epigrams explain father Favorinus feeling Fronto Galba Gaul give gods Greek hand honor Horace instance Jerome Julian Juvenal kind Lactantius Latin learned less letters literary literature live Lucan Martial Maximian ment nature Nero never orator Otho pagan panegyric passion perhaps peror Persius philosopher Piso Pliny Pliny's poem poet poetry Pompeius prætorian praise prefect probably Quinctilian reign rhetoric Roman Rome Satire seems senate Seneca Severus Silius slave speaks speech spirit Statius Stilicho Stoic story style Suetonius Tacitus tells Tertullian things thought Tiberius tion Trajan treated treatise Trimalchio turn Valentinian Valerius Vergil verses Vespasian virtue Vitellius whole wished writer wrote
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Página 433 - Ibi vacabimus et videbimus, videbimus et amabimus, amabimus et laudabimus. Ecce quod erit in fine sine fine. Nam quis alius noster est finis nisi pervenire ad regnum cuius nullus est finis ? Videor mini debitum ingentis huius operis adiuvante Domino reddidisse.