The Works of Virgil in English Verse, Volume 3R.J. Dodsley, 1763 - Latin poetry |
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Page 3
... qui retourne en Ithaque , & que c'eft Achille & Agamemnon qui querellent . He goes on , -Mais il y a des actions qui d'elles mêmes - B 2 font the machinery of the gods , and their intervention on Jixth Book of VIRGIL's ÆNEIS . 3.
... qui retourne en Ithaque , & que c'eft Achille & Agamemnon qui querellent . He goes on , -Mais il y a des actions qui d'elles mêmes - B 2 font the machinery of the gods , and their intervention on Jixth Book of VIRGIL's ÆNEIS . 3.
Page 4
Virgil, Christopher Pitt, Joseph Warton. the machinery of the gods , and their intervention on every occafion , which was to create the mar- vellous , becomes , in this improvement , an indif- penfible part of the poem . A divine ...
Virgil, Christopher Pitt, Joseph Warton. the machinery of the gods , and their intervention on every occafion , which was to create the mar- vellous , becomes , in this improvement , an indif- penfible part of the poem . A divine ...
Page 13
... gods : A confideration , which greatly en- couraged the people in their irregularities ; and was therefore obviated in the myfteries , by the de- tection of the vulgar errors of polytheifm . Now Euripides feems plainly enough to have ...
... gods : A confideration , which greatly en- couraged the people in their irregularities ; and was therefore obviated in the myfteries , by the de- tection of the vulgar errors of polytheifm . Now Euripides feems plainly enough to have ...
Page 14
... gods , are nothing to the purpose . I cannot think them guilty of the crimes imputed to them . I cannot apprehend how one god can be the fovereign of another god . - A god who is truly fo , ftands in need of no one . Reject we then ...
... gods , are nothing to the purpose . I cannot think them guilty of the crimes imputed to them . I cannot apprehend how one god can be the fovereign of another god . - A god who is truly fo , ftands in need of no one . Reject we then ...
Page 33
... gods on their admiffion into that ftate ; where the eternity was in confequence of their deification . So Virgil But the nature and end of this purgatory the poet de- fcribes at large , from ver . 736. to ver . 745 . See the paffage in ...
... gods on their admiffion into that ftate ; where the eternity was in confequence of their deification . So Virgil But the nature and end of this purgatory the poet de- fcribes at large , from ver . 736. to ver . 745 . See the paffage in ...
Common terms and phrases
Æneas Æneid againſt ancient Apollonius Rhodius arms Auguftus beauteous becauſe Cæfar chief Chimæra circumftance courfers defcribed defcription defign Dido dire divine dreadful Evander fable facred faid fame fate Faunus fays fecond feems fhade fhall fhews fhield fhining fhore fhould fide fierce fight fire firft firſt flain flames flew flood folemn fome foul fpeaking ftands ftate ftill fubject fuch fuppofe glorious gods golden bough hell hero himſelf hoft Homer honours Iliad initiated Jove juft Jupiter king laft laſt Latian Latium Livy Mezentius mighty moft moſt muft muſt myfteries Neptune o'er obferves occafion paffage pafs perfon plain Plato poem poet pow'rs prefent prince race rage rais'd raiſe reafon reprefented rife riſe rites Roman Rome round ſcene Servius ſhade ſhall ſhe ſhore ſkies ſky ſpread ſtate Statius Tarchon Tartarus thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand thro tow'rs Trojan Troy Turnus uſe Virgil whofe youth
Popular passages
Page 189 - ... a particular beauty, which I do not know that any one has taken notice of. The list which he has there drawn up was in general to do honour to the Roman name, but more particularly to compliment Augustus. For this reason Anchises, who shows .¿Eneas most of the rest of his descendants in the same order that they were to make their appearance in the world...
Page 211 - Aeneas, it may be worth while to consider with how much Judgment he has qualified it, and taken off every thing that might have appeared improper for a Passage in an Heroic Poem.
Page 291 - He made darkness his secret place, his pavilion round about Him with dark water, and thick clouds to cover Him.
Page 54 - But he was too good a painter, to leave any thing ambiguous ; and hath therefore concluded his hero's initiation, as was the custom, with instructing him in the Aporreta, or the doctrine of the unity.
Page 210 - I believe very many readers have been shocked at that ludicrous prophecy which one of the harpies pronounces to the Trojans in the third book ; namely, that before they had built their intended city they should be reduced by hunger to eat their very tables.
Page 310 - Thou shalt not plant thee a grove of any trees near unto the altar of the LORD thy God, which thou shalt make thee.
Page 41 - I can give no reason for their being stationed there in so particular a manner, but because none of them seem to have had a proper right to a place among the dead, as not having run out the whole thread of their days, and finished the term of life that had been allotted them upon earth. The first of these are the souls of infants, who are snatched away by untimely ends...
Page 261 - The hoarfe rough verfe fhould like the torrent roar. When Ajax ftrives fome rock's vaft weight to throw, The line too labours, and the words move flow ; Not fo, wrr?n fwift Camilla fcours the plain, flies o'er th' unbending corn, and Ikiras along the main.
Page 52 - European law-givers; but better known under the character of poet: for the first laws being written in measure, to allure men to learn them, and, when learnt, to retain them, the fable would have it, that by the force of harmony, Orpheus softened the savage inhabitants of Thrace : -Threicius longa cum veste sacerdos Obloquitur numeris septem discrimina vocum: Jamque eadem digitis, jam pectine pulsat eburno (t).
Page 9 - Milton was the emulator of both. He found Homer possessed of the province of MORALITY ; Virgil of POLITICS : and nothing left for him, but that of RELIGION.