Roman Erotic Elegy: Selections from Tibullus, Propertius, Ovid and SulpiciaJon Corelis Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Universität Salzburg, 1995 - 166 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 19 筆
第 4 頁
... Augustus was anxious to establish a continuity between his own regime and these great Republican traditions , and it was through literature that such a continuity could most effectively be asserted . The third reason has to do with the ...
... Augustus was anxious to establish a continuity between his own regime and these great Republican traditions , and it was through literature that such a continuity could most effectively be asserted . The third reason has to do with the ...
第 8 頁
... Augustus in P.II.1.17-42 and scornfully rejects the value of military prowess in P.II.15.41-48 ; and Ovid trivializes martial courage and endurance by flippantly comparing the soldier's sufferings to the lover's in O.I.9 . Schol- ars ...
... Augustus in P.II.1.17-42 and scornfully rejects the value of military prowess in P.II.15.41-48 ; and Ovid trivializes martial courage and endurance by flippantly comparing the soldier's sufferings to the lover's in O.I.9 . Schol- ars ...
第 9 頁
... Augustus to be seen patronising such men as ... Pro- pertius , who had lost a relative in the Perusine revolt against Augustus .... Indeed , such broadmindedness ' on Augustus's part might give other former opponents grounds for hope of ...
... Augustus to be seen patronising such men as ... Pro- pertius , who had lost a relative in the Perusine revolt against Augustus .... Indeed , such broadmindedness ' on Augustus's part might give other former opponents grounds for hope of ...
常見字詞
abortion Achilles Agamemnon Alexandrian ancient Andromeda anthology Apollo arms Augustan Augustus Augustus's Bacchus beautiful believe Bona Dea called Callimachus Cerinthus conquered Corinna Cornelia crime Cybele Cynthia Cypassis dactylic hexameter daughter death Delia Dionysus door earth elegiac couplet elegiac poets elegy Ennius epic erotic elegy excluded lover famous father funeral gifts girl give goddess gods gown Greece Greek hair hands harsh hero husband Iliad Isis Jove Lanuvium Latin love poetry love's lyre Maecenas maenad mean Messalla meter mistress mother Muses myth Mythical Nemesis never night Notes to Ovid Notes to Propertius Ovid's patron Paullus Phaeacia poem poet poet's portrayed praise prayers Propertius's pyre reference rhetoric Roman elegists Rome Rome's sacred scholars Sextus Propertius slave sleep song steeds Sulpicia Tarpeia tears tell themes thyrsus Tibullus Tibullus's Tibur Tithonus tomb torch translation Trojan Troy underworld Venus verse wine woman women word youth