Ovid's Epistles: With His AmoursJ. and R. Tonson, 1761 - 309 páginas |
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... first that fet foot on the enemy's ground , and was kill'd on the spot . After the war had been continu'd nine years , a quarrel arifing betwixt Agamemnon and ACHIL- LES , the latter absented himself from the army , and the former in ...
... first that fet foot on the enemy's ground , and was kill'd on the spot . After the war had been continu'd nine years , a quarrel arifing betwixt Agamemnon and ACHIL- LES , the latter absented himself from the army , and the former in ...
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... first civil war betwixt himself and Mark Antony the triumvir , which is more fulfome than any paffage I have met with in our poet . To pafs by the naked familiarity of his expreffions to Horace , which are cited in that author's life ...
... first civil war betwixt himself and Mark Antony the triumvir , which is more fulfome than any paffage I have met with in our poet . To pafs by the naked familiarity of his expreffions to Horace , which are cited in that author's life ...
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... first verfes which were made by him in his youth , and recited publickly , according to the cuftom , were , as he himself affures us , to Corinna : His banishment happen'd not till the age of fifty , from which it may be deduc'd , with ...
... first verfes which were made by him in his youth , and recited publickly , according to the cuftom , were , as he himself affures us , to Corinna : His banishment happen'd not till the age of fifty , from which it may be deduc'd , with ...
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... first establishes , and then contrives the means which will naturally conduct him to his end . This will be evident to judicious readers in this work of his Epittles , of which fomewhat , at least in general , will be ex- pected . The ...
... first establishes , and then contrives the means which will naturally conduct him to his end . This will be evident to judicious readers in this work of his Epittles , of which fomewhat , at least in general , will be ex- pected . The ...
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... First , that they are generally granted to be the most perfect piece of Ovid , and that the style of them is tenderly paffionate and courtly , two properties well agreeing with the perfons , which were Heroines , and Lovers . Yet where ...
... First , that they are generally granted to be the most perfect piece of Ovid , and that the style of them is tenderly paffionate and courtly , two properties well agreeing with the perfons , which were Heroines , and Lovers . Yet where ...
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Acontius againſt arms aſk beauty breaſt cauſe charms Corinna cou'd crime CYDIPPE dear defire Demophoon Dido doft eaſe ELEGY Ev'n ev'ry eyes facred fafe faid fair falfe fame fate fear fhall fhame fhips fhould fifter fighs fince firft firſt flain flame flave fleep foft fome foon foul ftill fuch fure Goddeſs Gods hand heart heav'n HENRY CROMWELL himſelf huſband Jove joys kiffes laft Laodamia laſt leaſt lefs loft lov'd love's lover maid Medea Menelaus miſtreſs mufe muft muſt myſelf ne'er night nymph o'er OEnone Ovid paffion Phaon pleaſe pleaſure pow'r prefent purſue rage reft rife Sapho ſee ſhall ſhame ſhe ſhore ſpread ſtay ſtill tears tender thee thefe theſe thine thofe thoſe thou thought thouſand Thracian thro Tibullus tranflation Troy twas Ulyffes uſe Venus verſe vows Whilft whofe wife winds wiſhes wou'd wound