Liverpool Classical Monthly, Band 16John Pinsent., 1991 |
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Seite 75
... passage is cited in his study of Greek fishes by Thompson , who says of the skorpios that ' its sharp spines give a poisoned wound ' and then goes on , mentioning Catullus 15.19 and Juvenal 10.137 for comparison , to deduce from the ...
... passage is cited in his study of Greek fishes by Thompson , who says of the skorpios that ' its sharp spines give a poisoned wound ' and then goes on , mentioning Catullus 15.19 and Juvenal 10.137 for comparison , to deduce from the ...
Seite 89
... passage where he seems to juxtapose the Stoic deus , i.e. the divine Aóyos from which fatum emanates , with fortuna : Bonus vero vir sine deo nemo est ; an potest aliquis supra fortunam nisi ab illo adiutus exurgere ? ( Epist 42. 2 ) ...
... passage where he seems to juxtapose the Stoic deus , i.e. the divine Aóyos from which fatum emanates , with fortuna : Bonus vero vir sine deo nemo est ; an potest aliquis supra fortunam nisi ab illo adiutus exurgere ? ( Epist 42. 2 ) ...
Seite 92
... passage can be taken more generally as an indication that , as Chrysippus too supposed , it is not appropriate to apply ' this ' to a dead person . Reference to dead people who aren't here any more might also call to mind the famous passage ...
... passage can be taken more generally as an indication that , as Chrysippus too supposed , it is not appropriate to apply ' this ' to a dead person . Reference to dead people who aren't here any more might also call to mind the famous passage ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 10 |
Abschnitt 2 | 42 |
Abschnitt 3 | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adulterers Aineias ancient appears argues Aristophanes Aristotle Aristotle's Athenian Athens Augustus Aulus Gellius Bywater Caesar Cambridge century chorus cited claim classical College commentary Copyright Denyen dialectic discussion earlier Eclogue edition Editor élite evidence fact fatum fortuna Francis Cornford Galatea Gellius grammar grammarian Greek Harrison Haverfield historian holon hymn Iamblichus imperium inscription interest interpretation ISBN late antiquity later Latin literary literature Liverpool Livy Lloyd London Luperci manuscripts Metaphysics Mommsen Nabonidus Neoplatonic Neoplatonists Neoptolemus O'Meara Octavian Ovid Oxford passage Pelham perhaps Philoctetes philosophy Plato Plotinus Pompeius problem Proclus Professor Pythagoras Pythagorean readers reference Remus Review rhetorical Roman Rome scholars scholarship seems sense Servius Sirius skorpios Skutsch social Sophocles stasimon Stoic substance suggests survive Syrianus Tacitus temple Thucydides tradition translation triumph University verse Virgil word δὲ καὶ