Liverpool Classical Monthly, Bände 4-6John Pinsent John Pinsent., 1979 |
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... Persius , himself the most allusive of satirists , deserves a yet more indirect compliment : imitation , and , what is more , imitation of a Per- sius passage in which Persius ostentatiously immitates his predecessor , Horace ( Persius ...
... Persius , himself the most allusive of satirists , deserves a yet more indirect compliment : imitation , and , what is more , imitation of a Per- sius passage in which Persius ostentatiously immitates his predecessor , Horace ( Persius ...
Seite 250
... Persius ' part to Stoicism ; vv.73-6 and 109-118 are directed at Persius rather than in the first case against a prosperous lawyer with conventional views and in the second against a person content with mere physical good health . The ...
... Persius ' part to Stoicism ; vv.73-6 and 109-118 are directed at Persius rather than in the first case against a prosperous lawyer with conventional views and in the second against a person content with mere physical good health . The ...
Seite 251
... Persius ' seven pieces . Neither when he is being literal nor when he is being free does he get anywhere near the tone of the Latin . Persius was an obscure au- thor , but his use of , for example , catachresis and enallage did not have ...
... Persius ' seven pieces . Neither when he is being literal nor when he is being free does he get anywhere near the tone of the Latin . Persius was an obscure au- thor , but his use of , for example , catachresis and enallage did not have ...
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Current Serials | 45 |
Mistresses pseudonymns in Latin elegy 2735 | 27 |
The grasshopper minds of the Greeks 3740 | 37 |
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