Liverpool Classical Monthly, Band 17John Pinsent John Pinsent, 1992 |
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Seite 11
... given us the slip through some fainthearted ineffectiveness that is the fault only of ourselves ' . - Despite the difficulties surrounding Karáуeλws and its possible contribution to a theatrical metaphor ( Cornarius — see the above ...
... given us the slip through some fainthearted ineffectiveness that is the fault only of ourselves ' . - Despite the difficulties surrounding Karáуeλws and its possible contribution to a theatrical metaphor ( Cornarius — see the above ...
Seite 139
... given an affirmative answer to those two questions , as put to the ancient Graeco - Roman world from Homer to Augustine . Or rather from the Eve of Greek mythology , Pandora , to St Perpetua , whose martyrology — she was thrown ad ...
... given an affirmative answer to those two questions , as put to the ancient Graeco - Roman world from Homer to Augustine . Or rather from the Eve of Greek mythology , Pandora , to St Perpetua , whose martyrology — she was thrown ad ...
Seite 142
... given this impossibility of struggling against a natural phenomenon that cannot be controlled , all the poet can do is fall back on his imagination : Nunc ego , quas habuit pinnas Danaeius heros , terribili densum cum tulit anque caput ...
... given this impossibility of struggling against a natural phenomenon that cannot be controlled , all the poet can do is fall back on his imagination : Nunc ego , quas habuit pinnas Danaeius heros , terribili densum cum tulit anque caput ...
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accepted Aeneas Aeschylus amber ancient Ansegisus Antiochus antiquity Antonius appears apud argues argument Athenian Athens Augustus Aulularia Balsdon Bernal Bremmer Bronze Age Caeculus Callimachus Cambridge Catullus century B. C. Cicero cited claim Classical Clytemnestra comedy commentary context Copyright dialogues discussion Editor Egypt Egyptian epic essay evidence fact fragments Greece Greek Hecale Herakles Herodotus Homer Horsfall Hyksos inscription interpretation Latin ligne lines literary Liverpool London manuscripts Menander mention myth Orestes original Ovid Oxford papyri passage Pausanias perhaps phantasia philosophical Phoc Phocion Plato Plautus Plutarch Poem poet political Praeneste Propertius Rawson readers reference Roman Rome Romulus sceptical scholars seating arrangements Second Vatican Mythographer seems sense Servius Sesōstris sexual Socrates status Stoics story Studies suggests Tamiai theatre Thebes Theramenes tradition translation University Varro Vatican Mythographer Virgil women word Zeus καὶ