Liverpool Classical Monthly, Bände 7-9John Pinsent John Pinsent., 1982 |
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Seite 2
... NATURE and 3 & 4 to CULTURE . But the opposition is already implicit in Jebb , on 343-53 , who sees an ascending scale of achievement : but his four levels 1 ) conquest of nature , 2 ) capture of animals , 3 ) taming of animals , 4 ...
... NATURE and 3 & 4 to CULTURE . But the opposition is already implicit in Jebb , on 343-53 , who sees an ascending scale of achievement : but his four levels 1 ) conquest of nature , 2 ) capture of animals , 3 ) taming of animals , 4 ...
Seite 40
... nature continues with the introduction of Sleep in line 42. Every adjective used there of Sleep and its actions balances adjectives and other descriptions of Attis . Sleep is fugiens and citus , both adjectives effectively picking up ...
... nature continues with the introduction of Sleep in line 42. Every adjective used there of Sleep and its actions balances adjectives and other descriptions of Attis . Sleep is fugiens and citus , both adjectives effectively picking up ...
Seite 122
... nature of the king's office helps to explain the Pax Minoica . All this seems a very big jump from the archaeological remains . B.C. Dietrich ( ' Minoan religion in the context of the Aegean ' , pp.55-60 ) writes a generalizing paper ...
... nature of the king's office helps to explain the Pax Minoica . All this seems a very big jump from the archaeological remains . B.C. Dietrich ( ' Minoan religion in the context of the Aegean ' , pp.55-60 ) writes a generalizing paper ...
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accept Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus ancient appears argued argument Aristophanes Aristotle Athenian Athens AthPol Attis Brutus Caecilius Cambridge Catullus century Cicero cited CLASSICAL MONTHLY commentary connexion context contrast Copyright Diggle discussion Dorians edition Editor Encolpius Eumolpus Euripides evidence example explain fact follows Gellius Greek Herakles Herodotus Homer Horace Iliad inter interpretation Juvenal Latin Lichas literary Liverpool Livy Martial meaning Menander mentioned Minoan Odes Ovid Oxford parallel passage perhaps Petronius Philoctetes phrase Pindar Plato Plautus play Plotinus Plutarch poem poet poetry Polybius possible Pylos quae question quod readers reason reference Roman Rome Satyricon Scaliger scholars seems sense sexual Sophocles speech suggests Tacitus Thucydides tradition translation Virgil words Zeus γὰρ δὲ ἐν καὶ μὲν οὐ τὰ τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τὸν τοῦ τῶν ὡς