Critical Essays on Roman Literature: Elegy and LyricJohn Patrick Sullivan |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 20
Page 17
... method which it exemplifies and testing wherever possible the accuracy of its records and the propriety of its interpretations ; and the student of literature will study it not as a source of information about the Peloponnesian War or ...
... method which it exemplifies and testing wherever possible the accuracy of its records and the propriety of its interpretations ; and the student of literature will study it not as a source of information about the Peloponnesian War or ...
Page 23
... method proceeds , must always be more certain than any conclusion which can be drawn concerning their relationships . Moreover , as ap- plied to literature itself this method considers the work from the point of view of neither artist ...
... method proceeds , must always be more certain than any conclusion which can be drawn concerning their relationships . Moreover , as ap- plied to literature itself this method considers the work from the point of view of neither artist ...
Page 24
... method be granted , its practicality is strictly limited . The Iliad and Odyssey we should have to abandon altogether ; we have no knowledge of their author or even of the approximate date of their composition . And how many works of ...
... method be granted , its practicality is strictly limited . The Iliad and Odyssey we should have to abandon altogether ; we have no knowledge of their author or even of the approximate date of their composition . And how many works of ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION J P Sullivan Lincoln College page | 1 |
ME EX VERSICULIS MEIS PARUM PUDICUM | 15 |
DOCTE CATULLE K F Quinn University of | 31 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Amores ancient Apuleius Aristophanes artistic atque attitude Augustan beauty biography Callimachus Catullus Cepheia character charm classical contrast conventional countryside couplet criticism Cynthia Delia dream E. A. Barber effect elegiac elegists elegy element emotional epic epigram example experience expression fact feeling girl give Greek haec Haemon Hellenistic heroines Horace Horace's illa individual ingenuus J. P. Postgate judgement Latin Lesbia lines literary literature long poems lover Lycinna Lynceus lyric means mente Messalla metre mihi mind mistress modern mood myth mythology nature Nemesis nunc Ovid Ovid's Ovidian passion pastoral perhaps poem Poem 64 poet poet's poetic poetry Propertius puella quae qualis quam quid Quintilian quod reader rhythm Roman Rome says scholars short poems sincerity stanza style suggested theme Theseus thought tibi Tibullus tion understand Venus vers de société verse Virgil words writing