The Works of HoraceUriah Hunt, 1899 - 357 |
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Strona 135
... satire against him , that both he and his daughter hanged themselves in despair . + Bupalus , a celebrated painter , having ridiculed the per- son of the poet Hipponax , by a portraiture he made of him , the bard in return wrote a most ...
... satire against him , that both he and his daughter hanged themselves in despair . + Bupalus , a celebrated painter , having ridiculed the per- son of the poet Hipponax , by a portraiture he made of him , the bard in return wrote a most ...
Strona 146
... , he hardened the ages ; from which there shall be a happy escape for the good , according to my preODE XVII . DIALOGUE BETWEEN HORACE AND CANIDIA . He ironically. happy dictions . * The poet Stesichorus wrote a satire against Helen , 146.
... , he hardened the ages ; from which there shall be a happy escape for the good , according to my preODE XVII . DIALOGUE BETWEEN HORACE AND CANIDIA . He ironically. happy dictions . * The poet Stesichorus wrote a satire against Helen , 146.
Strona 148
... The poet Stesichorus wrote a satire against Helen , on account of which her brethren Castor and Pollux deprived the bard of his sight ; but , on his making a recantation , it was restored . * Cotytto , or Cotys , was the goddess of 148.
... The poet Stesichorus wrote a satire against Helen , on account of which her brethren Castor and Pollux deprived the bard of his sight ; but , on his making a recantation , it was restored . * Cotytto , or Cotys , was the goddess of 148.
Strona 153
... the praises of Phœbus and Diana , bear home with us a good and certain hope , that Jupiter , and all the other gods , perceive and attend to these our sup- plications . THE SATIRES OF HORACE . BOOK I. SATIRE I. TO 153.
... the praises of Phœbus and Diana , bear home with us a good and certain hope , that Jupiter , and all the other gods , perceive and attend to these our sup- plications . THE SATIRES OF HORACE . BOOK I. SATIRE I. TO 153.
Strona 154
Horace. THE SATIRES OF HORACE . BOOK I. SATIRE I. TO MÆCENAS . That all , but especially the covetous , think their own condition the hardest . How comes it to pass , Mæcenas , that no one lives content with his condition , whether ...
Horace. THE SATIRES OF HORACE . BOOK I. SATIRE I. TO MÆCENAS . That all , but especially the covetous , think their own condition the hardest . How comes it to pass , Mæcenas , that no one lives content with his condition , whether ...
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