Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. 23 sty 2024 · who hopes that you will be always free, always lovable, he who is ignorant of the treacherous breeze! Wretched are they for whom you, untried, shine. As for me, the sacred wall with its votive tablet declares that I have hung up my dripping garments to the god who rules over the sea.

  2. sacred hills with fiery hand, to scare the city, and scare the people, lest again. we know Pyrrha’s age of pain. when Proteus his sea-herds drove. across high mountains, and fishes lodged in all the elms, that used to be the haunt of doves, and the trembling roe-deer swam.

  3. Horace 'The Epistles', Book I Epistle I: A new, downloadable English translation.

  4. Q. Horatius Flaccus (Horace). Horace, Satires, Epistles and Ars Poetica. H. Rushton Fairclough. London; Cambridge, Massachusetts. William Heinemann Ltd.; Harvard University Press. 1929. Keyboarding. The Mellon Foundation provided support for entering this text.

  5. Horace. The Odes and Carmen Saeculare of Horace. John Conington. trans. London. George Bell and Sons. 1882. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text.

  6. 22 wrz 2014 · This edition, revised and edited by Reginald H. Chase and initially produced by A. J. Macleane, aims to make Horace's works accessible to contemporary readers and scholars, delving into themes of love, nature, morality, and the complexities of human experience as reflected in poetry.

  7. 11 lis 2004 · THE THIRD BOOK OF THE ODES OF HORACE. ODE I. ON CONTENTMENT. I abominate the uninitiated vulgar, and keep them at a distance. Preserve a religious silence: I, the priest of the Muses, sing to virgins and boys verses not heard before.

  1. Ludzie szukają również