Rollover or tap image to see magnified area.

  Item Reference: KCLCAL-1886-1887-669

Please note: The digitised calendars in this site have had their contents extracted using OCR (optical character recognition) and as a result, there may be occasional errors in the text. We are working on correcting these errors, but this may take some time.

Page content

GENERAL LITERATURE AND SCIENCE 671 Turn caput ipsi aufert domino truncumque relinquit Sanguine singultantem atro tepefacta cruore Terra torique madent Turn vero exterritus amens Conclamat Nisus nec se celare tenebris Amplius aut tanturn potuit perferre dolorem Me me adsum qui feci in me convertite ferrum Ο Rutuli mea fraus omnis nihil iste nec ausus Nec potuit coelum hoc et conscia sidera testor Tantum infelicem nimium dilexit amicum Talia dicta dabat sed viribus ensis adactus Transabiit costas et Candida pectora rumpit Volvitur Euryalus leto pulchrosque per artus It cruor inque humeros cervix collapsa recumbit Purpureus veluti quum flos succisus aratro Languescit moriens lassove papavera collo Demisere caput pluvia quum forte gravantur At Nisus ruit in medios solumque per omnes Volscentem petit in solo Volscente moratur Quern circum glomerati hostes hinc comminus atque hinc Proturbant Instat non secius ac rotat ensem Fulmineum donee Rutuli clamantis in ore Condidit adverso et moriens animam abstulit hosti Translate and explain Volvenda dies en attulit ultro δ Sed periisse semel satis est peccare uisset Ante satis penitus modo non genus omne perosos Femineum si fortuna permittitis uti Quaesitum Aenean et moenia Pallantea nec te tua unera mater Produxi pressive oculos aut volnera lavi The love of Nature seems more congenial to the Italian than the Greek mind Illustrate this statement by com- parison of Homer and Vergil adducing instances of the latter fondness for external nature
ARCHIOS™ | Total time:0.2107 s | Source:database | Platform: NX