Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 34Association, 1897 - Classical philology Beginning with v. 31, the proceedings and papers of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast are included. |
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ablative absolute agis anapaest ancient Andr annual session apocope appears Aristophanes Athenian Berkeley Brasidas caesura Cambridge Catullus Charles Chicago Cicero College Comedy Conn copula curiae dactyl diaeresis elision English enim essay examples fable foot frequent frgm gerund grammarians Greek Gylippus Harvard University Haven Heaut Hephaestion hexameter Hopkins iambic trimeter iambic verse initial accent inscriptions Iuturna John language Latin Leland Stanford Jr Library literary literature Livy Mass metrical Mindarus monosyllabic monosyllable nauarch Notes noun occurs opus paper participle Pasippidas passage Philological Association Phorm phrases Plautus poem poet prepositions Prof Professor pronouns quae quid quód reference Roman scansion séd sepultura Spartan speeches spondee syllable Tacitus Terence Thucydides tion tribrach trimeter trochaic University of California verb vowel William word-accent words writers xxiii Yale University York ἐνόπλιον ἕτοιμος καὶ κατ τὸ
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Page xxxi - PRIMUS. [ILLE ego qui quondam gracili modulatus avena carmen, et, egressus silvis, vicina coegi, ut quamvis avido parerent arva colono, gratum opus agricolis ; at nunc horrentia Martis...
Page lxxxviii - Notes and Observations on the Empress of Morocco revised, with some few erratas ; to be printed instead of the Postscript with the next Edition of the Conquest of Granada, 1674.
Page 12 - Ipse eorum opinionibus accedo, qui Germaniae populos nullis aliis aliarum nationum conubiis infectos propriam et sinceram et tantum sui similem gentem extitisse arbitrantur. unde habitus quoque corporum, quamquam in tanto hominum numero, idem omnibus: truces et caerulei oculi, rutilae comae, magna corpora et tantum ad impetum valida.
Page 42 - Nimis hercle invitus abeo: sed quid agam scio. Nam noster nostrae qui est magister curiae Dividere argenti dixit nummos in viros. Id si relinquo ac non peto, omnes ilico Me suspicentur, credo, habere aurum domi.
Page cxxxix - MEETINGS. 1. There shall be an annual meeting of the Association in the city of New York, or at such other place as at a preceding annual meeting shall be determined upon. 2. At the annual meeting, the Executive Committee shall present an annual report of the progress of the Association. 3. The gener.il arrangements of the proceedings of the annual meeting shall be directed by the Executive Committee.
Page xii - Brasidas arranged his troops for an orderly retreat and encouraged his men in a short speech, which, whether ever made or not, clearly sets forth, we may accept, the motives underlying his conduct on this trying occasion. " Mobs like these," said he, " if an adversary withstand their first attack, do but threaten at a distance and make a flourish of valor; although if one yields to them they are brave enough to run after him when there is no danger
Page lxxviii - Literature is a reamrmation of that aspect of philology — the literary — which, both because it was eclipsed by, and dependent upon, the development of linguistics, has long ceased to be regarded as philology at all ; save in Germany, where philological seminars have dealt not only with the phonology and history of language as they asserted themselves, but also as of old with whatever concerns the literary side of language as an expression of the national, or more broadly human spirit. Since...
Page xci - Holy angels now are bending To receive thy soul ascending Up to Heaven to joys unending, And to bliss which is divine; While thy pale cold form is fading Under death's dark wings now shading Thee with gloom which is pervading This poor, broken heart of mine!
Page xii - Peloponnesus, and when, shortly after, they desired to negotiate, they had places to give in return for what they sought to recover. And at a later period of the war, after the Sicilian expedition, the honesty and ability of Brasidas, which some had experienced and of which others had heard the fame, mainly attracted the Athenian allies to the Lacedaemonians. For as he was the first who was sent out and proved himself to be in every way a good man, he left in their minds a firm conviction that others...
Page vii - The nature of their assistance is made certain by the information of Servius, for there can be no doubt that luturna and the Nymphs were honored in the Vulcanalia as goddesses who gave the water to be used in case of fire.2 They were, moreover, connected with this festival at least before 56 Bc, the date of the De llar.