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Exsilium (The Seventh Seal Book 2)

For the story see Cassandra in Proper Names. Horace has imperor, invideor: Ovid, credor more than once. The leaves would be those of the. The ancients believed that the heavens consisted of two hemispheres, one of light and the other of darkness, and by the revolution of those light and darkness were produced: Milton, Paradise Lost, 9, 52 — and now from end to end Night's hemisphere had veiled the horizon round.

Night is said to ' rush up from the ocean ' in pursuit of the retreat- ing day. Some say that the passage shows that the moon was quietly shining, others that there was no moon shining. Some quote in support of the latter view Milton, Samsoti Agonistes: Vergil brings out prominently the light and calm of the night so as to further the designs of the Greeks.

I, Act 3, Sc. It may be an imitation of Homer, II.

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Hence some look on sepultum in this passage of Vergil as a zeugma, "o'ercome with wine and buried in sleep," but the order of the words precludes this. The accusative in this case resembles the accusative of specification: Hector slew Patroclus, who had donned the armour of his friend Achilles. The meaning of tit in such cases must be inferred from the context, here zd—ut libente: What the penates were it is difficult to say.

They were probably national deities represented in little images of wood or stone, and the word may be derived from PA, "to protect" or " feed ": In the temple of Vesta at Rome, " the eternal fire " was maintained, the extinguishing of which foreboded the doom of the city. Possibly diveiso means " in a distant quarter of the city. This, with the latter interpretation, is particularly significant as marking the transition. Note the imitative harmony produced by the recurring of the r sound. The contrast is between Aeneas listening to the din of battle and the shepherd hear- ing the roaring of a conflagration or a torrent from the top of a crag.

The simile is suggested by Homer, II. Thomson's imitation in his. That the house of Deiphobus was first attacked is evident from Homer, Od. Note the lively effect of the sudden introduction of the figure. There is an anachronism here, as trumpets were not used in Homer's time to give signals in battle. Nettleship shows that summa res is an old phrase for the later res publica, "our all," "the main chance. Is the " arx" any longer defensible? The fact that Panthus has just come from the "arx" and that Aeneas has resolved to go thiiher v.

Lucan, 4, , civilis Erinys, — niaxivuis armis: The second interpretation of Servius seems the best: Understood in this sense, the epithet raises our respect not only for Coroebus but for Cassan- dra, in the same degree as, understood in the former sense, it lowers it.

The meaning then is: S48 — incipio super his. It is best to take super adverbially and to supply dictis with his: It seems to have been a universal belief among the ancients that the gods left a doomed city. Josephus relates that during the siege of Jerusalem voices more than human were heard crying on the day of Pentecost: So also Milton, Ode on Nativity: With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving. Note the quantity of the final syllable of pavor -.

Tvaaa I6ta Katkorrj davarov. Here there is little or no distinction betwreen the words: So also Milton, Paradise Lost, g, So also Catullus, iv, 2: The same simile occurs in Homer Iliad, 3, Note the recurring dactyls and the repetition of re- well brings out the sudden recoil of the unwary traveller. Perhaps badge seems nearest to it in English. With fas supply est. The Oilean Ajax was said to have dragged Cassandra and the image to which she was clinging from the temple. The precincts of religious buildings have from time immemorable been places of refuge: The altar was considered especially inviolable: Kings, ii, 28 ; Matt, xxiii, Note the quan- tity of -ur.

A final syllable naturally short may be lengthened when it is caesural: Latin is sadly deficient in verbal nouns ; their place is often supplied by the perf. The Oilean Ajax felt aggrieved at the loss of his prize. Vergil means here that there was a slight difference in dialect or accent. Then came its interjectional meaning. Homer, Iliad, 12, Seneca recommends his friend on the occasion of any loss to say constantly without complaining, di's aliter visum est, or rather di melius scil. For the form see v.

Tennyson, Dream of Fair Women: Dislodging pinnacle and parapet Upon the tortoise creeping to the "wall. What verbs are semi- deponent? Note the present convellimus represents a continued act and iinpulimus a single, momentary one. Some derive it from ve-sti-bu-lum, "a place for standing outside ": The simile is taken from the Iliad 22, 93, when Hector is awaiting the attack of Achilles: Shelley's Hellas ad finem: Pyrrhus brought a number of warriors from Scyros, one of the Cyclades, where his grandfather Lycomedes dwelt: The doors were double doors vulvae.

Achilles was the father of Pyrrhus. No doubt this would be a familiar image to Vergil seen both on the Mincius and the Padus.

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The Imndred mentioned here must refer to both daughters-in-law and daughters. The phrase "barbaric gold " suggests the idea of Oriental magnificence: Milton's Paradise Lost, 2, 3: The Romans often adorned the walls of their houses and temples with the spoils of war. The atrium was the main hall of a Roman house ia which were the images ofthe peiiates and an altar. The roof of this was partly open and below the open space was a cistern impluvium.

Around it ran a pillared portico to which rooms opened, with an altar to Jupiter hospitalis Zeif ifiKlLoq. Laurus erat tecti medio in penetralibus altis. Horace also alludes to the custom of planting trees around the atrium'. Shakespeare, Coriolaniis, I, 2: Here, it is used for the reciprocal feeling of gods to men: The infinitive cernere is rare after facere for tet cernerem. Daphnis me mains urit, ego ' hanc in Daphnide laiirum. This does not mean that Pyrrhus was illegitimate, but that his nature and conduct showed him to be no true son of Achilles. Achilles granted his request and allowed him to depart in safety.

It was covered with leather: Vergil may have in mind the sad fate of Pompey. According to Servius, Priam's body was exposed on the Sigetlm promontory. Scan this line and tell any irregularity in the scansion. The main argument against the genuineness is that in Aeneid 6, seqq. Helen is spoken of as betraying Deiphobus to the Greeks.

He does not descend till V. Ii, introduces Leda in the shades. The sense is "shall she return now that Priam has been murdered, Troy burned, Dardania bathed in blood? The present represents a continuous effort, and the perfect the completion of the act if the effort were relaxed. Kar' miprjq, literally, "from the top to the bottom: Note the emphatic position of tu, "do you not," no matter what others do.

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Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva. So also Macaulay, Lay of Horatius: Metaphor taken from spinning: KEifiEvoq, "laid out for burial. Another interpretation, suggested by Horace, Od. I, 28, 35, is as follows: It all hinges on the meaning of ipsa manii, v. Taking the most reasonable meaning of this, viz. Horace's Quamquam festinas, non est mora longa ; licebit Iniecto ter pulvere curras.

G48 — annos demoror: Aeneas uses this and not a stronger word, to soften the rebuke of his father: I, , ; retro, retro Aen. Where Andro- mache in this way speaks of Astyanax. This is the MSS. We have followed the MSS. Thunder on the left was a good sign according to Roman augury: When beggars die there are no comets seen: The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.

So also Richard II. The meteors fright the fixed stars of heaven ; The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth, And lean-faced prophets whisper fearful things, These signs forerun the death or fall of kings. Ida was the point for which they should set out. Servius says that the light signified the future glory of the house of Aeneas: Anchises was probably before this stretched on his bed: Note the presents est, seqiior, mark strongly the promptness of Anchises.

Conington takes incendia subject and aestus object: Servius thinks that Vergil is leading up to tlie loss of Creusa. Note that dicayti is future indicative. It is rare to find such a construction with adverto: The indicatives substitit — erravit — resedit for the subjunctives substiterit — erraverit — resederit of depend ent question may be explained by supposing that Vergil intended the question to be originally a direct one: With si, " to see whether" ; cp.

Perhaps Vergil is thinking of the shrine of Juno in the capitol of Rome. Spain, ultima Hesperia- -Lydlns: Prophecy describes the future as present. Ida, and also a patroness of Troy. These lines are translated from Od. But unsubstantial Form eludes her grasp As often as that eager grasp was made. Acama-S, -ntis ; N. Acamas, a Greek hero ; v. Aene-as, -ae ; N. Aeneas, son of Anchises and Venus, and hero of the Aeneid. Achaic-us, -a, -um ; adj. Achill-es, -is ; N. He was slain by Paris shortly before the fall of Troy ; see v. Achiv-i, -orum ; N.

Ai-ax, -acis ; N. Sometimes called the lesser Ajax to distinguish him from the greater Ajax, son of Telamon, who, being defeated by Ulysses in the contest for the Anns of Achilles, went mad and slew himself. The Oilcan Ajax mentioned in Aen. Anchis-es, -ae ; N. Anchises, father of Aeneas. He was, both by his father, Capys, and by his mother, Themis, descended from the royal house of Troy, whose ancestor was Dardanus.

His beauty equalled that of the immortals. He was beloved by Venus, and by her became the father of Aeneas. For divulging and boasting of the origin of Aeneas he was struck by a flash of lightning, which, according to some tradition, killed, according to others, blinded or lamed him. Vergil makes Anchises sui-vive the capture of Troy, and Aeneas carry his father on his shoulders from the burning city.

Androg-eos, -ei ; N. Andromache, es ; N. Andromache, wife of Hector ; v. Argiv-i, orum ; N. ArgoliC-US, -a, -um ; adj. Argos, a city in Argolis, the district in which was situated Mycenae, the royal city of Agamemnon. Asi-a, -ae ; N. Asia, or Asia Minor. Ascan-ius, -i ; N. Ascaimis or Ixilus, son of Aeneas. Astyan-ax, -actis ; N. Atrid-es, -ae ; N. Auster, -tri ; N. Automedon, -ntis ; N. Automedon, charioteer of Achilles. Belid-es, -ae properly Belides ; N. Calcha-s, -ntis ; N. Calchas, a Greek soothsayer. Cap-ys, -yos ; N. Capys, a Trojan ; see v. Cassandr-a, -ae ; N.

Cassandra, daughter of Priam, inspired by Apollo with the gift of prophecy, but doomed by him always to be disbelieved. Cer-es, -eris ; N. Ceres, Goddess of Agriculture. Coroeb-US, -i ; N. Coroebus, a Phrygian, son of Mygdon, and a suitor of Cassandra in the Trojan army ; see v. Creus-a, -ae ; N. Creusa, wife of Aeneas. Cybel-e, -es ; N. Dana-i, -orum, or -um ; N.

Dardani-a, -ae ; N. Dardanid-ae, -arum ; N. Deiphob-US, -i ; N. Deiphohus, son of Priam ; v. Diomed-es, -is ; N. D6l6p-es, -um ; N. Their leader was Phoenix. Doricus, -a, -um ; aflj. Dyvias, father of Hecuba. E6-US, -a, -um ; adj. Epe-os, -i ; N. Epeos, the inventor of the wooden horae ; see v. Erin-ys, -yos ; N. The Erynyes or Eumenides were Avenging Deities, a personification of curses. Bur-US, -i ; N. Eurypylus, a Greek ; v. Fortun-a, -ae ; N. Fortune, the Goddess of Fortune. Gorg-O, or -on, -onis ; N.

The head of one of them. Medusa, was fixed by Minerva upon her shield ydp-yos, grim ; v. Grai-us, -i ; p'. Graii or Grai ; N. Greeks ; see note on v. Hect-or, -oris ; N. Hector, son of Priam and bravest of the Trojans, slain by Achilles after the latter had pursued him thrice round Troy. His body was dragged to the Grecian fleet at the wheels of Achilles' chariot, and was afterwards ransomed by the aged Priam, who, securing a twelve days' truce, performed the funeral obsequies. The story is to be found in Horn. Iliad, xxii and xxiv.

Hecub-a, -ae ; N. Hecuba, wife of Priam. Helen-a, -ae ; N. Helen, wife of Menelaus, king of Sparta. Eloped with Paris to Troy in fulfilment of Venus' promise to give Paris the most beautiful woman in the world for wife, in return for his awarding to her Venus the apple of Discord.

Upon this fateful event hinged the Trojan war. Menelaus, gathering an army of Grecian heroes and their followers, sailed to Troy and besieged it in order to recover his faithless spouse. Helen was frequently taunted by the Trojans as the cause of the war. At the close she returned home with her husband, and in the Odyssey, Bk. See, however, note on v. Western, and so Italian when contrasted with Greece or Asia icrirepla. Hypanis, one of the Trojans who accompanied Aeneas on the night of the fall of Troy. Ida, a range of mountains close to Troy, noted for the luxuriance and veitlure of their forests.

Noted in Mythology as the scene of manj' fables, particularly of the rape of Ganymede and the judgment of Paris. Idae-us, -a, -um ; adj.: Ilium, another name for Troja, i. In recent 90 Vergil's aen. Schlieniann in the Troad. Remains of a prehistoric cilj- of great wealth and grandeur have been unearthed beneath the ruins of the historical citj', Ilium, on the site of the present town of Hissarlik. The destruction of the Homeric Ilium is usually assigned to B. The historic Ilium was founded about B. To avert the wrath of Artfimis Diana , whom Agamenmon had enraged by killing a sacred hind, and who detained the Greek fleet at Aulis, Iphigenia was to be sacrificed ; but a hart was miraculously substituted for her, and she was conveyed in a cloud to Tauris, where she became priestess to Artfiniis.

There is an allusion to the story in v. Ithac-us, -a, -una; adj.: The Julii family of the Caesars, originally belonging to Alba Longa , were fond of tracing their descent to lulus couAo9, "down". Juno, wife of Jupiter and queen of heaven, the bitter enemy of Troy.

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Lacaen-a, -ae ; N. Sparta was called Laoedaemon ; in v.


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For story of his death see vv. Larissae-us, -a, -uni ; adj. Lucifer, the nioming star Lux, fero. Lydi-us, -a, -um ; adj.: Macha-on, -onis ; N. Machaon, a Greek surgeon, son of Aesculapius. Menelaus, son of Atreus, brother of Agamenmon, husband of Helen and king of Sparta.. Probably akin in derivation to metis. Mycen-ae, -arum ; N.

Mycenae, royal city of Agamemnon in Argolis. Mygdonid-es, -ae ; N. Neoptolem-US, -i ; N. NeoptoUmus ; also called Pyrrkus, son of Achilles. His name yeos n-ToAeynos from the fact that he came late to the tvar. See the beautiful passage in Odyssey xi, , and compare the account there given with the picture presented by Vergil, Aen.

Neptuni-us, -a, -um; adj.: Nep tun-US, -i ; N. Neptune, God of the Sea ; the constant enemy of Troy owing to a breach of faith on the part of King Laomedon, who had bargained to reward him and Apollo for building the walls of Troy. After the fall of Troy he befriended Aeneas. Probably from root niq, "to wash"; cp. Nereus, a sea-deity, son of Oceanus and Tethys, and father of the sea-nymphs; "the old man of the sea.

Ocean-US, -i ; N. Olymp-us, -i ; N. Olympus, a mountain in Thessaly, the fabled abode of the gods. Orc-US, -i ; N. Orcus, the lotver tvorld, the jrave akin to epiryco or ipyco, "to confine ". Pan thus ; see v. Palamedes, king of Euboea, a Grecian who lost his life through the wiles of Ulysses.

Pallad-ium, -ii ; N. On its preservation depended the safety of Troy. In the Trojan war it was carried off by Ulysses and Diomed. Pall-as, -adis ; N. Panthus, priest Apollo in the Trojan citadel. Par-is, -idis ; N. When born he was exjjosed on Mount Ida, because his mother dreamed that she was delivered of a blazing torcli, which was interpreted by the seer Aesaeus to mean that the child would be the destruction of Troy.

Paris was brought up by shep- herds, and 60 signalized himself in protecting the people that he obtained the name of "man defender " 'A AfffaiSpos. He married the nymph Oenone. After- wards he was chosen a judye in the dispute about the golden apple. Having awarded the prize to Venus, against Juno and Minerva, he incurred the hatred of the two latter goddesses. Grecians, the Pelasgi were thT earliest inhabitants of Greece. Peli-as, -ae ; N. Pelias, a Trojan, comrade of Aeneas.

Pelid-es, -ae ; N. Pelop-eus, -ea, -eum; adj.: Penele-us, -i ; N. Peneleus, a leader of the Boeotians in the Trojan War. Pergam-a, -orum ; N. Pergama, the citadel of Troy ; 2. Periph-as, -antis ; N. Periphas, one of the companions of Pyrrhus at the sack, ing of Troy. Ptloeb-US, -i ; N. Phoen-ix, -icis ; N. Phoenix, son of Amyntor and friend of Achilles at the siegfc of Troy. Our website is secured by bit SSL encryption issued by Verisign Inc, making your shopping at Sapnaonline as secure as possible. If you need any of your orders' to be delivered outside of India, please reach out to us via our contact us page with the product details and delivery location for us to quote you the best possible shipping price.

Comics And General Novels. Armageddon rages on, changing the world and bringing with it all of the Angels once thought dead and gone. Vera and Cole must save their own fallen solider when his past returns to haunt him. Everyone has a past and everyone has secrets. The only difference is only a few will try to kill you. Vera and Cole are no different fighting side by side in a battle over the world. Powers are growing inside Cole that he never knew he had and has no idea what they mean or how to control them.

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There will be nothing left if Vera and Cole fail. Watch as the world burns and war rages on. Believe the reckoning that is coming within Exsilium. Milton, Paradise Lost, 9, 52 — and now from end to er. Night is said to ' rush up from the ocean ' in pursuit of the retreat- ing day. Some say that the passage shows that the moon was quietly shining, others that there was no moon shining. Some quote in support of the latter view Milton, Samson Agonistes: Vergil brings out prominently the light and calm of the night so as to further the designs of the Greeks.

I, Act 3, Sc. It may be an imitation of Homer, II. Hence some look on sepultuiii in this passage of Vergil as a zeugma, "o'ercome with wine and buried in sleep," but the order of the words precludes this. The accusative in this case resembles the accusative of specification: Hector slew Patroclus, who had dunned the armour of his friend Achilles. What the penates were it is difficult to say. They were probably national deities represented in little images of wood or stone, and the word may be derived from PA, "to protect" or "feed": In the temple of Vesta at Rome, " the eternal fire " was maintained, the extinguishing of which foreboded the doom of the city.

Possibly diverso means " in a distant quarter of the city.

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This, with the latter interpretation, is particularly significant as marking the transition. Note the imitative harmony produced by the recurring of the r sound. The contrast is between Aeneas listening to the din of battle and the shepherd hear- ing the roaring of a conflagration or a torrent from the top of a crag. The simile is suggested by Homer, II. Sophocles Electra , riv' iSovaa niariv. TidrjfiL is often used in the sense of "make": That the house of Deiphobus was first attacked is evident from Homer, Od.

Note the lively effect of the sudden introduction of the figure. There is an anachronism here, as trumpets were not used in Homer's time to give signals in battle. Nettleship shows that sumiiia res is an old phrase for the later res publica, "our all," "the main chance. Is the "arx" any longer defensible?

The fact that Panthus has just come from the "arx" and that Aeneas has resolved to go thither v. VK-y j, "to scratch," — primi — vigiles: Lucan, 4, 1S7, civilis Erinys. The second interpretation of Servius seems the best: Understood in this sense, the epithet raises our respect not only for Coroebus but for Cassan- dra, in the same degree as, understood in the former sense, it lowers it.

According to Roman custom, after betrothal relationship [affiititas was considered complete: Tacitus Ann, XII, 4: The meaning then is: It is best to take super adverbially and to supply diciis with his: It seems to have been a universal belief among the ancients that the gods left a doomed city. Josephus relates that during the siege of Jerusalem voices more than human were heard crj'ing on the day of Pentecost: So also Milton, Ode Nativity: With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving. Note the quantity of the final syllable of pavor ; possibly long, because the stress of the voice ictus falls on it and also because the letter r is trilled: Here there is little or no distinction between the words: So also Milton, Paradise Lost, g, So also Catullus, iv, 2: Note the recurring dactyls and the repetition of 7-e- well brings out the sudden recoil of the unwary traveller.

Perhaps badge seems nearest to it in English. With fas supply est. The Oilean Ajax was said to have dragged Cassandra and the image to which she was clinging from the temple. The precincts of religious buildings have from time immemorable been places of refuge: The altar was considered especially inviolable: Kings, ii, 28 ; Matt, xxiii, Note the quan- tity of -ilr. A final syllable naturally short may be lengthened when it is caesural: Latin is sadly deficient in verbal nouns ; their place is often supplied by the petf. The Oilean Ajax felt aggrieved at the loss of his prize.

Vergil means here that there was a slight difference in dialect or accent. Then came its interjectional meaning. Minerva, 68 Vergil's aen. Homer, Iliad, 12, Seneca recommends his friend on the occasion of any loss to say constantly without complaining, dis aliter visum est, or rather di melius scil. German iveichen, " a change," " turn ": For the form see v.

Tennyson, Dream of Fair Women: What verbs are semi- deponent? Note the present cotivellimus represents a continued act and impulimus a single, momentary one. Some derive it from ve-sti-bu-luvi, "a place for standing outside ": The simile is taken from the Iliad 22, 93, when Hector is awaiting the attack of Achilles: Shelley's Hellas ad Jinem: So also Tennyson, The Two Voices, when he describes the dragon- fly: Pyrrhus brought a number of warriors from Scyros, one of the Cyclades, where his grandfather Lycomedes dwelt: The doors were double doors valvae.

It may be observed that though b7. Achilles was the father of Pyrrhus. No doubt this would be a familiar image to Vergil seen both on the Mincius and the Padus. The hundred mentioned here must refer to both daughters-in-law and daughters. The phrase " barbaric gold " suggests the idea of Oriental magnificence: Milton's Paradise Lost, 2, 3: The Romans often adorned the walls of their houses and temples with the spoils of war.

The roof of this was partly open and below the open space was a cistern iftiphtviwn. Laurus erat tectl medio in penetralibus altis. Horace also alludes to the custom of planting trees around the alrium: Tennyson, In Memoriam , xv: Shakespeare, Coriolanus, i, 2: Here, it is used for the reciprocal feeling of gods to men: Qt facere for ut cernerem.

Daphnis me malus urit, ego hanc in Daphnide laurum. This does not mean that Pyrrhus was illegitimate, but that his nature and conduct showed him to be no true son of Achilles. Achilles granted his request and allowed him to depart in safety. It was covered with leather; root AMBH, "to project," cp. Vergil may have in mind the sad fate of Pompey. According to Servius, Priam's body was exposed on the Sigeum promontory. The main argument against the genuineness is that in Aeneid 6, seqq.

Helen is spoken of as betraying Deiphobus to the Greeks. He does not descend till V. Ii, introduces Leda in the shades. The sense is "shall she return now that Priam has been murdered, Troy burned, Dardania bathed in blood? The present represents a continuous effort, and the perfect tlie completion of the act if the effort were relaxed. Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva. So also Macaulay, Lay of Horatins: Metaphor taken from spinning: Another interpretation, suggested by Horace, Od.

I, 28, 35, is as follows: It all hinges on the meaning of ipsa inami, v. Taking the most reasonable meaning of this, viz. Horace's Quamquam festinas, non est mora longa ; llcebit Iniecto ter pulvere curras. Aeneas uses this and not a stronger word, to soften the rebuke of his father: Homeric, "koIov ae ettoq pvysv epKog bddvTcjv. I, , ; retro, re! Where Andro- mache in this way speaks of Astyanax. This is the MSS. Ill, 89, where almost the identi- cal expression " da pater attg! We have followed the MSS. Scan this line and tell what metrical figure in ii. Thunder on the left was a good sign according to Roman augury: When beggars die there are no comets seen: The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.

So also Richard II. The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth. And lean-faced prophets whisper fearful things, These signs forerun the death or fall of kings. Ida was the point for which they should set out. Servius says that the light signified the future glory of the house of Aeneas: Anchises was probably before this stretched on his bed: Note the presents est, sequor, mark strongly the promptness of Anchises.

Conington takes incendia subject and aestus object: Servius thinks that Vergil is leading up to the loss of Creusa. Note that dicarn is future indicative. It is rare to find such a construction with adverto: The indicatives substitit — erravit — resedit for t'ae subjunctives snbstiterit — erraverit — resederit of depend ent question may be explained by supposing that Vergil intended the question to be originally a direct one: With si, "to see whether": Perhaps Vergil is thinking of the shrine of Juno in the capitol of Rome.

Greek, iarrepia, " the western land ": Prophecy describes the future as present. Cybele, a Phr 'gian goddess, specially worshipped on Mt. Ida, and also a patroness of Troy. These lines are translated from Od. But unsubstantial Form eludes her grasp As often as that eager grasp was made.


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  8. Acama-S, -ntis ; N. Acamas, a Greek hero ; v. Aene-as, -ae ; N. AchaiC-US, -a, -um ; adj. Achill-es, -is ; N. He was slain by Paris shortly before the fall of Troy ; see v. Agamemn-on, -onis ; N. Ai-ax, -acis ; N. Ajax, a Grecian hero, son of Oilens, king of the Locri in Greece. Sometimes called the lesser Ajax to distinguish him from the greater Ajax, son of Telamon, who, being defeated by Ulysses in the contest for the Arms of Achilles, went mad and slew himself.

    Tlie Oilean Ajax mentioned in Aen. Anchis-es, -ae ; N. Anchises, father of Aeneas. He was, both by his father, Capys, and by his mother, Themis, descended from the royal house of Troy, whose ancestor was Dardanus. His beauty equalled that of the immortals. He was beloved by Venus, and by her became the father of Aeneas. For divulging and boasting of the origin of Aeneas he was stnick by a flash of lightning, which, according to some tradition, killed, according to others, blinded or lamed him. Vergil makes Anchises survive the capture of Troy, and Aeneas carry his father on his shoulders from the burning city.

    Andxog'-eos, -el ; N. Androtnach-e, es ; N. Andromache, wife of Hector ; v. Argiv-i, -orum ; N. Argolic-US, -a, -um ; adj. Argos, a city in Argolis, the district in which was situated Mycenae, the royal city of Agamemnon. Asia, -ae ; N. Asia, or Asia Minor. Ascan-ius, -i ; N. Ascanius or lulus, son of Aeneas. Astyan-ax, -actis ; N. Astyanax, son of Hector and Andromache. Atrid-es, -ae ; N. Auster, -tri ; N. Automedon, -ntis ; N. Automedon, charioteer of Achilles. Belid-es, -ae properly Belides ; N. Calcha-S, -ntis ; N. Calchas, a Greek soothsayer. Cap-ys, -yos ; N. Capys, a Trojan ; see v.

    Cassandra, -ae ; N. Cassfuirfra, daughter of Priam, inspired by Apollo with the gift of prophecy, but doomed by him always to be disbelieved.

    Hell's Gate

    On the capture of the city, she fell to the lot of Agamemnon and accompanied him to Mycenae. Cer-es, -eris ; N. Ceres, Goddess of Agriculture. Coroeb-US, -i ; N. Creus-a, -ae ; N. Creusa, wife of Aeneas. Cybel-e, -es ; N. Dardani-a, -ae ; N. Dardanid-ae, -arum ; N. Deiphob-us, -i ; N. Deiphobus, son of Priam ; v. Diomed-es, -is ; N. Dolop-es, -um ; N. Their leader was Phoenix. Doricus a -um ; adj. Dyma-S, ntis ; N. Dymas, father of Hecuba. E6-US, -a, -um ; adj. Epe-OS, -i ; N. Epeos, the inventor of the wooden horse ; see v. Erinys, -yos ; N.

    The Erjnyes or Eumenides were Avenging Deities, a personification of curses. Eur-us, -i ; N. Eiirypylus, a Greek ; v. Fortun-a, -ae ; X. Fortune, the Goddess of Fortune. GrOrg'-O, or -on, -onis ; N. Grai-us, -i ; pi. Graii or Grai ; N. Greeks ; see note on v. Hect-or, -oris ; N. Hector, son of Priam and bravest of the Trojans, slain bj- Achilles after the latter had pursued him thrice round Troy.

    His body was dragged to the Grecian fleet at the wheels of Achilles' chariot, and was afterwards ransomed by the aged Priam, who, securing a twelve days' truce, performed the funeral obsequies. The storj' is to be found in Horn. Iliad, xxii and xxiv. Hecub-a, -ae ; N. Hecuba, wife of Priam. Helen, wife of Menelaus, king of Sparta. Upon this fateful event hinged the Trojan war. Menelaus, gathering an army of Grecian heroes and their followers, sailed to Troy and besieged it in order to recover his faithless spouse. Helen was frequently taunted by the Trojans as the cause of the war.

    At the close she returned home with her husband, and in the Odyssey, Bk. See, however, note on v. Hesperi-US, -a, -um; adj.: Western, and so Italian when contrasted with Greece or Asia eo-Trepia. Hypan-is, -is ; N. Hypanis, one of the Trojans who accompanied Aeneas on the night of the fall of Troy. Ida, a range of mountains close to Troy, noted for the luxuriance and verdure of their forests.

    Noted in Mythology as the scene of many fables, particularly of the rape of Ganymede and the judgment of Paris. Idae-'JS, -a, -um ; adj.: Di-nm, -i ; N. Ilium, another name for Troja, i. In recent 90 veegil's aen. Schliemann in the Troad. Remains of a prehistoric city of great wealth and grandeur have been unearthed beneath the ruins of the historical city, Ilium, on the site of tlie present town of Hissarlilf.

    The destruction of the Homeric Ilium is usually assigned to B. The historic Ilium was founded about B. To avert the wrath of Artemis Diana , whom Agamemnon had enraged by killing a sacred hind, and who detained the Greek fleet at Aulis, Iphigenia was to be sacrificed ; but a hart was miraculously substituted for her, and she was conveyed in a cloud to Tauris, where she became priestess to Artgmis. There is an allusion to the story in v. The Julii family of the Caesars, originally lielonging to Alba Longa , were fond of tracing their descent to lulus louAo?

    Ilin-O, -onis ; N. Juno, wife of Jupiter and queen of heaven, the bitter enemy of Troy. Lacaen-a, -ae ; N. Sparta was called Lacedaemon ; in v. Laoeoon, priest of Apollo, although at v. For story of his death see vv. Larissae-US, -a, -um ; adj.: Lucifer, -i ; N. Lucifer, the morning star lux, fero.

    Lydi-US, -a, -um ; adj.: Macha-on, -onis ; N. Machaon, a Greek surgeon, son of Aesculapius. Mars, God of War. Menela-us, -i ; m. Menelaus, son of Atreus, brother of Agamemnon, husband of Helen and king of Sparta. Minerv-a, -ae ; N. Probably akin in derivation to mens. Mycen-ae, -arum ; N. Mycenae, royal city of Agamemnon in Argolis. Myrmidon-es, -um ; N. Neoptolem-US, -i ; N. Xeoptolemus ; also called Pyrrhus, son of Achilles. See the beautiful passage in Odyssey xi, , and compare the account there given with the picture presented by Vergil, Aen.

    Neptuni-us, -a, -um; adj.: Neptun-US, -i ; N. Neptune, God of the Sea ; the constant enemy of Troy owing to a breach of faith on the part of King Laomedon, who had bargained to reward him and Apollo for building the walls of Troy. After the fall of Troy he befriended Aeneas. Probably from root nig, "to wash"; ep. Nereus, a sea-deity, son of Oceanus and Tethys, and father of the sea-nymphs ; "the old man of the sea. Notus, the South wind; Ndros the Gk. Ocean-US, -i ; N.

    Olymp-us, -i ; N. Olympus, a mountain in Thessaly, the fabled abode of the gods. Orc-us, -i ; N. Otliryad-es, -ae ; N. Palamedes, king of Euboea, a Grecian who lost his life tlirough the wiles of Ulysses. Pallad-ium, -ii ; N. On its preservation depended the safety of Troy. In the Trojan war it was carried oflE by Ulysses and Diomed.

    Panthus, priest Apollo in the Trojan citadel. Par-is, -idis ; N. Paris, also called Alexander, son of Priam and Hecuba. When born he was e. He married the njinph Oenone. After- wards he was chosen a judge in the dispute about the golden apple. Having awarded the prize to Venus, against Juno and Minerva, he incurred the hatred of the two latter goddesses. Pelasg-i, -omm ; N. Grecians, the Pelasgi were thj earliest inhabitants of Greece. Peli-as, -ae ; N. Pelias, a Trojan, comrade of Aeneas.

    Pelld-es, -ae ; N. Pel6p-eus, -ea, -eum; adj.: Penele-US, -i ; N. Peneleus, a leader of the Boeotians in the Trojan War. Pergam-a, -orum ; N. Pergama, the citadel of Troy ; 2. Periph-as, -antis ; N. Periphas, one of the companions of Pyrrhus at the sack- ing of Troy. Ptloeb-US, -i ; N.

    Phoen-ix, -icis ; N. Phoenix, son of Amyntor and friend of Achilles at the siege of Troy. Phryg-es, -um ; N. PhtM-a, -ae ; N. Phthia, a town in Thessaly and birth-place of Achilles. Polit-es, -ae ; N. Polites, a son of Priam, slain by Pyrrhus before his father's eyes during the sacking of Troy: