BUKU BASA POLANDIA KAKAIT KARO «QUIS LEGET HAEC»
Temukaké kagunané saka
quis leget haec ing pilihan bibliografi iki. Buku kang kakait dening
quis leget haec lan pethikan cekak kang padha kanggo nyediyakaké panggunané ing sastra Basa Polandia.
1
A History of Roman Literature: From Livius Andronicus to Boethius : ...
52); quis leget haec?, 'who will read this?' (1. 2); vel duo vel nemo, 'one or two, which is as good as none' (1. 3); vine memor leti: Jiigit horn: hoc, quod loquor, inde est, 'live with death in your mind; the hour is fleeting; this saying of mine is so ...
Michael von Albrecht, Gareth L. Schmeling, 1997
2
The satires of A. Persius Flaccus, with a tr. and comm. by J. ... - Strona 8
Quis leget haec ? ' Min ' tu istud ais ? Nemo hercule.' Nemo ? ' Vel duo, vel nemo.' Turpe et miserabile! ' Quare ? ne mihi Polydamas et Troiades Labeonem 1 . hominum quantum. 4. Nee mihi. An attack on the corruptions of literature, ...
3
The Satires of A. Persius Flaccus: With a Translation and Commentary
Quis leget haec: 'Vel duo, vel nemo.' Nemo hercule.' Nemo P 'Quare ? 1. hominum quantum. An attack on the corruptions of literature, as symptomatic of corruption in morals, intended as introductory to the Satires, as would seem from the ...
Persius, John Conington, Henry Nettleship, 1874
4
History of Roman literature: from it's earliest period to the ...
The lines, " Cujus non audeo dicere nomen," &c. quoted above, are copied by Juvenal in his first satire, but with evident allusion to the works of his predecessor. A line in the first book— " Quis leget haec ? min' tu istud ais ? nemo, Hercule, ...
5
History of Roman Literature . .: From its̓ earliest period to the ...
A line in the first book — " Quis leget haec ? mm' tu istud ais ? nemo, Hercule, nemo," has been imitated by Persius in the very commencement of his satires — " O curas hominum ! O quantum est in rebus inane ! Quis leget haec ? min' tu istud ...
6
The Critical Review: Or, Annals of Literature
The very sirst line of his poem present to \is sentiments that appear dis;ointed, because the language is desective in which these are represented. O curas hominum ! O quantum est in rebus inane ! — Quis leget hæc ? — Min' tu istud ais ?
Tobias George Smollett, 1774
7
A Companion to Persius and Juvenal
... iambic is further emphasized by Callimachus' insistence upon the textual nature of his verse (e.g. Acosta- Hughes (2002) 51-52; Barchiesi (2002) 59-60), a conceit that features prominently at the start of Persius' first Satire (quis leget haec?
Susanna Braund, Josiah Osgood, 2012
8
Persius: A Study in Food, Philosophy, and the Figural - Strona 156
Second, satire 1 contains the only three instances of pause-elision in Persius, and the first one occurs already in line 1, between hominum and the following O. O curas hominum! O quantum est in rebus inane! “quis leget haec?” min tu istud ...
9
History of Roman literature ... to the Augustan age - Strona 410
The lines, " Cujus non audeo dicere nomen," &c. quoted above, are copied by Juvenal in his first satire, but with evident allusion to the works of his predecessor. A line in the first book — " Quis leget haec ? min' tu istud ais ? nemo, Hercule, ...
10
A Companion to Roman Rhetoric - Strona 402
If the line is meant to mime the preaching of diatribe, Persius follows it immediately with correction in the voice of an interlocutor: quis leget haec? (“who will read this stuff ?”, 1.2) - “read,” that is, not listen to. Another complication appears in the ...
William Dominik, Jon Hall, 2008