The Year's Work in Classical StudiesJ.W. Arrowsmith, 1916 - Classical education |
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Page 52
... treats ; but there is very little in the way of connective reading , so that the work would have to be used in connec- tion with some class or lecture , or side by side with some continuous history of Greece , if the meaning of many of ...
... treats ; but there is very little in the way of connective reading , so that the work would have to be used in connec- tion with some class or lecture , or side by side with some continuous history of Greece , if the meaning of many of ...
Page 65
... treats in detail the house 1 J.R.S. iv . 147-92 . 2 Hermes , l . 151 . 3 Cicero of Arpinum ( Yale , 1914 ) , pp . 488 ; $ 24 . This ought properly to have been noted last year . It has been a good deal criticised . See also p . 116 . 4 ...
... treats in detail the house 1 J.R.S. iv . 147-92 . 2 Hermes , l . 151 . 3 Cicero of Arpinum ( Yale , 1914 ) , pp . 488 ; $ 24 . This ought properly to have been noted last year . It has been a good deal criticised . See also p . 116 . 4 ...
Page 78
... treat of the three ( which he reduces to two originals ) of the ' eрxoμaι èк кaðαρоû ' type , 1 J.H.S. 1915 , p . 1. See also p . 110 . 2 Religion and Art , by A. della Seta , translated by Marian C. Harrison , with a preface by Mrs ...
... treat of the three ( which he reduces to two originals ) of the ' eрxoμaι èк кaðαρоû ' type , 1 J.H.S. 1915 , p . 1. See also p . 110 . 2 Religion and Art , by A. della Seta , translated by Marian C. Harrison , with a preface by Mrs ...
Page 89
... treats . Rome certainly gives us the high - water mark of the possible development of the chthonic notion of the spirit in the tomb ' ( p . 15 ) . But neither Parentalia nor Caristia , except in their relation to the family , had any ...
... treats . Rome certainly gives us the high - water mark of the possible development of the chthonic notion of the spirit in the tomb ' ( p . 15 ) . But neither Parentalia nor Caristia , except in their relation to the family , had any ...
Page 107
... treat Teiresias as a fraud , are excellent . He is perhaps too severe in his judgment of the frivolity of Jocasta , and rather unapprecia- tive , therefore , of her love for Oedipus . His view of the dramatic interest of the Oedipus at ...
... treat Teiresias as a fraud , are excellent . He is perhaps too severe in his judgment of the frivolity of Jocasta , and rather unapprecia- tive , therefore , of her love for Oedipus . His view of the dramatic interest of the Oedipus at ...
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accent ancient appeared Arch Berl Berlin Brugmann caesura Cambridge Catullus century B.C. chapter Cicero Class Classical coins connected contains contribution criticism daimon deals dialect Dictionary Dionysos discusses dissertation edition English Etruscan Euripides excavations Forsch fragments German gives Glotta Grammar Hesiod hexameter Homer Ibid Iliad important Indo-Germanic Indog inscriptions interesting Ital J. P. Postgate Journ Journal language Latin Leipzig literary mention Museum notes origin Oscan Oxford PALAEOGRAPHY paper papyri Paris Pelasgian period Phil Philology plates Plautus poems poet points present Prof Professor published Quart religion Revue rhythm ritual Roman Roman Britain Rome satem Scavi scholars Sitzungsberichte subjunctive suggestion syllable syntax Teubner theory tion tomb Trans translation Tsakonian University Press valuable verb volume vowel Vulgar Latin Wilamowitz Woch words writes written Year's Zeit
Popular passages
Page 29 - ... accented vowel was sung on two notes, there was a tendency in the case of acute vowels to make the second mora the higher, in the case of circumflexed vowels a strong tendency to make the first the higher. This agrees generally with what we know of the nature of these accents. 3. When a long unaccented vowel was sung on two notes, there was a tendency in the case of those preceding an accented syllable to make the second mora the higher, in the case of those following an accented syllable to...
Page 24 - A Criticism of Criteria: Observations on the Evidence Afforded by Metre and Diction for the Date of Latin Poems," Classical Quarterly, X (1916), pp.
Page 105 - Si nous avons raison d'affirmer que Rome a été formée par la fusion de deux peuples aux traditions opposées, l'analyse de la religion, du droit, des institutions de Rome doit logiquement permettre de retrouver les traces de ce dualisme. Rome n'est plus la Cité Antique, aux institutions fortement...
Page 22 - I sometimes wonder how many suspect that there is a human document in a Schoolbook that came into the world shortly after the great conflict of the Civil War, out of which the author, who was not a mere compiler, emerged, crippled in body, shattered in fortune, with teeth set hard to meet the stress of fate, his eyes wet with tears for his fallen comrades, and yet with the gleam of a new love reflected in their depths. In the examples of my Latin Grammar of 1867 lies perdu the history of that period...
Page 93 - Witte assigns it to the period from 1300 to 1308. between the emperor and the pope ; the emperor is supreme by divine right in temporal things, and is to guide the human race to temporal felicity in accordance with the teaching of philosophy...