FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1311   1312   1313   1314   1315   1316   1317   1318   1319   1320   1321   1322   1323   1324   1325   1326   1327   1328   1329   1330   1331   1332   1333   1334   1335  
1336   1337   1338   1339   1340   1341   1342   1343   1344   1345   1346   1347   1348   1349   1350   1351   1352   1353   1354   1355   1356   1357   1358   1359   1360   >>   >|  
an nymph." 4854. Leland. "Their lips resound with thousand kisses, their arms are pallid with the close embrace, and their necks are mutually entwined by their fond caresses." 4855. Angerianus. 4856. Si longe aspiciens haec urit lumine divos atque homines prope, cur urere lina nequit? Angerianus. 4857. "We wonder how great the vapour, and whence it comes." 4858. Idem Anger. 4859. Obstupuit mirabundas membrorum elegantiam, &c. Ep. 7. 4860. Stobaeus e graeco. "My limbs became relaxed, I was overcome from head to foot, all self-possession fled, so great a stupor overburdened my mind." 4861. Parum abfuit quo minus saxum ex nomine factus sum, ipsis statuis immobiliorem me fecit. 4862. Veteres Gorgonis fabulam confinxerunt, eximium formae decus stupidos reddens. 4863. Hor. Ode 5. 4864. Marlos Hero. 4865. Aspectum virginis sponte fugit insanus fere, et impossibile existimans ut simul eam aspicere quis possit, et intra temperantiae metas se continere. 4866. Apuleius, l. 4. Multi mortales longis itineribus, &c. 4867. Nic. Gerbel. l. 5. Achaia. 4868. I. Secundus basiorum lib. 4869. Musaeus Illa autem bene morata, per aedem quocunque vagabatur, sequentem mentem habebat, e oculos, et corda virorum. 4870. Homer. 4871. Marlowe. 4872. Perno didascalo dial. Ital. Latin. donat. a Gasp. Barthio Germano. 4873. Propertius. 4874. Vestium splendore et elegantia ambitione incessus, donis, cantilenis, &c. gratiam adipisci. 4875. Prae caeteris corporis proceritate et egregia indole mirandus apparebat, caeteri autem capti ejus amore videbantur, &c. 4876. Aristenaetus, ep. 10. 4877. Tom. 4. dial. meretr. respicientes et ad formam ejus obstupescentes. 4878. In Charidemo sapientiae merito pulchritudo praefertur et opibus. 4879. Indignum nihil est Troas fortes et Achivos tempore tam longo perpessos esse labore. 4880. Digna quidem facies pro qua vel obiret Achilles, vel Priamus, belli causa probanda fuit. Proper. lib. 2. 4881. Coecus qui Helenae formam carpserat. 4882. Those mutinous Turks that murmured at Mahomet, when they saw Irene, excused his absence. Knowls. 4883. In laudem Helenae erat. 4884. Apul. miles. lib. 4. 4885. Secun. bas. 13. 4886. Curtius, l. 1. 4887. Confessi. 4888. Seneca. Amor in oculis oritur. 4889. Ovid Fast. 4890. Plutarch. 4891. Lib. de pulc
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1311   1312   1313   1314   1315   1316   1317   1318   1319   1320   1321   1322   1323   1324   1325   1326   1327   1328   1329   1330   1331   1332   1333   1334   1335  
1336   1337   1338   1339   1340   1341   1342   1343   1344   1345   1346   1347   1348   1349   1350   1351   1352   1353   1354   1355   1356   1357   1358   1359   1360   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

formam

 
Angerianus
 

Helenae

 

Aristenaetus

 

mirandus

 

indole

 

apparebat

 

videbantur

 

caeteri

 

meretr


pulchritudo
 
merito
 

sapientiae

 

praefertur

 
opibus
 
Indignum
 

Charidemo

 
egregia
 

respicientes

 

obstupescentes


adipisci

 

Marlowe

 
didascalo
 

mentem

 

sequentem

 

vagabatur

 
habebat
 
oculos
 

virorum

 

Barthio


gratiam

 

cantilenis

 

corporis

 

caeteris

 
incessus
 

ambitione

 

Propertius

 
Germano
 

Vestium

 

elegantia


splendore

 

proceritate

 

laudem

 

excused

 

absence

 
Knowls
 
Curtius
 

Plutarch

 

oritur

 

Confessi