FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   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   1361   1362   1363   1364   1365   1366   1367   1368   1369   1370   1371   1372   1373   1374   1375   1376   1377   >>   >|  
eid. 4. 5358. Seneca. 5359. Cor totum combustum, jecur suffumigatum, pulmo arefactus, ut credam miseram illam animam bis elixam aut combustam, ob maximum ardorem quem patiuntur ob ignem amoris. 5360. Embl. Amat. 4. et 5. 5361. Grotius. 5362. Lib. 4. nam istius amoris neque principia, neque media aliud habent quid, quam molestias, dolores, cruciatus, defatigationes, adeo ut miserum esse maerore, gemitu, solitudine torqueri, mortem optare. semperque debacchari, sint certa amantium signa et certae actiones. 5363. Virg. Aen. 4. "The works are interrupted, promises of great walls, and scaffoldings rising towards the skies, are all suspended." 5364. Seneca Hip. act. "The shuttle stops, and the web hangs unfinished from her hands." 5365. Eclog. 1. "No rest, no business pleased my lovesick breast, my faculties became dormant, my mind torpid, and I lost my taste for poetry and song." 5366. Edyl. 14. 5367. Mant. Eclog. 5368. Ter. Eunuch. 5369. Ov. Met. de Polyphemo: uritur oblitus pecorum, antrorumque suorum; jamque tibi formae, &c. 5370. Qui quaeso? Amo. 5371. Ter. Eunuch. 5372. Qui olim cogitabat quae vellet, et pulcherrimis philosophiae praeceptis operam insumpsit, qui universi circuitiones coelique naturam, &c. Hanc unam intendit operam, de sola cogitat, noctes et dies se componit ad hanc, et ad acerbam servitutem redactus animus, &c. 5373. Pars epitaphii ejus. 5374. Epist. prima. 5375. Boethius l. 3 Met. ult. 5376. Epist. lib. 6. Valeat pudor, valeat honestas, valeat honor. 5377. Theodor. prodromus, lib. 3. Amor Mystili genibus ovolutis, ubertemque lachrimas, &c. Nihil ex tota praeda praeter Rhodanthem virginem accipiam. 5378. Lib. 2. Certe vix credam, et bona fide fateare Aratine, te no amasse adeo vehementer; si enim vere amasses, nihil prius aut potius optasses, quam amatae mulieri placere. Ea enim amoris lex est idem velle et nolle. 5379. Stroza, sil. Epig. 5380. Quippe haec omnia ex atra bile et amore proveniunt. Jason Pratensis. 5381. Immense amor ipse stultitia est. Carda, lib. 1. de sapientia. 5382. Mantuan. "Whoever is in love is in slavery, he follows his sweetheart as a captive his captor, and wears a yoke on his sumbissibe neck." 5383. Virg. Aen. 4. "She began to speak but stopped in the middle of her discourse." 5384. Seneca
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   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   1361   1362   1363   1364   1365   1366   1367   1368   1369   1370   1371   1372   1373   1374   1375   1376   1377   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

amoris

 
Seneca
 

Eunuch

 

valeat

 

credam

 

operam

 

praeter

 

redactus

 

praeda

 

lachrimas


animus
 
Rhodanthem
 

accipiam

 

intendit

 
ubertemque
 
virginem
 

acerbam

 
servitutem
 

genibus

 

noctes


Boethius

 

prodromus

 
Theodor
 

Mystili

 

cogitat

 

Valeat

 
componit
 
epitaphii
 

honestas

 

ovolutis


potius

 

slavery

 

Whoever

 

sweetheart

 
Mantuan
 

Immense

 

stultitia

 
sapientia
 

captive

 

captor


stopped

 

middle

 

discourse

 

sumbissibe

 

Pratensis

 
optasses
 
amatae
 

placere

 

mulieri

 

amasses