Sentences with phrase «roman poets»

I never heard him discussing his work, or Roman poets.
Over the course of his writing life, Augustine combined a number of elements from his fragmented culture — Neoplatonic philosophy, Roman civic morality, the heritage of the great Roman poets, Manichaeism — with his dominant but open - ended Christian faith, into a new synthesis.
In the first century AD, Roman poet Ovid wrote the following: «There is more refreshment and stimulation in a nap, even of the briefest, than in all the alcohol ever distilled.»
A similar revulsion was recorded even earlier by the imperial Roman poet Virgil, who depicted an episode of the Roman civil wars as a victory of human law and ordinary human beings over «every kind of monstrous god and barking Anubis too.»
Seeing all those thousands of bureaucrats, military officers, lawyers, and hangers - on, the Roman poet Horace knew too well the world in which Astrue dwells.
At first glance, Feuerbach's later theory looks like an elaboration of a view that goes back at least to the Roman poet Statius and was revived by Spinoza, Hobbes, Hume and others: that fear of the terrifying forces of nature first created the gods — «in the ignorance of causes,» as Hobbes explains.
The Roman poet Horace (65 to 8 BCE) used «grind» in his endorsement of brothels.
(18) Doubtless, many of Luke's readers were familiar also with the remarkable work of the well - known Roman poet, Virgil, The Fourth Eclogue (40 B.C.).
He headed one of his chapters with a line from the Annales of the pre-Classical Roman poet Ennius — Moribus antiquis res stat Romana viresque — thus linking the Christian Roman faithfulness to Tradition with the pagan Roman appetite for venerable and normative antiquity.
Enoch Powell, a shadow frontbencher in 1968, had compared racial unrest in the US to the Roman poet Virgil's description of «the River Tiber foaming with much blood», in a speech which made the discussion of immigration a largely no - go area for the mainstream British political parties for fear of being accused of racism.
But Copernicus credited the ancient Roman poet Virgil as his inspiration.
The Roman poet Ovid said `' wine and love have ever been allies.»
The Roman poet Horace coined the Latin phrase aurea mediocritas, which translated means the golden mean.
With well over 2,000 entries by more than 350 scholars from all over the world, this set endeavors to provide users with a single comprehensive resource in English to consult for information on the classical Roman poet best known for composing the influential Aeneid, the epic poem of ancient Rome and a major part of the Western literary canon.
Whether the Roman poet and philosopher Titus Lucretius Carus (known as Lucretius) coined the expression in the first century BC, or merely repeated it, his is the oldest known reference: «quod ali cibus est aliis fuat acre venenum» (what is food for one man may be bitter poison to others).
At university, where I read Greek and Latin, they appeared in the most unexpected places: a reference to cassia in a poem by Sappho written in the 6th century BC; a Roman poet's sarcastic remarks about pepper.
«Bread and circuses» (or bread and games; from Latin: panem et circenses) Entertaining ourselves into slavery / deathEtymology 1914 translation of the Roman poet Juvenal's Latin remark panem et circenses («bread and circuses»).
[6][20][22][24] During the first century, the Roman poet Martial wrote descriptive verses to a small white dog named Issa owned by his friend Publius.
Dante feels pity for many of the sinners he meets along his journey, and we learn that his guide, the Roman poet Virgil, will never be able to get into Heaven because he died shortly after the birth of Christ and therefore never had the opportunity to be baptized.
Since the 1980s, Reinhardt has exclusively illustrated scenes from Ovid's Metamorphoses, with vivid, whimsical watercolor and gouache paintings that recount the Roman poet's time - honored myths.
Roman poet Ovid's (43 BC — 17 AD) 15 book poem was written in Latin and features the story of Diana, which inspired Titian's three great paintings.
Ovid, the Roman poet whose legacy has inspired countless authors since his death around 2,000 years ago, will be the subject of a range of academic conferences and talks,, including events at the Guangqi International Centre for Scholars of Shanghai Normal University (31 May — 2 June), and the American Academy in Rome (9 March).
Titian considered these paintings, of which there are seven in total, to be his own «painted poems» of select myths from the Roman poet Ovid's magnum opus: Metamorphoses.
Punctuated by green tones reflecting the tropical palette of Trinidad where the artist lives, the work echoes a series of mythologcal paintings presented in «Night and Day,» that he made in response to «Metamorphoses» by the Roman poet Ovid.
That is also the topic behind the so - called ut pictura poesis, the Latin expression by the Roman poet Quinto Orazio Flacco which literally translates to: «as in painting so in poetry» — an across all disciplines - approach defined and advocated for centuries by artists and eloquence virtuosos.
The Wikipedia adds: «Annuit Coeptis and the other motto on the reverse of the Great Seal, Novus Ordo Seclorum, can both be traced to lines by the Roman poet Virgil.
That leads us back to the Roman poet Juvenal's question: «Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?»
The words of the roman poet Terence are of particular relevance: Homo sum: humani nil a me alienum puto — «I am a man: nothing human is foreign to me.»
-- Horace, Roman poet (65 - 8 B.C.) Have you read your resume lately?
Love letter to her include the letters written by the very famous Ovid, he was a Roman poet.

Not exact matches

In a similar way, one might say that Western poetry and literature are the offspring of Virgil, whose writings, especially the Aeneid, captured the Roman and medieval mind like those of no other poet.
I am first defining the poetic function in a negative manner, following Roman Jakobson, as the inverse of the referential function understood in a narrow descriptive sense, then in a positive way as what in my volume on metaphor I call the metaphorical reference.7 And in this regard, the most extreme paradox is that when language most enters into fiction — e.g., when a poet forges the plot of a tragedy — it most speaks truth because it redescribes reality so well known that it is taken for granted in terms of the new features of this plot.
Classically trained poets and writers at the time would have been exposed to a few sources that painted ancient Romans as just the sort of people who would vomit just to eat more.
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The author, a poet, newspaper columnist and former dean of campus at Goddard College, offers an exhaustive history of his subject, which includes such luminaries as Edward Gibbon, who devoted one - quarter of the space in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire to footnotes.
With contributions from writers, artists, scientists, poets and curators, Roman Road Journal sets out to make connections within an international community of independent people who are interested in exploring the world around them.
Therefore, the Society decided that the future examinations should require a display of a general knowledge of English, Grecian and Roman History, an acquaintance with one of the ancient Latin Poets, and an understanding of mathematics.
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