BREATHINGS in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from The Aeneid by Virgil
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 Current Search - breathings in The Aeneid
1  Whoso thou art, not hated I think of the immortals dost thou draw the breath of life, who hast reached the Tyrian city.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FIRST
2  All over him the sweat trickles and pours in swart stream, and no breathing space is given; sick gasps shake his exhausted limbs.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK NINTH
3  Mark the lineaments of divine grace and the gleaming eyes, what a breath is hers, what a countenance, and the sound of her voice and the steps of her going.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FIFTH
4  Speaking she turned away, and her neck shone roseate, her immortal tresses breathed the fragrance of deity; her raiment fell flowing down to her feet, and the godhead was manifest in her tread.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FIRST
5  Never, O Queen, will I deny that thy goodness hath gone high as thy words can swell the reckoning; nor will my memory of Elissa be ungracious while I remember myself, and breath sways this body.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FOURTH
6  His lofty helmet, triple-tressed with horse-hair, holds high a Chimaera breathing from her throat Aetnean fires, raging the more and exasperate with baleful flames, as the battle and bloodshed grow fiercer.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
7  And now the sea reddened with shafts of light, and high in heaven the yellow dawn shone rose-charioted; when the winds fell, and every breath sank suddenly, and the oar-blades toil through the heavy ocean-floor.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
8  And I, lately moved by no weapons launched against me, nor by the thronging bands of my Grecian foes, am now terrified at every breath, startled by every noise, thrilling with fear alike for my companion and my burden.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SECOND
9  To him Tullus shall next succeed, who shall break the peace of his country and stir to arms men rusted from war and armies now disused to triumphs; and hard on him over-vaunting Ancus follows, even now too elate in popular breath.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SIXTH
10  So speaks he and checks his voice; therewith he drives his sword at lordly Rhamnes, who haply on carpets heaped high was drawing the full breath of sleep; a king himself, and King Turnus' best-beloved augur, but not all his augury could avert his doom.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK NINTH
11  Sliding between her raiment and smooth breasts, it coils without touch, and instils its viperous breath unseen; the great serpent turns into the twisted gold about her neck, turns into the long ribbon of her chaplet, inweaves her hair, and winds slippery over her body.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
12  All afire, he hunts Dares headlong over the lists, and redoubles his blows now with right hand, now with left; no breath nor pause; heavy as hailstones rattle on the roof from a storm-cloud, so thickly shower the blows from both his hands as he buffets Dares to and fro.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FIFTH
13  Furthermore there came, sent by King Archippus, the priest of the Marruvian people, dressed with prosperous olive leaves over his helmet, Umbro excellent in valour, who was wont with charm and touch to sprinkle slumberous dew on the viper's brood and water-snakes of noisome breath.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
14  Aeneas was our king, foremost of men in righteousness, incomparable in goodness as in warlike arms; whom if fate still preserves, if he draws the breath of heaven and lies not yet low in dispiteous gloom, fear we have none; nor mayest thou repent of challenging the contest of service.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK FIRST
15  There, when the sentence of the Fathers stands fixed for battle, the Consul, arrayed in the robe of Quirinus and the Gabine cincture, with his own hand unbars the grating doors, with his own lips calls battles forth; then all the rest follow on, and the brazen trumpets blare harsh with consenting breath.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
16  Open now the gates of Helicon, goddesses, and stir the song of the kings that rose for war, the array that followed each and filled the plains, the men that even then blossomed, the arms that blazed in Italy the bountiful land: for you remember, divine ones, and you can recall; to us but a breath of rumour, scant and slight, is wafted down.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK SEVENTH
17  And now envoys were there from the Latin city with wreathed boughs of olive, praying him of his grace to restore the dead that lay strewn by the sword over the plain, and let them go to their earthy grave: no war lasts with men conquered and bereft of breath; let this indulgence be given to men once called friends and fathers of their brides.
The Aeneid By Virgil
ContextHighlight   In BOOK ELEVENTH
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