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Atlas and Axis

Classical Quarterly 33 (01):220- (1983)

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  1. Notes on Aratus, Phaenomena.D. A. Kidd - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (2):355-362.
    It is characteristic of A. to use words that occur only once in Homer, and such a word is ρρητος. In Od. 14. 466 it describes the remark that is better left unspoken, πέρ τ' ρρητον μεινον. But it has the distinction of occurring once also in Hesiod, and this time it is used of men without fame, ητοί τ' ρρητοί τε Διòς μεγάλοιο κατι. It is clearly this line in Hesiod's proem that A. is echoing in his own, and (...)
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  • Notes on Aratus, Phaenomena.D. A. Kidd - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (02):355-.
    It is characteristic of A. to use words that occur only once in Homer, and such a word is ρρητος. In Od. 14. 466 it describes the remark that is better left unspoken, πέρ τ' ρρητον μεινον. But it has the distinction of occurring once also in Hesiod, and this time it is used of men without fame, ητοί τ' ρρητοί τε Διòς μεγάλοιο κατι . It is clearly this line in Hesiod's proem that A. is echoing in his own, (...)
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  • Ancient Scholarship and Virgil's Use of Republican Latin Poetry. I.H. D. Jocelyn - 1964 - Classical Quarterly 14 (02):280-.
    From the scholarly activity of the fourth and fifth centuries A.D. stem several collections of scholia to the poems of Virgil, most of which make copious reference to prose and verse composed in Latin before Virgil's time. The authors of these scholia were the last of a long line of commentators whose labours began soon after Virgil's death. Just as Virgil walked in the tracks of Theocritus, Hesiod, Aratus, Nicander, Homer, and Apollonius, so did his students in the tracks of (...)
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  • Ancient Scholarship and Virgil's Use of Republican Latin Poetry. I.H. D. Jocelyn - 1964 - Classical Quarterly 14 (2):280-295.
    From the scholarly activity of the fourth and fifth centuries A.D. stem several collections of scholia to the poems of Virgil, most of which make copious reference to prose and verse composed in Latin before Virgil's time. The authors of these scholia were the last of a long line of commentators whose labours began soon after Virgil's death. Just as Virgil walked in the tracks of Theocritus, Hesiod, Aratus, Nicander, Homer, and Apollonius, so did his students in the tracks of (...)
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