At 12:22 AM 12/17/99 -0500, David Adams wrote: >I'm trying to figure out how this paragraph relates to other things happening >in the scene and the novel. One (if not both) of my questions is likely to >seem terribly elementary to many list subscribers, so I start by thanking you >in advance for your patience and explaining that the fifteen years of >accumulated rust since I took the intensive Latin course at CUNY have made me >as bad as Josephine at construing passages of Virgil. My first question (in >two parts) is what the passage says and what Josephine does to it; the second >question is whether anyone knows where the passage appears in Virgil.
The easiest (I won't say the best) way to answer a question like the second is to use the search engine at http://virgil.org/texts: E 2. 59 perditus et liquidis inmisi fontibus apros ----------------------------------------------------------------------- David Wilson-Okamura http://geoffreychaucer.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] Macalester College Chaucer: An Annotated Guide to Online Resources ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- To leave the Mantovano mailing list at any time, do NOT hit reply. Instead, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message "unsubscribe mantovano" in the body (omitting the quotation marks). You can also unsubscribe at http://virgil.org/mantovano/mantovano.htm#unsub
