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Notes on Claudian
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
‘Prince, lovelier than the flashing star’, says the Poet Laureate to his Emperor; ‘Leda would rather have produced thee than Castor, Thetis than Achilles; Delos prefers thee to Apollo, Lydia to Bacchus.’ Then follows a passage describing the effect on nature of the Emperor's going out to hunt: ‘the beasts will gladly fall to your spear, the lion will be proud to die at your sacred hand. Venus scorns Adonis returned to life, Diana Hippolytus’.
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- Copyright © The Classical Association 1957
References
1 The reading hanc tamen (pace Heinsius) is not at all well attested, being found only in one 13th-century manuscript and one early edition.
1 Barthius apparently takes nullis as obj. of deterrebat: ‘nullis deterrebat’, he says, ‘frustra hic haereas’. On the contrary, eo magis haereo.
2 The other examples there are errors.
1 See Bailey, Shackleton, Propertiana, p. 202.Google Scholar
1 See Mythographi Latini, i. 232; ii. 130.Google Scholar