1. Pindar, Fragments, None (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •lucan, civil war •civil war and weddings, marcia and cato, in lucans civil war Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 20 |
2. Livy, History, 21.1-21.22, 30.45 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •civil war, in lucan Found in books: Giusti (2018) 184 |
3. Ovid, Epistulae Ex Ponto, 2.2.74 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •civil wars, in lucan Found in books: Fertik (2019) 40 |
4. Ovid, Metamorphoses, 6.640-6.646 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •lucan, civil war Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 152 6.640. et “mater, mater” clamantem et colla petentem 6.641. ense ferit Procne, lateri qua pectus adhaeret, 6.642. nec vultum vertit. Satis illi ad fata vel unum 6.643. vulnus erat: iugulum ferro Philomela resolvit. 6.644. Vivaque adhuc animaeque aliquid retinentia membra 6.645. dilaniant. Pars inde cavis exsultat aenis, 6.646. pars veribus stridunt: mat penetralia tabo. | |
|
5. Seneca The Younger, Oedipus, 321-322, 324-330, 323 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 231 |
6. Seneca The Younger, Thyestes, 690-700, 702-721, 701 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 231 |
7. Tacitus, Annals, 15.36 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •civil wars, in lucan Found in books: Fertik (2019) 38 15.36. Nec multo post omissa in praesens Achaia (causae in incerto fuere) urbem revisit, provincias Orientis, maxime Aegyptum, secretis imaginationibus agitans. dehinc edicto testificatus non longam sui absentiam et cuncta in re publica perinde immota ac prospera fore, super ea profectione adiit Capitolium. illic veneratus deos, cum Vestae quoque templum inisset, repente cunctos per artus tremens, seu numine exterrente, seu facinorum recordatione numquam timore vacuus, deseruit inceptum, cunctas sibi curas amore patriae leviores dictitans. vidisse maestos civium vultus, audire secretas querimonias, quod tantum itineris aditurus esset, cuius ne modicos quidem egressus tolerarent, sueti adversum fortuita aspectu principis refoveri. ergo ut in privatis necessitudinibus proxima pignora praevalerent, ita populum Romanum vim plurimam habere parendumque retinenti. haec atque talia plebi volentia fuere, voluptatum cupidine et, quae praecipua cura est, rei frumentariae angustias, si abesset, metuenti. senatus et primores in incerto erant procul an coram atrocior haberetur: dehinc, quae natura magnis timoribus, deterius credebant quod evenerat. | 15.36. Before long, giving up for the moment the idea of Greece (his reasons were a matter of doubt), he revisited the capital, his secret imaginations being now occupied with the eastern provinces, Egypt in particular. Then after asseverating by edict that his absence would not be for long, and that all departments of the state would remain as stable and prosperous as ever, he repaired to the Capitol in connection with his departure. There he performed his devotions; but, when he entered the temple of Vesta also, he began to quake in every limb, possibly from terror inspired by the deity, or possibly because the memory of his crimes never left him devoid of fear. He abandoned his project, therefore, with the excuse that all his interests weighed lighter with him than the love of his fatherland:â "He had seen the dejected looks of his countrymen: he could hear their whispered complaints against the long journey soon to be undertaken by one whose most limited excursions were insupportable to a people in the habit of drawing comfort under misfortune from the sight of their emperor. Consequently, as in private relationships the nearest pledges of affection were the dearest, so in public affairs the Roman people had the first call, and he must yield if it wished him to stay." These and similar professions were much to the taste of the populace with its passion for amusements and its dread of a shortage of corn (always the chief preoccupation) in the event of his absence. The senate and high aristocracy were in doubt whether his cruelty was more formidable at a distance or at close quarters: in the upshot, as is inevitable in all great terrors, they believed the worse possibility to be the one which had become a fact. |
|
8. Lucan, Pharsalia, 2.25-2.26, 2.34-2.36, 2.38-2.42, 2.322-2.323, 2.327, 2.329-2.345, 2.348-2.353, 2.358-2.359, 2.375-2.376, 2.378-2.380, 5.274-5.282, 6.773-6.774, 7.264-7.269, 7.318-7.323, 7.557-7.568, 7.577-7.580, 7.789-7.794, 7.796-7.799, 8.67, 8.674, 8.698, 8.722, 9.25, 9.227-9.236, 10.31-10.32, 10.34 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •civil wars, in lucan •lucan, civil war •civil war and weddings, marcia and cato, in lucans civil war •civil war, in lucan Found in books: Fertik (2019) 24, 26, 29, 30, 31, 38; Giusti (2018) 184; Panoussi(2019) 56, 57, 58, 152, 231 |
9. Porphyry, Letter To Marcella, 1154, 691-692, 694-704, 693 (3rd cent. CE - 4th cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 232 |
10. Servius, Commentary On The Aeneid, 4.99 (4th cent. CE - 5th cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •lucan, civil war •civil war and weddings, marcia and cato, in lucans civil war Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 20 |
11. Valerius Flaccus Gaius, Argonautica, 2.1-2.427 Tagged with subjects: •lucan, civil war Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 152 |
12. Vergil, Aeneis, 7.397-7.399 Tagged with subjects: •lucan, civil war Found in books: Panoussi(2019) 152 | 7.397. was wrought by Lapithae or Calydon? 7.398. But I, Jove's wife and Queen, who in my woes 7.399. have ventured each bold stroke my power could find, |
|
13. Vergil, Georgics, 2.161-2.164 Tagged with subjects: •civil war, in lucan Found in books: Giusti (2018) 43 2.161. an memorem portus Lucrinoque addita claustra 2.162. atque indignatum magnis stridoribus aequor 2.163. Iulia qua ponto longe sonat unda refuso 2.164. Tyrrhenusque fretis inmittitur aestus Avernis? | |
|
15. Cicero, Diu., 1.49 Tagged with subjects: •civil war, in lucan Found in books: Giusti (2018) 184 |