The Fasti, Tristia, Pontic Epistles, Ibis And Halieuticon of Ovid. Literally Translated Into English Prose, With Copious Notes
The Fasti, Tristia, Pontic Epistles, Ibis And Halieuticon of Ovid. Literally Translated Into English Prose, With Copious Notes
43 Bc 17 Or 18 Ad Ovid
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the lightning is to be averted by atonement, and the wrath of the angry Jove is e€uily appeased ; but Picus and Faunus*^ will be able to reveal the ceremony of expiation, each of them a Divinity of the Roman soil ; but they will not inform thee without force : apply chains when thou hast caught them." And thus does she instruct Numa by what means they may be taken. There was at the foot of the Aventine hUl^ a grove, dark with the shade of the holm-oak, on seeing which you might readily say, ** ...Surely a Divinity dwells here ! " In the centre was a grassy plot, and, covered over with green moss, a constant stream of water trickled from the rock. From this stream '^ Pieui and Fatmus,'] — ^Ver. 291. These were ancient deities of Lttium. They have been mentioned before, both in the text and in the notes. » Of the Aventine At//.]— Ver. 295. This was one of the hills to which Borne extended in the later times. It is supposed that its name was other derived from Aventinus, son of Romnlus Silyius, king of Alba Longa, who was buried there, or from *ayes/ ' birds/ which used to flock there.
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