aeneas造句(1) Aeneas would find them willing and powerful allies.
(2) Aeneas is the pater, the ancestor, the proto-Roman.
(3) Finally Turnus and Aeneas meet in single combat.
(4) Her dear son Aeneas was all but ruined, she said.
(5) If Lavinia was to be won Aeneas could not count on any help from his future father-in-law.
(6) After they had broken their fast he gave Aeneas the advice he had come to seek.
(7) He felt convinced that Aeneas was the son-in-law Faunus had predicted, and he said as much to the envoys.
(8) Aeneas came back with a large army of Etruscans in time to save the camp, and furious war raged.
(9) Finally at sunset AEneas looked up and laughed.
(10) Aeneas perceived before him a spacious valley.
(11) AENEAS: We have to capture the enemy quickly.
(12) They were all in ecstasies, Aeneas in particular.
(13) Patroclus and AEneas looked up and saw the Pumpkin Giant coming with his mouth wide open.
(14) Aeneas founds or to lay the foundations for four cities prior to his arrival in Latium.
(15) Then she sat down and wept, and AEneas wept too as loud as he possibly could.
(16) On the side of Aeneas were the expressed decree of destiny.
(17) There he found a man named Aeneas, a paralytic who had been bedridden for eight years.
(18) Ironically, the way in which Aeneas abandons Dido in favour of his preordained fate is characteristic of Carthaginian treachery.
(19) The flames rising over the city gave to Aeneas some intimation of the fatal event.
(20) In what respects might Aeneas be more like Mark Anthony than Augustus and how does Vergil treat this resemblance?
(21) At length the final conflict took place between Aeneas and Turnus.
(22) In that sorrowful but lovely spot, shaded with groves of myrtle, Aeneas caught sight of Dido.
(23) These two resolved to try to pass through the, enemy under the cover of the night and reach Aeneas.
(24) They were now ruling the country and of course were rejoiced to welcome Aeneas and his men.
(25) Aeneas and the Sibyl made their way back to the earth and Aeneas returned to his ships.
(26) He dispatched Mercury to Carthage with a stinging message for Aeneas.
(27) With her dying breath, Queen Dido pronounced a malediction on Aeneas and all his descendants.
(28) Virgil:Roman poet. His greatest work is the epic poem Aeneid, which tells of the wanderings of Aeneas after the sack of Troy.
(29) Turnus threw his lance, but it recoiled harmless from the shield of Aeneas.
(30) Giulio Camillo indicated the mythological reference for this box: the Latin hero Aeneas, taking the golden bough to penetrate into the Ades.