Lexicon:Intermissa, Venus diu, rursus bella moves
From WikiPOBia
Citation: | intermissa, Venus diu, rursus bella moves |
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Language: | Latin |
References: | The Fortune of War, page 53 |
Meaning: | Venus, again you provoke wars long since abandoned |
Notes:
Horace, Odes VI. Nb: the comma after diu is misplaced, and should instead follow Venus. The line precedes, "parce, precor, precor," quoted in The Surgeon's Mate 176.
Additional information
Guide for the Perplexed — This article is based on information from the Guide for the Perplexed, edited by Anthony Gary Brown and based on the work of many contributors. As an aid to readers, the translations offered in Guide for the Perplexed are intended to be a literal as possible, and to follow as closely as possible the original word order.
All contributions to this article are considered to be dual licensed under the terms of the WikiPOBia License and for use in future editions of the Guide for the Perplexed under its terms of inclusion (contact Anthony Gary Brown for details).
All contributions to this article are considered to be dual licensed under the terms of the WikiPOBia License and for use in future editions of the Guide for the Perplexed under its terms of inclusion (contact Anthony Gary Brown for details).
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