Lexicon:Mala soluta navis exit alite ...
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Citation: | Mala soluta navis exit alite ferens olentem Maevium ut horridus utrumque verberes latus auster, momento fluctibus niger rudentes Eurus, inverso mari, fractosque remos differat... O quantos instat [navitis] sudor tuis tibique pallor luteus et illa non virilis ejulatio preces et adversum ad Jovem |
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Language: | Latin |
References: | The Golden Ocean, pages 178, 179 |
Meaning: | An evil, winged omen is unleashed, and the ship bearing the foul Maevius sets out. O South Wind, make sure you pound her on both her sides with savage waves! May the black North Wind, with the sea in a turmoil, carry away her rigging and smashed oars! [4 couplets omitted] Oh, what a sweat there will be on your sailors! For you what a bilious-yellow pallor and such an unmanly yowl, with prayers to the hard-hearted Jupiter! |
Notes:
Horace Epodi 10. Maevius was a wretched poetical contemporary of Virgil. In line 3 O'Brian's horridus should be horridis; in line 7 the word navitis is missing. In the final line adversum is lit. 'unregarding'.
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).