The destruction of Troy, or The acts of Aeneas. Translated out of the second booke of the Æneads of Virgill, that peerelesse prince of Latine poets. With the Latine verse on the one side, and the English verse on the other, that the congruence of the translation with the originall may the better appeare. As also a centurie of epigrams, and a motto vpon the Creede, thereunto annexed. By Sr Thomas Wrothe, Knight

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Title
The destruction of Troy, or The acts of Aeneas. Translated out of the second booke of the Æneads of Virgill, that peerelesse prince of Latine poets. With the Latine verse on the one side, and the English verse on the other, that the congruence of the translation with the originall may the better appeare. As also a centurie of epigrams, and a motto vpon the Creede, thereunto annexed. By Sr Thomas Wrothe, Knight
Author
Virgil.
Publication
London :: Printed by T[homas] D[awson] and are to be sold by Nicholas Bourne, at the Royall Exchange,
1620.
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"The destruction of Troy, or The acts of Aeneas. Translated out of the second booke of the Æneads of Virgill, that peerelesse prince of Latine poets. With the Latine verse on the one side, and the English verse on the other, that the congruence of the translation with the originall may the better appeare. As also a centurie of epigrams, and a motto vpon the Creede, thereunto annexed. By Sr Thomas Wrothe, Knight." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68848.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 1, 2024.

Pages

Page 21

In Leuem. Ep. 91.

T'Is white and red that most delights the eye, That cheek's ador'd, where those two colours lye; But thou look'st green as leeks, or greenest glasse, Which hue in thee, confirms all flesh is grasse. Greene cures greene, conceiue me in a word. For thee nought's better then a Green-goose—
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