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The Text of the Cynthia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2016

O. L. Richmond*
Affiliation:
Edinburgh

Extract

A. I begin with some emendations founded on familiar evidence.

(a) ii. 9. aspice quos summittat humus formosa colores.

In each of the following verses of the stanza from u. 9 to u. 14 natural and spontaneous beauty is the subject (sponte sua, solis, indociles, natiuis, nulla arte). Verse 9 has seemed unsatisfactory because it lacks the very point which it should introduce. All the emendations have attacked formosa because it is repeated in u. 11: morosa, Housman (which would rather mean ‘wayward’ or ‘crabbed’), dumosa, nemorosa, muscosa, and other even less probable adjectives have been suggested.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1926

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