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Searched all Perseus collections for "aulis" 252 results in 4 collections
Results summary (items)
Greek and Roman Materials (249)
The Works of Christopher Marlowe (1)
Renaissance Materials (1)
The Tragedie of Coriolanus (1)

249 from Greek and Roman Materials

  1. Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon alphabetic letter *p, entry pa^li/rroxqos
    roaring with ebb and flow, of Aulis, prob. in (lyr., restd. metri gr. for (25.73)

  2. Walter Leaf, Commentary on the Iliad (1900) book 2, commline 305
    Not only was this spring shewn at Aulis in Pausanias' day, but part of the plane-tree (307) was preserved as a relic in the temple of Artemis (ix. 19. 7). (18.36)

  3. A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) alphabetic letter O
    ) In the Boeotian tradition he was the father of Alalcomenia, Thelxinoea and Aulis (Suid. (16.99)

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1 from The Works of Christopher Marlowe

  1. Christopher Marlowe, Dido, Queen of Carthage act 5, scene 1, line 200
    Dido Call him not wicked, sister, speake him faire,
    And looke upon him with a Mermaides eye,
    Tell him, I never vow'd at Aulis gulfe
    The desolation of his native Troy,
    Nor sent a thousand ships unto the walles,
    Nor ever violated faith to him:
    Request him gently (Anna) to returne,
    I crave but this, he stay a tide or two,
    That I may learne to beare it patiently,
    If he depart thus suddenly, I dye:
    Run Anna, run, stay not to answere me.
    (4.64)

1 from Renaissance Materials

  1. William Shakespeare, The Tragedie of Coriolanus (ed. Horace Howard Furness, Jr., A. B.; Litt. D.) act 5, scene 3, commline 168
    Speake thou Boy J. C. Collins (p. 77) calls attention to this as a touch not in Plutarch, but which ‘may have been suggested by the pathetic scene in the Iphigenia in Aulis (ll. 1241-5), where the little Orestes is employed by Iphigenia for the same reason and for the same purpose. (2.69)

1 from The Tragedie of Coriolanus

  1. William Shakespeare, Critical Commentary: The Tragedie of Coriolanus (ed. Horace Howard Furness, Jr., A. B.; Litt. D.) act 5, scene 3, commline 168
    Speake thou Boy J. C. Collins (p. 77) calls attention to this as a touch not in Plutarch, but which ‘may have been suggested by the pathetic scene in the Iphigenia in Aulis (ll. 1241-5), where the little Orestes is employed by Iphigenia for the same reason and for the same purpose. (2.69)

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