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Quote of the day: Urgulania's influence, however, was so f
Notes
Do not display Latin text
The Aeneid by Virgil
translated by Theodore C. Williams
Book VII Chapter 29: Cortillas and Coras
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Then came twin brethren, leaving Tibur's keep
(named from Tiburtus, brother of them twain)
Catillus and impetuous Coras, youth
of Argive seed, who foremost in the van
pressed ever where the foemen densest throng:
as when two centaurs, children of the cloud,
from mountain-tops descend in swift career,
the snows of Homole and Othrys leaving,
while crashing thickets in their pathway fall.

Event: Preparations for war between the Trojans and Latium.

670-677
Tum gemini fratres Tiburtia moenia linquunt,
fratris Tiburti dictam cognomine gentem,
Catillusque acerque Coras, Argiua iuuentus,
et primam ante aciem densa inter tela feruntur:
ceu duo nubigenae cum uertice montis ab alto
descendunt Centauri Homolen Othrymque niualem
linquentes cursu rapido; dat euntibus ingens
silua locum et magno cedunt uirgulta fragore.