LitHum Midterm Review Spring 2014
a crossword puzzle by
PuzzleFast Instant Puzzle Maker
Puzzle URL
https://www.puzzlefast.com/en/puzzles/20140302657742
To embed this puzzle on your website, paste the markup below into your HTML. Change the width and height values as desired.
Plain Puzzle
Plain Puzzle Without Solution Link
Hide This
1:00
en
CR
LitHum Midterm Review Spring 2014
34
Ulysses: Who is the “inventor of impieties”?
Three: The number of “blooding” stems of myrtle shoots Aeneas tore up
Aeneid: In which text someone shouldn’t “fear [his/her] gnawing at the tables”?
Restless: The adjective used to describe Dido the first time we meet her
Seven: The number of years that have passed since Aeneas left Troy
Ulysses: Who is the “fable-babbling”?
Palinurus: The Trojan whose “life shall be enough [to mourn] instead of many”
Aeneas: The “new Achilles”
Charon: “The [grim], squalid ferryman”
Hope: “Leave any […] that prayer can turn aside”
Three: How many times does Aeneas try to hug Anchises’ shadow?
Aeneas: “To teach the ways of peace to those you conquer, to spare defeated peoples, tame the proud.” Whose “arts” will be these?
Horn: One Gate of Sleep is of ivory; the other is of […]
Lions: In the Metamorphoses, Circe transforms people into swine, in the Aeneid, into […]
Lavinia: Her hair is caught on fire
Lavinia: The daughter “sent down from heaven” [who is not allowed to be] “wed to any husband from [her] nation”
Amata: In her breast a snake is casted
Turnus: “They stole my wife from me; such injury and hurt do not touch only Atreus’ sons: Mycenians are not the only ones who war by right”: these words are of […]
Turnus: “The dark womb of a horse will not hide us” said […]
Mezentius: He who, “with full awareness, gives his throat up to the sword and pours his life in waves of blood across his armor”
Camilla: The Aeneid’s amazon
Aeneas: He who awakens brutal, indiscriminate slaughter, and lets his violence run free
Changes: The first word of Metamorphoses’ Prologue
Golden: In which of the four Ages, “swords were not carried nor helmets worn”?
Daphne: Apollo’s first love
Cupid: The mischievous boy
Apollo: Healing is his invention, the world invokes him as Helper
Still: "Tree though she was, Apollo […] loved her”: An adverb giving the idea of “continuity”
A hundred: The number of Argus' eyes
Caenis: She accepted none of her suitors…. and was raped but the god of the sea
Achilles: All that remained of […] the great was a small amount of material, barely sufficient to fill an urn
Ajax: Achilles’ cousin
Hecuba: She grabbed hold of him tight,… and dug her fingers into his treacherous eyes, to gouge the balls from their sockets—the power was lent by her anger: Who is she?
Circe: You’ll learn what a woman in love who is injured can do; and […] is surely an injured woman in love!
Fame: Metamorphoses’ last word
One: The number of thornbush branches Dante tears up in the Circles of the Suicides
Charon: The ferryman, aged man, who shouted: “Forget you hope of ever seeing Heaven: I come to lead you to the other shore, to the eternal dark, to fire and frost.”
Hell: Abandon every hope, who enter here: Inscription above the Gate of [...]
LitHum Midterm Review Spring 2014
Across:| 2. | “The [grim], squalid ferryman” | | 5. | The number of Argus' eyes | | 6. | The number of thornbush branches Dante tears up in the Circles of the Suicides | | 8. | The mischievous boy | | 12. | The number of “blooding” stems of myrtle shoots Aeneas tore up | | 14. | Metamorphoses’ last word | | 15. | In the Metamorphoses, Circe transforms people into swine, in the Aeneid, into […] | | 17. | “The dark womb of a horse will not hide us” said […] | | 17. | “They stole my wife from me; such injury and hurt do not touch only Atreus’ sons: Mycenians are not the only ones who war by right”: these words are of […] |
| | 18. | The daughter “sent down from heaven” [who is not allowed to be] “wed to any husband from [her] nation” | | 20. | You’ll learn what a woman in love who is injured can do; and […] is surely an injured woman in love! | | 21. | “To teach the ways of peace to those you conquer, to spare defeated peoples, tame the proud.” Whose “arts” will be these? | | 26. | In which text someone shouldn’t “fear [his/her] gnawing at the tables”? | | 28. | Healing is his invention, the world invokes him as Helper | | 29. | All that remained of […] the great was a small amount of material, barely sufficient to fill an urn | | 30. | He who awakens brutal, indiscriminate slaughter, and lets his violence run free | | 31. | In which of the four Ages, “swords were not carried nor helmets worn”? |
| | Down:| 1. | “Leave any […] that prayer can turn aside” | | 2. | The ferryman, aged man, who shouted: “Forget you hope of ever seeing Heaven: I come to lead you to the other shore, to the eternal dark, to fire and frost.” | | 3. | The first word of Metamorphoses’ Prologue | | 4. | Abandon every hope, who enter here: Inscription above the Gate of [...] | | 7. | One Gate of Sleep is of ivory; the other is of […] | | 9. | The Trojan whose “life shall be enough [to mourn] instead of many” | | 10. | She grabbed hold of him tight,… and dug her fingers into his treacherous eyes, to gouge the balls from their sockets—the power was lent by her anger: Who is she? | | 11. | In her breast a snake is casted | | 13. | She accepted none of her suitors…. and was raped but the god of the sea |
| | 16. | The Aeneid’s amazon | | 18. | Her hair is caught on fire | | 19. | Achilles’ cousin | | 22. | The “new Achilles” | | 23. | "Tree though she was, Apollo […] loved her”: An adverb giving the idea of “continuity” | | 24. | Apollo’s first love | | 25. | The number of years that have passed since Aeneas left Troy | | 27. | Who is the “inventor of impieties”? |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
LitHum Midterm Review Spring 2014
Across:| 2. | “The [grim], squalid ferryman” | | 5. | The number of Argus' eyes | | 6. | The number of thornbush branches Dante tears up in the Circles of the Suicides | | 8. | The mischievous boy | | 12. | The number of “blooding” stems of myrtle shoots Aeneas tore up | | 14. | Metamorphoses’ last word | | 15. | In the Metamorphoses, Circe transforms people into swine, in the Aeneid, into […] | | 17. | “The dark womb of a horse will not hide us” said […] | | 17. | “They stole my wife from me; such injury and hurt do not touch only Atreus’ sons: Mycenians are not the only ones who war by right”: these words are of […] |
| | 18. | The daughter “sent down from heaven” [who is not allowed to be] “wed to any husband from [her] nation” | | 20. | You’ll learn what a woman in love who is injured can do; and […] is surely an injured woman in love! | | 21. | “To teach the ways of peace to those you conquer, to spare defeated peoples, tame the proud.” Whose “arts” will be these? | | 26. | In which text someone shouldn’t “fear [his/her] gnawing at the tables”? | | 28. | Healing is his invention, the world invokes him as Helper | | 29. | All that remained of […] the great was a small amount of material, barely sufficient to fill an urn | | 30. | He who awakens brutal, indiscriminate slaughter, and lets his violence run free | | 31. | In which of the four Ages, “swords were not carried nor helmets worn”? |
| | Down:| 1. | “Leave any […] that prayer can turn aside” | | 2. | The ferryman, aged man, who shouted: “Forget you hope of ever seeing Heaven: I come to lead you to the other shore, to the eternal dark, to fire and frost.” | | 3. | The first word of Metamorphoses’ Prologue | | 4. | Abandon every hope, who enter here: Inscription above the Gate of [...] | | 7. | One Gate of Sleep is of ivory; the other is of […] | | 9. | The Trojan whose “life shall be enough [to mourn] instead of many” | | 10. | She grabbed hold of him tight,… and dug her fingers into his treacherous eyes, to gouge the balls from their sockets—the power was lent by her anger: Who is she? | | 11. | In her breast a snake is casted | | 13. | She accepted none of her suitors…. and was raped but the god of the sea |
| | 16. | The Aeneid’s amazon | | 18. | Her hair is caught on fire | | 19. | Achilles’ cousin | | 22. | The “new Achilles” | | 23. | "Tree though she was, Apollo […] loved her”: An adverb giving the idea of “continuity” | | 24. | Apollo’s first love | | 25. | The number of years that have passed since Aeneas left Troy | | 27. | Who is the “inventor of impieties”? |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only