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LitHum Midterm Review Spring 2014
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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”? |
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© 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”? |
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© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only