HFS clients enjoy state-of-the-art warehousing, real-time access to critical business data, accounts receivable management and collection, and unparalleled customer service. HFS provides print and digital distribution for a distinguished list of university presses and nonprofit institutions. MUSE delivers outstanding results to the scholarly community by maximizing revenues for publishers, providing value to libraries, and enabling access for scholars worldwide. So many terrible things I saw, and in so many of them I played a great part. Project MUSE is a leading provider of digital humanities and social sciences content, providing access to journal and book content from nearly 300 publishers. Quaeque ipsa miserrima vidi, et quorum pars magna fui. With warehouses on three continents, worldwide sales representation, and a robust digital publishing program, the Books Division connects Hopkins authors to scholars, experts, and educational and research institutions around the world. With critically acclaimed titles in history, science, higher education, consumer health, humanities, classics, and public health, the Books Division publishes 150 new books each year and maintains a backlist in excess of 3,000 titles.
The division also manages membership services for more than 50 scholarly and professional associations and societies. The Journals Division publishes 85 journals in the arts and humanities, technology and medicine, higher education, history, political science, and library science. The Press is home to the largest journal publication program of any U.S.-based university press. Notice that is is the second half of a sentence.One of the largest publishers in the United States, the Johns Hopkins University Press combines traditional books and journals publishing units with cutting-edge service divisions that sustain diversity and independence among nonprofit, scholarly publishers, societies, and associations. "Īt least that´s how he starts in Dryden´s translation. The next day, the Carthaginians want to know the story of this sudden newcomer who has melted the heart of their queen, and she invites him to speak to the assembled people (that´s the end of Book 1).īook 2 starts ("continued from our last") saying they all look at him expectantly, and he says "Great queen, what you command me to relateĪll that I saw, and part of which I was. With greedy pleasure, and devour'd his charms").
He has just spent a passionate night with the beautiful and unhappy Queen Dido ("she took him to her arms At this point he has been travelling seven years and finally wound up in Carthage. mulierque pudens sese ipsa morte multavisset, tum vir. This was how the Romans believed their city originated.īook 2 of the Aeneid begins with a scene in which Aeneas speaks to the assembled Carthaginians. portu conlocassemalios ego vidi ventos, alias prospexi animo procellas, allis impendentibus. The prophet has now come off his circuit, which he went as judge, in God's name, to try and pass sentence upon the neighbouring nations, and, having finished with them, and read them all their doom, in the eight chapters foregoing, he now returns to the children of his people, and receives further instructions what to say to them. It comes from the Roman poet Vergil, in the Aeneid, which tells the story of Aeneas and his journeys from the ruins of Troy, leading to Italy and the supposed founding of Rome. Then you can find it in the KudoZ glossary. Slight error at the beginning: it should be "quaeque ipse". "and those terrible things I saw, and in which I played a great part. Latin, possibly from Europe I found this saying in a book
Latin term or phrase: Queaque ipsa miserrima vidi,et quorum pars magna fui. and those terrible things I saw, and in which I played a great partĪrt/Literary - Printing & Publishing / book
Queaque ipsa miserrima vidi,et quorum pars magna fui.