- countrymen.
Aeneas is
moved to
tears and says "sunt
lacrimae rerum et
mentem mortalia tangunt" ("There are
tears for [or 'of']
things and
mortal things touch...
- deos
numquam mortalia fallunt mortal actions never deceive the gods
Derived from Ovid, Tristia, I.ii, 97: si
tamen acta deos
numquam mortalia fallunt, /...
- deos
numquam mortalia fallunt mortal actions never deceive the gods
Derived from Ovid, Tristia, I.ii, 97: si
tamen acta deos
numquam mortalia fallunt, /...
-
there are
tears for
things From Virgil, Aeneid.
Followed by et
mentem mortalia tangunt ("and
mortal things touch my mind").
Aeneas cries as he sees Carthaginian...
- song, "Scarecrow", sat down to
perform the second, "Boy
Septem Peccata Mortalia", and was then
escorted off
stage by
staff after the
third song, "Zekkai"...
-
reaction to a
painting of the sack of Troy: Sunt
lacrimae rerum et
mentem mortalia tangunt—"These are the
tears of things, and our
mortality cuts to the heart"...
- Neo Universe" (美 NEO Universe)
Sakurai Imai 5:05 6. "Boy
Septem Peccata Mortalia"
Sakurai Imai 4:21 7. "Jukai" (樹海)
Sakurai Hoshino 3:46 8. "The Seaside...
- virgine. ∘∘∘
Hostis herodes impie,
Christum venire quid times? non
eripit mortalia, qui
regna dat caelestia. Now
praise we, Christ, the Holy One, The spotless...
-
either side an
ostrich reguardant Proper the head neck legs and
grasping in the beak an ear of
wheat slipped and
leaved Or.
Motto Mentem Mortalia Tangunt...
- omnium.
Hostis herodes impie,
christum venire quid times? non
eripit mortalia, qui
regna dat caelestia.
Ibant magi, qua
venerant stellam sequentes...