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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Boethius, Consolatio Philosophiae. Search the whole document.

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Jupiter (Canada) (search for this): book 1, sectio M5
lucida: modifies luna (line 7). fratris: i.e., Phoebus (the sun); final syllable closed before diaeresis. obvia: "opposite" (with dative), modifies luna (line 7). condat: "dims." Phoebo propior: "closer to Phoebus" i.e., as day nears. Hesperos (evening star) and Lucifer (morning star) are the names given to whatever planet (usually Venus or Jupiter) shines brightest at dawn and at dusk. B.'s point in these lines is that the same planet can be evening star now, and morning star a few weeks from now. algentes . . . ortus: "chilly risings." Hesperos: Greek nominative form, "[as] the evening star." Lucifer: "[as] the morning star." Winter and summer. frondifluae: "leaf-flowing"; a word not otherwise attested in surviving Latin authors, perhaps co