The Poetry of the Aeneid: Four Studies in Imaginative Unity and Design |
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Page 70
... ships as Dido herself might have done . The grief and suffering of Dido , Juno's emotional pawn , can in part be traced back ultimately to the suffering of the goddess herself . For , still in Book V , we find Juno ( line 608 ) multa ...
... ships as Dido herself might have done . The grief and suffering of Dido , Juno's emotional pawn , can in part be traced back ultimately to the suffering of the goddess herself . For , still in Book V , we find Juno ( line 608 ) multa ...
Page 90
... ships alike and then quenched.31 The ships now take on human characteristics for a moment , as the poet's metaphors lend another special touch to the imagery of fire . Like the flame of love which consumes Dido , imparting a silent ...
... ships alike and then quenched.31 The ships now take on human characteristics for a moment , as the poet's metaphors lend another special touch to the imagery of fire . Like the flame of love which consumes Dido , imparting a silent ...
Page 91
... ships be- cause they symbolize , for them at least , the years of seemingly fruitless wandering to which all have been subjected . When , not long after , Anchises appears in a dream to Aeneas , he urges his son to accept the suggestion ...
... ships be- cause they symbolize , for them at least , the years of seemingly fruitless wandering to which all have been subjected . When , not long after , Anchises appears in a dream to Aeneas , he urges his son to accept the suggestion ...
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid Aeolus Amata Anchises appears atque belly Book VIII Book XII book's bough Cacus CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ calm cave clash Creusa CRUZ The University dark death destiny destruction Dido Dido's doom epic episode escape Evander Evander's fate final fire flames force Furor future Georgic glides golden bough Greeks Gyas Hercules hero imagery initial journey Juno Juturna land Laocoön Latinus Latium Lavinia looks Lucretius madness Menoetes metaphor Mnestheus Neptune Nisus and Euryalus Odysseus offer omen once opening lines Orpheus Palinurus Pallas parallels past pastoral pattern phrase poet poet's Priam Pyrrhus race rage recall Rome Rutulian sacrifice SANTA CRUZ seems Sergestus ships shore Sibyl simile Sinon sleep snakes Somnus symbolic Tenedos Tiber tion Trojans Troy Troy's turn Turnus underworld University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA Venus verb violence Virgil Vulcan winds wooden horse words wound wrath