Virgil, a Study in Civilized Poetry |
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Page 98
... followed two souls through an intensely dramatic experience , and followed them not as an external observer but as a participant of their inmost thoughts and feelings . The two main characteristics of this kind of continuity are thus ...
... followed two souls through an intensely dramatic experience , and followed them not as an external observer but as a participant of their inmost thoughts and feelings . The two main characteristics of this kind of continuity are thus ...
Page 186
... followed by a further section in which the bees are subjected to disease and even annihilation which no desire of theirs to immortalize the species ( at genus immortale manet , 208 ) can quite prevent . The revelation of the problem of ...
... followed by a further section in which the bees are subjected to disease and even annihilation which no desire of theirs to immortalize the species ( at genus immortale manet , 208 ) can quite prevent . The revelation of the problem of ...
Page 417
... followed , in part at least , the scheme of the Eclogue Book and designed 7 to be in some sense the centre with planned correspondence between 6 and 8 , 5 and 9 , 4 and 10 , & c . He also followed a 6-6 scheme ( cf. p . 392 ) , as is ...
... followed , in part at least , the scheme of the Eclogue Book and designed 7 to be in some sense the centre with planned correspondence between 6 and 8 , 5 and 9 , 4 and 10 , & c . He also followed a 6-6 scheme ( cf. p . 392 ) , as is ...
Contents
The Mystery of the Aeneid I | 1 |
The Subjective Style | 41 |
The Young Virgil | 98 |
Copyright | |
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action actually Aeneas Aeneid Allecto amor Anchises animal Apollonius Argonautica Aristaeus Ascanius atque Augustan Augustus battle bees Book Büchner bucolic Callimachus Catullus character Choerilus clearly contrast corresponds course Daphnis death Deiphobus destiny Dido Dido's difference divine dramatic Eclogue effect emotional empathetic empathy Ennius epic episode Euryalus Eurydice fact fate feeling finally furor future Gallus Georgics gods Greek Hades Helenus Hellenistic Heracles hero heroic Hesiod Homer human humanitas idylls Iliad Iliadic Aeneid infelix Juno Juno's Jupiter Juturna Latin Latin War Lausus lines Medea Mezentius Mnestheus mood moral motifs myth narrative nature neoteric Nisa Nisus nunc obviously Odyssean Odysseus once Orpheus Palinurus Pallas Pasiphaë passage passion past pietas poem poet poetical poetry prophecy Proteus psychological quae quid revealed Roman Rome seems sense ship-burning simile storm story style symbolic terrible theme Theocritean Theocritus tion tragedy Trojan Troy true Turnus Venus Virgil Virgilian whole words