Madness Unchained: A Reading of Virgil's AeneidThe book aims at providing a coherent guide to the entirety of Virgil's Aeneid, with analysis of every scene and, in some cases, every line of crucial passages. The book tries to provide a guide to the vast bibliography and scholarly apparatus that has grown around Virgil studies (especially over the past century), and to offer some critical study of what Virgil's purpose and intent may have been in crafting his response to Augustus' political ascendancy in Rome, Rome's history of near-constant civil strife, and the myths of Rome's origins and their conflicting Trojan, Greek, and native Italian origins. |
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Page 54
... killing Achilles , but now the son will finish the slaughter his father began when he killed Hector . The whole scene slowly and carefully describes what happened so rapidly ; the battering ram takes down the door and the guards are killed ...
... killing Achilles , but now the son will finish the slaughter his father began when he killed Hector . The whole scene slowly and carefully describes what happened so rapidly ; the battering ram takes down the door and the guards are killed ...
Page 179
... killed by her husband Cephalus ( Ovid's version towards the end of Metamorphoses 7 is the most enduring ) . Eriphyle had been bribed with a necklace by Polyneices to betray her husband when he wanted to leave the expedition of the Seven ...
... killed by her husband Cephalus ( Ovid's version towards the end of Metamorphoses 7 is the most enduring ) . Eriphyle had been bribed with a necklace by Polyneices to betray her husband when he wanted to leave the expedition of the Seven ...
Page 377
... killed Dolon , as Virgil reminds us ( 12.351-352 ) ; we are reminded , however , of how the son of Tydeus has refused to come and fight the Trojans one last time . The image of Diomedes is a terrifying one in the Aeneid for Aeneas ; the ...
... killed Dolon , as Virgil reminds us ( 12.351-352 ) ; we are reminded , however , of how the son of Tydeus has refused to come and fight the Trojans one last time . The image of Diomedes is a terrifying one in the Aeneid for Aeneas ; the ...
Contents
Arms and the Man | 1 |
All Fell Silent | 37 |
After It Seemed Best | 75 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Acestes Achilles Actium Aeneas Aeneid Allecto Anchises Apollo appearance Arcadian arma arms Arruns Ascanius Augustan Augustus battle beginning Book 11 Book 9 Camilla Carthage Carthaginians cavalry Chloreus Classical combat commentary Creusa dead death depiction describes Diana Dido Dido's Diomedes divine Drances end of Book epic episode Etruscan Evander Evander's evoke fate father fight final further future goddess gods Greek Harpalyce Hector Helenus hero Homer horse hunt Iliad immortals Italian Italy Juno Juno's Jupiter Jupiter's Juturna killed Latin Latium Lausus Lavinia Lucretius madness Marcellus mention Mezentius mother narrative neas Nisus and Euryalus notes Odysseus once Oxford Palinurus Pallas passage peace Penthesilea poem poem's poet Priam prophecy rage rites Roman Rome Rome's Rutulians scene Servius shield ships Sibyl Sicily simile slaughter storm story temple theme tion tradition Trojans Troy Turnus underworld Venus Vergilius victory Virgil Virgil's Aeneid Virgilian Volscian words wounded young