Middles in Latin PoetryΣτρατής Κυριακίδης, Francesco De Martino |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 24
Page 26
... marked points within the work , but the middle is just the work itself with those marked points lopped off , and there is consequently no place for a separate theory of the middle . There is however perhaps more to be said . - and Don ...
... marked points within the work , but the middle is just the work itself with those marked points lopped off , and there is consequently no place for a separate theory of the middle . There is however perhaps more to be said . - and Don ...
Page 32
... marked 27 26 23 P. Fowler ( 1997 ) ; D. Fowler ( 1995a ) , p . 9 , had already noticed that " the ordered divisions of the text of the De Rerum Natura reflect the ordered divisions of the world " and that the end is the final division ...
... marked 27 26 23 P. Fowler ( 1997 ) ; D. Fowler ( 1995a ) , p . 9 , had already noticed that " the ordered divisions of the text of the De Rerum Natura reflect the ordered divisions of the world " and that the end is the final division ...
Page 85
... marked by ring - composition between the first and fourth stanzas , both concerning the military behaviour of young men , exhorted by both positive exhortation and negative counter - example ( 3.2.2 robustus ... puer , 3.2.15 imbellis ...
... marked by ring - composition between the first and fourth stanzas , both concerning the military behaviour of young men , exhorted by both positive exhortation and negative counter - example ( 3.2.2 robustus ... puer , 3.2.15 imbellis ...
Contents
List of Contributors pp | 7 |
Stratis Kyriakidis and Francesco De Martino Introduction 99 | 9 |
Philip Hardie Don Fowler and Middles 99 | 25 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid allusion already Apollonius appears Asopus battle becomes beginning Book bring Caesar Callimachus catalogue Catullus central centre civil clear close closure comes connection contrast course coverlet create death delay describes discussion earlier epic epigram example fact final forces Fowler Francesco De Martino further gives gods Greek Homeric human important indicates instance kind later Latin lines literary look Lucan Lucretius marked Martial meaning mention Metamorphoses middle mind Muses narrative nature Odes opening Ovid Ovid's particular passage perhaps Persius poem poem's poet poetic poetry position present proem Punica reader recalls reference relation river Roman Rome scene second half seems seen sense significance Silius stanzas Statius story structure suggests Theb Thebaid thematic theme Theseus things Tibullus tradition turn Valerius Venus verses Virgil Virgilian whole