Virgil, Volume 10Sheed & Ward, 1946 - 162 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 9
Page 32
... mysteries under the " perivial , " as the Elizabethan Chapman puts it , persists to the very brink of the eighteenth century . Curiously irrelevant to a real understanding of the poet as this method was , it is worth noting that its ...
... mysteries under the " perivial , " as the Elizabethan Chapman puts it , persists to the very brink of the eighteenth century . Curiously irrelevant to a real understanding of the poet as this method was , it is worth noting that its ...
Page 141
... mystery of every- thing else about her . Death has resolved the riddle of life for her at least whose love , continuing ... mysteries to Aeneas , grown pale at the sound of groans , and scourges , and the clang of dragging chains . Two ...
... mystery of every- thing else about her . Death has resolved the riddle of life for her at least whose love , continuing ... mysteries to Aeneas , grown pale at the sound of groans , and scourges , and the clang of dragging chains . Two ...
Page 163
... mysteries lie beneath the " pervial " of his narrative and phrasing is of course recognised from the beginning of Virgilian criticism . But , as we have seen , the earlier and larger method of allegorizing his text struck into a false ...
... mysteries lie beneath the " pervial " of his narrative and phrasing is of course recognised from the beginning of Virgilian criticism . But , as we have seen , the earlier and larger method of allegorizing his text struck into a false ...
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid Alexandrian allusion already Anchises ancient Annales Augustus battle beauty Carthage Catullus centuries character classic Comedy criticism Dante death destined Dido divine doctrine drama dream earth Eclogues Elysian Elysium Empire Ennius epic episode epos expression fact fate feel figure genius Georgics glory gods Greece Greek Hades heaven Hellenic hero Hesiod Homer honour human Iliad imitation important Italian Italy Juno Juturna later Latin literature least less lines literary Lucretian Lucretius manes Mantua ment merely metempsychosis mood Moretum mysteries Naevius narrative nature never Odyssey original passage passion pastoral peace Peleus philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry Pollio Priam Punic remarkable Rerum Natura rival Roman history Rome Rutulians Saturnian scenery seems shade shepherds Sibyl sixth book soul spirit style suggest Sychaeus Tartarus thee theme Theocritus third book tion translation transmigration Trojan Troy true Turnus Ulysses underworld verse victories Virgil Virgilian vision words writers yearning