The Burial-places of Memory: Epic Underworlds in Vergil, Dante, and Milton |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 32
Page 12
... Homeric warriors in the Aeneid are excluded from the process which is Rome and do not participate in the recirculation of souls that Anchises describes later in the book . Indeed , the Greeks among the Homeric shades are those who have ...
... Homeric warriors in the Aeneid are excluded from the process which is Rome and do not participate in the recirculation of souls that Anchises describes later in the book . Indeed , the Greeks among the Homeric shades are those who have ...
Page 39
... Homeric heritage and indeed his awareness of his own position in relation to the Homeric poems , the presence of which in the Aeneid as the most important intertext is part of the poem's meaning . Vergil's allusive technique is ...
... Homeric heritage and indeed his awareness of his own position in relation to the Homeric poems , the presence of which in the Aeneid as the most important intertext is part of the poem's meaning . Vergil's allusive technique is ...
Page 42
... Homeric warriors in a very un - Homeric light ( the thoroughly cruel Ulysses of the second book , the rep- resentation of Achilles in the frieze on the temple at Carthage selling the corpse of Hector for gold [ 1.484 ; 659–60 ] ) , or ...
... Homeric warriors in a very un - Homeric light ( the thoroughly cruel Ulysses of the second book , the rep- resentation of Achilles in the frieze on the temple at Carthage selling the corpse of Hector for gold [ 1.484 ; 659–60 ] ) , or ...
Contents
The Easy Descent from Avernus | 17 |
Language and History | 57 |
Traditions and the Individual Talent | 118 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achilles Adam and Eve Aeneas Aeneas's Aeneid Anchises ancient attempt become Brunetto Brunetto Latini calls canto Charon Commedia context Dante Dante's dark dead death demonic Dido discourse of fate divine Divine Comedy earth effect epic episode essay eternal Eurypylus Eve's experience fact fallen angels false father fiction Francesca Freud genre gods Harold Bloom Heaven Hell hero heroic Homeric human Iliad imagination Inferno journey kind king language Latium lines meaning meditation memory metalepsis metaphor Milton mind narration narrative never Northrop Frye Odysseus Paradise Lost passage past perhaps phrase pilgrim poem poet poetry precisely present Priam Princeton prophecy R. S. Conway reminded repetition Richmond Lattimore Roman Satan scene seems sense shades simile simply souls speak speech story suggests surely Sybil tell things thir thou tradition Troy turn Turnus underworld University Press Vergil Vergilian vision voice words