VirgilVirgil lived through the fall of the Roman Republic and the establishment of the Empire. In his poems we see a series of attempts, increasingly ambitious in scale and conception, to combine technical brilliance and beauty with profound meditation on the nature of imperialism and the relation of the individual to the State. From short pastoral poems on love and song he progressed to the heroic myth of the founding of Rome. "The Aeneid", immediately recognised as the greatest masterpiece of Latin literature, has had incalculable influence on European literature in the two thousand years since it was first published. |
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Page 10
What the poet wrote before that we do not know : he did not himself publish and acknowledge anything earlier . ... It was the appetite for more poetry by the greatest of Roman poets that led people to accept as Virgilian various pieces ...
What the poet wrote before that we do not know : he did not himself publish and acknowledge anything earlier . ... It was the appetite for more poetry by the greatest of Roman poets that led people to accept as Virgilian various pieces ...
Page 23
convey neither statistics of the ejections nor autobiography of the poet but , rather , the atmosphere and the emotional significance of events . Of course the temptation to inquire into the poet's own life is strong .
convey neither statistics of the ejections nor autobiography of the poet but , rather , the atmosphere and the emotional significance of events . Of course the temptation to inquire into the poet's own life is strong .
Page 102
The poet Propertius announced the epic's imminence : ' Make way , you writers of Greece and Rome ; something greater than the Iliad is on the way ' . It was in the generation of Virgil and Horace that for the first time contemporary ...
The poet Propertius announced the epic's imminence : ' Make way , you writers of Greece and Rome ; something greater than the Iliad is on the way ' . It was in the generation of Virgil and Horace that for the first time contemporary ...
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Contents
Rome and Arcadia | 19 |
the Muse in hobnails | 34 |
The Aeneid and the myth of Rome | 55 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid allowed ancient appears Augustus battle bees begins bring Caesar called century civil classic comes course death destiny Dido divine driven Eclogues effect emotions Empire epic expression fact father feel fighting figure finally follows friends Georgics give goddess gods goes Greek hand happy hard hero Homer human idea important included Italian Italy Juno Jupiter killed king language Latin leave less lines literature live look marked means meant mind moral nature Octavian opening passage passion pastoral poem poet poetry political present produce question reader Roman Rome rustic says scene seems seen shows simple sing song stand story style suffering suggest tell Theocritus things Trojan Troy turn Turnus verse Virgil Virgilian whole write young