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PREFACE.

It has been thought desirable to adopt for the present edition of the Aeneid a standard text, and to adhere to it throughout, without any variation, even in those few pas sages where the editor might prefer a change of reading. Accordingly the revised text of Jahn, as one of the most faultless and reliable, and as the one at present, perhaps, most generally approved, has been carefully reprinted from the German edition, as the basis of the school commentary here offered to the American student.

The notes have been derived from most of the ablest commentators on the Aeneid, and more especially from Heyne, Wagner, Thiel, and Forbiger. The editor has also frequently consulted the numerous school and college editions, and is particularly indebted to the admirable commentaries of Theodore Ladewig and A. H. Bryce, recently published, the former in Berlin, and the latter in London and Glasgow.

To meet the wants of American students, very frequent references are made in the notes, especially in the earlier part of the work, to the revised edition of Andrews and Stoddard's Latin Grammar, and to Dr. Anthon's edi tion of Zumpt's Latin Grammar. References are also

occasionally made to Madvig, Ramshorn, and other grammatical works. These references to the grammars, and also those to parallel passages in Virgil, if carefully used, cannot fail to promote a critical scholarship.

The illustrative cuts which accompany the notes have been taken mostly from Vollmer's Dictionary of Mythology, and from Hope's Costumes of the Ancients. They have been selected for the purpose of illustrating ancient usages, arts, costumes, utensils, and implements of war, and also as a means of imparting to the reader some adequate idea of the classic gods and heroes as they existed in the minds of Virgil and the poets of his day. Virgil and his contemporaries, when speaking of the deities of mythology, undoubtedly had in view just such forms as have come down to us in the numberless statues, basreliefs, wall-paintings, vase-paintings, and intaglios, which fill up the museums of Europe. Some of the most remarkable of these are represented in this work. A list of the wood-cuts, followed by an alphabetical index of the things illustrated, will be found below.

The editor takes this opportunity of returning his sincere thanks for many valuable suggestions received from classical teachers, and especially to Mr. C. B. Grant, of the Ann Arbor High School, for efficient aid in the revision of the proofs.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, May, 1860.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

1. Virgil-from a bust in the Capitoline Museum at Rome.

BOOK I.

2. The three Fates-from Flaxman,.

3. Juno-from a statue in the Vatican at Rome,

PAGE

2

307

314

4. Eurus-from the Tower of the Winds at Athens,

317

5. Family of Tritons-from an antique cutting on amethyst,

320

6. Neptune in his chariot calming the sea-Flaxman,

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7. Roman Orator of the early republican period-from an ancient vasepainting,.

331

8. The Huntress Diana-from a statue in the Vatican,.

836

9. Venus Genetrix-from a statue in the Louvre at Paris,

340

10. Amazon-from a Greek Statue in the Vatican,

11. Bacchanal reclining at a feast-from a vase-painting, 12. Hector's body at the car of Achilles-from Flaxman,

347

360

364

BOOK II.

13. Minerva-from Hope's Costumes,

366

statue in the Vatican,

14. Diomed seizing the Palladium-from an antique gem,

15. Laocoon and his sons in the toils of the serpents-from the celebrated

16. Hector in battle-from an antique gem,

874

378

382

17. Aeneas hastening to battle-from an ancient vase-painting,

385

18. An attack upon a fortified palace-from Layard's Nineveh,

390

19. Attack upon a citadel—from Layard's Nineveh,

391

20. Head of Priam-from a bas-relief in the Vatican,

395

21. Menelaus, on the point of taking vengeance on Helen, disarmed by her

beauty,-from a vase-painting,

397

22. Plain of Troy-landscape view,

405

BOOK III.

23. Ancient ships under sails and oars-from a wall-painting in the Bour

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BOOK IV.

PAGE

26. Melpomene, the muse of tragedy-from a wall-painting in Herculaneum,

437

27. Cupid torturing Psyche or the soul-from an antique gem,

440

28. Apollo-from the celebrated statue in the Belvedere of the Vatican, 29. Jupiter Ammon-from an ancient coin,

442

444

30. Trojan or Phrygian youth-from a vase-painting,

445

31. Mercury conveying a message from Olympus-from a vase-painting, 32. Dido's death-from an ancient wall-painting,

447

462

33. Site of Carthage-landscape view,

463

BOOK V.

34. Helios, or Sol in his chariot, attended by Lucifer, Castor, and the per

sonification of sea and sky-from an ancient vase-painting,

464

35. Melicertes, or Portunus-from a statue in the Vatican, .

474

36. Ganymede and the eagle-from a statue by Leochares, 37. Phrygian Amazon-from a vase-painting,

475

482

38. Jupiter Pluvius-from Vollmer,

491

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39. Group of Nereids and Tritons-from a bas-relief on a sarcophagus, 40. The Sirens-from Flaxman,

496

498

BOOK VI.

41. Cumae and its environs--landscape view,

42. Hecate, or Trivia-from Vollmer,.

500

501

43. Charon landing ghosts from his boat-from an ancient bas-relief, .
44. Jupiter destroying the giants-from a cameo in the Bourbon Museum,
45. Tantalus, Ixion, and Sisyphus-from an ancient bas-relief,
46. Cybele, Corybantes, and the infant Jupiter-from a bas-relief in the
Capitol at Rome,

516

523

524

532

47. Pluto and Proserpine in Hades-from an ancient bas-relief,

538

BOOK VII.

48. Chart of the Trojan camp and its environs on the Tiber-from Wag

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55. Saturn-from an antique gem in the Bourbon Museum,

552

56. Goblet, or cantharus-from the Bourbon Museum,

555

57. Minerva with the Aegis-from a vase-painting,.

557

58. Vulcan at his forge-from an antique gem,

567

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