Virgil's Experience: Nature and History: Times, Names, and PlacesThis book studies Virgil's ideas of nature, history, sense of nation, and sense of identity. It is exact and patient in its probing for nuance and detail, but also bold, wide, and original in its scope. It combines the study of Virgil with the study of attitudes to nature throughout antiquity. Blending literature with history, and in the case of Lucretius, philosophy, it offers a vision and an interpretation of the culture of the 1st century BC as a whole. It argues that Lucretius and Virgil affected a revolution in Western sensibility; claiming that a book about poetry should be a book about life, it combines scholarship and precision with a sense of the importance of literature and its capacity to enhance our understanding of our past and of ourselves. |
From inside the book
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Page 13
... similes describing the dying Euryalus and the dead Pallas , even though the first of these is modelled on Homer and the second also owes something to Catullus . Such slight nuances are perhaps the best evidence there is for ...
... similes describing the dying Euryalus and the dead Pallas , even though the first of these is modelled on Homer and the second also owes something to Catullus . Such slight nuances are perhaps the best evidence there is for ...
Page 24
... simile at Aen . 2. 304–8 ) . 9 Cf. F. Braudel , The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II , tr . S. Reynolds , vol . i ( London , 1972 ) , 62 f . , 247 f .; Gibbon , Decline and Fall , ch . 71. In his ch . 30 ...
... simile at Aen . 2. 304–8 ) . 9 Cf. F. Braudel , The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II , tr . S. Reynolds , vol . i ( London , 1972 ) , 62 f . , 247 f .; Gibbon , Decline and Fall , ch . 71. In his ch . 30 ...
Page 36
... simile and the garden is not , but essentially they are upon the same level and correspond to one another . The descrip- tion is thus neither an autonomous scene , valued for itself , nor a setting for a person or action , but a term of ...
... simile and the garden is not , but essentially they are upon the same level and correspond to one another . The descrip- tion is thus neither an autonomous scene , valued for itself , nor a setting for a person or action , but a term of ...
Page 43
... simile likens Lynceus , who thinks he has spotted Heracles a vast distance away , to a man who sees or thinks he ... similes of his was to be annexed and adapted by Virgil.62 He imagines a god's aerial view of the earth as he sweeps down ...
... simile likens Lynceus , who thinks he has spotted Heracles a vast distance away , to a man who sees or thinks he ... similes of his was to be annexed and adapted by Virgil.62 He imagines a god's aerial view of the earth as he sweeps down ...
Page 44
... simile bees hum around lilies , ' and the dewy meadow rejoices ' ; dawn looses the night , and the shores and the dewy paths laugh . 6 7 Perhaps Apollonius ' most effective use of the pathetic fallacy comes when he describes night ...
... simile bees hum around lilies , ' and the dewy meadow rejoices ' ; dawn looses the night , and the shores and the dewy paths laugh . 6 7 Perhaps Apollonius ' most effective use of the pathetic fallacy comes when he describes night ...
Contents
21 | |
A Transpadanes Experience | 73 |
The Neoteric Experience | 131 |
Energy and Delight | 211 |
The Conquest of Death | 252 |
Earth and Country | 297 |
Land and Nation | 341 |
The Wanderings of Aeneas | 389 |
Latinus Kingdom | 463 |
Evanders Kingdom | 515 |
The Later Aeneid | 564 |
Virgil and the Poets | 593 |
Virgil Augustus and the Future | 631 |
Labor Improbus | 678 |
Index of Passages Cited | 685 |
Index of Greek and Latin Words | 704 |
Other editions - View all
Virgil's Experience: Nature and History, Times, Names, and Places Richard Jenkyns No preview available - 1998 |
Virgil's Experience: Nature and History, Times, Names, and Places Richard Jenkyns No preview available - 1998 |
Common terms and phrases
Achilles adjective Aeneas Aeneid Anchises ancient Arcadia Ascanius atque Augustan Augustus Caesar Callimachus Carm Catullus Cicero colour comes context contrast Creusa death describes Dido distinctive divine earth echoes Eclogues emotional Ennius epic Epicurus Evander experience father Faunus feel force Georgics glory goddess gods golden age Greek hero Homer Horace human idea Iliad imagination Italian Italy Jupiter land landscape later Latin Latium laus Italiae lines literary look Lucr Lucretius meaning metaphor moral nature Nymphs Odyssey once Ovid Pallas paradox passage pastoral pathetic fallacy patriotic perhaps phrase poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry praise Propertius quae rerum river Roman Rome scene seems seen sense sentence significance simile speech spirit story suggests tells theme Theocritus things Tiber Tiberinus Tibullus tion tone Transpadane Trojans Troy Turnus Venus verse Virgil vision whole woods words