Virgil: Aeneid VIBloomsbury Publishing, 12. maj 2016 - 206 sider This pivotal book of the Aeneid has Aeneas - like Odysseus in Odyssey XI - visiting the Underworld. He is poised, as it were, between the world of his 'Homeric' past, the wanderings he has undergone in the poem's first half, and the destiny mapped out for his descendants, which culminates in the age of Augustus and his lost successor Marcellus. Aeneas is at once a figure of past, present and future. This edition replaces the long-serving edition by Gould & Whiteley, making the book more accessible to today's students and taking account of the most recent scholarship and critical approaches to Virgil. It includes an introduction, annotation to explain language and content, and a comprehensive vocabulary. |
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Side 14
... Carthage looks forward to the wars between Rome and Carthage . " Throughout the poem there are references to Roman social and religious practices as having their ancestry in Aeneas ' time.30 Aeneas himself is described by the ...
... Carthage looks forward to the wars between Rome and Carthage . " Throughout the poem there are references to Roman social and religious practices as having their ancestry in Aeneas ' time.30 Aeneas himself is described by the ...
Side 15
... Carthage and are being welcomed by Dido . Dido , seeing in him a fellow - exile , offers him and the Trojans partnership in Carthage . She invites them all to a great feast . ( Odyssey 6 : Odysseus , shipwrecked on the coast of ...
... Carthage and are being welcomed by Dido . Dido , seeing in him a fellow - exile , offers him and the Trojans partnership in Carthage . She invites them all to a great feast . ( Odyssey 6 : Odysseus , shipwrecked on the coast of ...
Side 16
... Carthage and Rome will never be founded. Now Aeneas, captivated by Dido and no longer confident of his own future, joins Dido in the building of Carthage. News of Dido's love reach the African king Iarbas, who had hoped to marry Dido ...
... Carthage and Rome will never be founded. Now Aeneas, captivated by Dido and no longer confident of his own future, joins Dido in the building of Carthage. News of Dido's love reach the African king Iarbas, who had hoped to marry Dido ...
Side 27
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Side 75
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Indhold
7 | |
9 | |
The Latin Text | 43 |
Notes on the Text | 71 |
Virgil Ennius Lucretius | 187 |
Literary grammatical and metrical terms | 191 |
Names in the text | 194 |
Other names | 200 |
Vocabulary | 203 |
Abbreviations | 231 |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Achilles adjective ae f Aeneas Aeneid Alba Longa Anchises animae Apollo atque Augustus Avernus avi atum Book caesura Carthage Cerberus Charon clause conj Cumae Daedalus dark dative dead death Deiphobus descendant Dido Elysium emphasised Ennius funeral gate goddess gods Greek haec hendiadys Hercules heroes Homer idea Iliad imperative Intro Italy Julius Caesar Juno Jupiter killed king Latin long syllables Marcellus means metre mihi Misenus noun nunc Odysseus omnes onomatopoeia Oris Palinurus perf perhaps phrase Pirithous poem prep pron Proserpina punishment quae quam quos refers regna river Roman Rome Romulus sentence Sibyl sing souls spirit story Styx subj subjunctive suggests sunt talia tantum Tartarus temple terra Theseus tibi translate Trojans Troy Turnus umbras unda understand underworld vates verb Virgil virum vowel word