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Work InformationThe Aeneid by Virgil
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The story is fascinating in how it doesn’t quite gel together, and there are pages where I am engrossed in the drama: I could feel Troy burn, Dido’s heart breaking, and the pains and sorrows of war. ( ) A prose translation, but by a well known authority at that time. Like the Iliad, this is the most prominent literary work from a major Hellenistic power. It is what most Romans had in their heads about the legendary foundations of their polity. Though the poem itself was incomplete, Vergil having died beore completion, there were several acounts finishing the receisved story . I can't pass an opinion on the beauty of the Latin poem, being twice removed from it, nontheless, one should have read some version of this work to complete an education. This time I read Robert Fagles verse translation, I found it to be an easy read. When I read this epic last I was less familiar with the backdrop of these stories than I am today, so maybe this also helped. There were parts where the poetry was moving, but minus: the story of Dido; the sea voyage Aeneas has; and some sobering war scenes, this mostly read like a piece of propaganda, but I would read again. A twelve-book-long epic poem it describes the early mythology of the founding of Rome. The hero Aeneas, a Trojan prince and son of Venus, faces trials and tribulations as he escapes Troy as it burns and sails the Mediterranean searching for a new home. The Aeneid alludes to both the Odyssey and the Iliad, tales of the Trojan War composed as epic poems by Homer. The first six books of the Aeneid are the stories of Aeneas and other Trojan survivors travelling around the Mediterranean, in the style of Odysseus and his crew in the Odyssey. The latter half of Virgil's work focuses on warfare, as Aeneas fights Turnus, king of the Rutuli and a warrior said to be more powerful than Achilles. The Aeneid also contains epic tropes that hearken back to Homer. For instance, in Book V Aeneas puts on funeral games for his dead father, Anchises. These games are strongly reminiscent of the funeral games hosted in honour of Patroclus in Book XXVIII of the Iliad. Later, in Book VI of the Aeneid, Aeneas descends into the Underworld where he encounters his father and Dido, his spurned lover and former Queen of Carthage; Odysseus makes a similar journey in Book XI of the Odyssey. Divine intervention is another prominent feature in the Aeneid; gods such as Jupiter and Venus compel and assist Aeneas to fulfill his destiny, while other divine figures, Juno, for example, actively plot against Aeneas, and attempt to thwart his attempts to reach Italy and lay the foundations of Rome. The epic begins in media res, the standard technique in epic poetry as Aeneas and his men wash up on an unfamiliar shore. He is whisked inland to the court of Dido, Queen of Carthage, where, in Book II, he tells the story of the fall of Troy from the Trojan perspective. In his account, he describes the Trojan Horse on the shores outside Troy, the warning of Laocoön, the Greeks' emergence from the hollow horse and the storming of the gates, the death of King Priam at the hands of Neoptolemus (Achilles' nephew), and the annunciation of his quest to take the Trojan gods and found a new city in the West. Aeneas goes on to describe his journey across the Mediterranean Sea. As he finishes the story, Dido is struck by an arrow of Cupid, Aeneas' half-brother, and falls in love with the Trojan. (This scheme is hatched by Juno to keep Aeneas in Carthage) Their love was not meant to be, as Jupiter, via Mercury, reminds Aeneas of his destiny and orders him to embark once again in search of his new home. After that divine reminder, Aeneas sets sail on the Mediterranean, still seeking the location of Troy's successor. Aeneas settles the Trojans in Latium, a region in western Italy, at the invitation of Latinus, king of the Latin tribe. Aeneas begins to court Latinus's daughter, Lavinia, with her father's blessing.
Belongs to Publisher SeriesAnchor Books (A20) Austral (1022) — 41 more Colecção História da Literatura (Livro 47) Empúries Narrativa (92) Everyman's Library (161) Harvard Classics (13) Harvill (151) Klassieke Galerij (154) Letras Universales (60) Mentor Books (ME2277) Penguin Classics (L051) Penguin Clothbound Classics (2021*) Perpetua reeks (9) Project Gutenberg EBook (228) Is contained inKsiegi wszytkie to iest ksiag dwanascie o Eneaszu Troianskim (Aeneïda), przekladania Jedrzeia Kochanowskiego, ksiag czworo Ziemianstwa (Georgica), przekladania Waleryana Otwinowskiego, ksiag dziesiec Pasterek (Bucolica)... by Publius Vergilius Maro ContainsIs retold inIs a (non-series) sequel toIs an adaptation ofHas the adaptationIs abridged inInspiredHas as a studyHas as a commentary on the textHas as a student's study guideAwardsNotable Lists
References to this work on external resources. Wikipedia in English (15)This enduring masterpiece tells of the epic quest of Aeneas, who flees the ashes of Troy to found a new civilization: Rome. A unique hero, Aeneas struggles and fights not for personal gain but for a civilization that will exist far into the future. Caught between passion and fate, his vision would change the course of the Western world. Virgil, Rome's greatest poet, turned a mythical legend into a national epic that would survive Rome's collapse to become the most influential book Rome contributed to Western culture. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)873.01Literature Latin & Italic literatures Latin epic poetry and fiction to ca. 499, Roman periodLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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