Tag: Aeneid

Gavin Douglas, ‘The Aeneid’ (1513) Volume 1 Introduction, Books I – VIII


Free Download Virgil, Gordon Kendal, "Gavin Douglas, ‘The Aeneid’ (1513) Volume 1: Introduction, Books I – VIII"
English, Scots | 2011 | ISBN: 0947623965 | PDF | pages: 454 | 19.2 mb
Virgil’s story of Aeneas, exiled from fallen Troy and leading his people to a new life through the founding of Rome, was familiar in the middle ages. The first true and full translation into any form of English was completed in Scotland in 1513 by Gavin Douglas and published in print forty years later. His version (still considered by some to be the finest of all) is significant historically but also for its intrinsic qualities: vigour, faithfulness, and a remarkable flair for language. Douglas was a scholar as well as a poet and brought to his task a detailed knowledge of the Latin text and of its major commentators, together with a sensitive mastery of his own language, both Scots and English, contemporary and archaic. The present edition is the first to regularise his spelling and make access easier for the modern reader without compromising the authentic Scots-English blend of his language. Glossaries (side- and end-) explain obscurities in his vocabulary while the introduction and notes set the work in context and indicate how Douglas understands and refocusses the great Virgilian epic. It will be of interest to medievalists and Renaissance scholars, to classicists and to students of the English language, and not least to the general reader whom Douglas had especially in mind. Gordon Kendal is an Honorary Research Fellow in the School of English, University of St Andrews.

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Virgil’s Gaze Nation and Poetry in the Aeneid


Free Download Virgil’s Gaze: Nation and Poetry in the Aeneid by Joseph D. Reed
English | January 22, 2007 | ISBN: 0691127409, 0691170916 | True EPUB | 240 pages | 0.7 MB
Virgil’s Aeneid invites its reader to identify with the Roman nation whose origins and destiny it celebrates. But, as J. D. Reed argues in Virgil’s Gaze, the great Roman epic satisfies this identification only indirectly-if at all. In retelling the story of Aeneas’ foundational journey from Troy to Italy, Virgil defines Roman national identity only provisionally, through oppositions to other ethnic identities-especially Trojan, Carthaginian, Italian, and Greek-oppositions that shift with the shifting perspective of the narrative. Roman identity emerges as multivalent and constantly changing rather than unitary and stable. The Roman self that the poem gives us is capacious-adaptable to a universal nationality, potentially an imperial force-but empty at its heart. However, the incongruities that produce this emptiness are also what make the Aeneid endlessly readable, since they forestall a single perspective and a single notion of the Roman.

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Ronald Knox’s Lectures on Virgil’s Aeneid With Introduction and Critical Essays


Free Download Ronald Knox’s Lectures on Virgil’s Aeneid: With Introduction and Critical Essays edited by Francesca Bugliani Knox
English | August 10, 2023 | ISBN: 1350118281 | True EPUB | 274 pages | 1.5 MB
This book makes available Ronald Knox’s hitherto unpublished lectures on Virgil’s Aeneid delivered at Trinity College, Oxford, as part of a lecture course on Virgil in 1912.

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Virgil Aeneid Book XII


Free Download Virgil: Aeneid Book XII By Richard Tarrant
2012 | 374 Pages | ISBN: 052130881X | PDF | 11 MB
Book XII brings Virgil’s Aeneid to a close, as the long-delayed single combat between Aeneas and Turnus ends with Turnus’ death a finale that many readers find more unsettling than triumphant. In this, the first detailed single-volume commentary on the book in any language, Professor Tarrant explores Virgil’s complex portrayal of the opposing champions, his use and transformation of earlier poetry (Homer’s in particular) and his shaping of the narrative in its final phases. In addition to the linguistic and thematic commentary, the volume contains a substantial introduction that discusses the larger literary and historical issues raised by the poem’s conclusion; other sections include accounts of Virgil’s metre, later treatments of the book’s events in art and music, and the transmission of the text. The edition is designed for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students and will also be of interest to scholars of Latin literature.

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