This has been helpful. Apparently, the old Loeb is hopeless.
I've taught the Aeneid many times in Mandelbaum's translation, and will probably continue. I would still prefer, however, to have something with Latin on the facing page. It would give our classicists an opportunity to actually use their Latin for literary analysis, and it might lure some of our non-classicists into starting Latin. Day Lewis had a facing-page Eclogues and Georgics, but I don't think that's in print anymore. For Eclogues, there's Lee and Ferry. Does anyone make a cheap Latin text of Virgil's opera? (Cheap = cheaper than the OCT.) ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. David Wilson-Okamura http://virgil.org david@virgil.org English Department Virgil reception, discussion, documents, &c East Carolina University Sparsa et neglecta coegi. -- Claude Fauchet ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- To leave the Mantovano mailing list at any time, do NOT hit reply. Instead, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message "unsubscribe mantovano" in the body (omitting the quotation marks). You can also unsubscribe at http://virgil.org/mantovano/mantovano.htm#unsub