Philip Thibodeau wrote:
>
> Musings, and a Question about an Emendation:
>
> Musings - The virtues of Putnam's approach, it seems to me, is that it
> describes quite convincingly how readers of the poem who were Stoics, both
> those we know of such as Manilius, Lucan, Seneca, plus all the many
>
I rec'd the following from Amazon's "Eyes" service this afternoon. This is
merely a notice, not a recommendation, but it looks interesting:
"The Shadows of Poetry : Vergil in the Mind of Augustine
(Transformation of the Classic
Musings, and a Question about an Emendation:
Musings - The virtues of Putnam's approach, it seems to me, is that it
describes quite convincingly how readers of the poem who were Stoics, both
those we know of such as Manilius, Lucan, Seneca, plus all the many
anonymous Stoics of the time, could hav
At 10:43 AM 5/26/98 PDT, you wrote:
>I need some opinions on Virgil's character in Dante's Inferno.
>Specifically the power he has, and also the things he can't do there.
Have a look at the items in the Dante section of the online bibliography at
http://www.virgil.org/bibliography
For
Date: Tue, 26 May 1998 15:11:27 -0400
From: "Rodger A Kahl" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The list can and will provide detailed answers to your inquiry, but I =
thought I might point you in another direction for some "after thought."
Read T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and some critici
I need some opinions on Virgil's character in Dante's Inferno.
Specifically the power he has, and also the things he can't do there.
__
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