I ask that everyone bear with me and after my first post I feel I have
better asked and explained what I'm not sure of as far as Virgil's dual
voice in Aeneas. I may be very far off but I would appreciate any input.
Do you think Virgil employs the use of voice in Aeneas to exhibit first
the hu
This is my first post so please bear with me! I have been researching
Virgil's employment of the participant and narrator voice in Aeneas. Is
part of Virgil's technique to show the human Aeneas to who turns into an
unhuman prodigy? Or is it that he shares a voice like Juppiter because he
is half go
Kimberly Tate [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Sat, 06 Mar 1999 21:32:00 +
From: ListBot Verifier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: REPLY REQUIRED: The Classics Pages Subscription Verify
Thank you for your request to join a
At 01:38 PM 3/6/99 EST, you wrote:
>I apologize for the inappropriate post. I didn't know about the Classics-L
>list and I didn't know who else I could ask. The Magna Pecunia bit was just
>because of the spam letter. I have learned a lot lurking on this list and am
>sorry to have been an irritant.
I apologize for the inappropriate post. I didn't know about the Classics-L
list and I didn't know who else I could ask. The Magna Pecunia bit was just
because of the spam letter. I have learned a lot lurking on this list and am
sorry to have been an irritant.
Jane
-
Sorry for delay. The essay is entitled 'Critical Observations on the
Sixth Book of the Aeneid' (1770) and is accessible in Patricia B. Craddock
(ed.) 'The English Essays of Edward Gibbon' (Oxford, 1972). - Martin
Hughes
On Thu, 25 Feb 1999, David Wilson-Okamura wrote:
> At 10:37 PM 2/25/99 +
(context follows)
I haven't been bothered by the off-topic postings the listowner talks
about (except the one offering mortgages) but I can see his point. The
MAGNA PECUNIA posting and the query on the Harington neo-Latin quote would
have fit in well on the Classics-L list, but they didn't really
Two notes and a query from the listowner:
1. MAGNA PECUNIA NUNC!!! was cute, but defeats the purpose of a subject
header, which is to help busy people decide what they want to read. So be
boring, be courteous, and use a subject header that reflects the content of
your message.
2. This also goes f
In a message dated 99-03-06 04:20:19 EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
<< "Ars celare artem" as such is not found in Ovid. What Ovid really said was
"si
latet ars prodest" (Ars 2, 313) and "Ars latet arte sua" (Met. 10, 252)
>>
Thank you both! Jane
--
Dear Jane, Simon and all,
"Ars celare artem" as such is not found in Ovid. What Ovid really said was "si
latet ars prodest" (Ars 2, 313) and "Ars latet arte sua" (Met. 10, 252)
Best, Miryam
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