VIRGIL: at Kalamazoo

1998-05-06 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Virgiliana in Medieval Scandinavia? Randi Eldevik, Oklahoma State University Aeneas and the 'Sign of Love' Rebecca Gottlieb, University of Wisconsin-Platteville Lavinia and Beatrice: The Epic Background of Dante's Romantic Theology David Wilson-Okamura, University of Chicago

VIRGIL: searching archives

1998-05-06 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
the scope of your search to March-June 1996. Hope to meet some of you at Kalamazoo... --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

Re: VIRGIL: nemo Hercule, nemo

1998-04-30 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
was really swearing by Hercules. I would translate it as by gum or something generic like that. But the contracted form is old: see Lewis Short, Hercules, 1b. --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: VIRGIL: The Fourfold Method

1998-04-30 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
). --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links --- --- To leave

VIRGIL: Another snake in the grass

1998-04-29 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Date: Tue, 28 Apr 1998 15:42:56 -0700 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tim Mallon) Georgics iv.457-459: Illa quidem, dum te fugeret per flumina praeceps, immanem ante pedes hydrum moritura puella servantem ripas alta non vidit in herba. Tim

VIRGIL: Comparing Virgil Homer

1998-04-29 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
. This might help you to focus your project more quickly. --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

Re: VIRGIL: nemo Hercule, nemo

1998-04-29 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
, a Christian, records that Livia was suspected of poisoning Marcellus and adds Nec hercle immerito!) --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion

Re: VIRGIL: Context of A snake lurks in the grass

1998-04-28 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Date: Tue, 28 Apr 1998 11:42:00 -0400 From: Andy Lafrenz [EMAIL PROTECTED] This follows up on Randi Eldevik's comments about the coluber mala gramina pastus. Actually, the phrase occurs in Book II of the Aeneid, at line 471. Virgil (Vergil?) uses a snake motif a little earlier in the same

Re: VIRGIL: spelling: Virgil or Vergil?

1998-04-25 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sat, 25 Apr 1998 09:58:51 + As I understand it, 'Virgil' (or French 'Virgile', etc.) is the traditional spelling in modern languages. 'Vergil' is preferred by some (a minority) on the ground that in Latin the name is 'Vergilius', 'Vergilii', etc.. The 'Virgil'

Re: VIRGIL: Archives

1998-04-23 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
) there. At this point, however, I'm not sure how far they go back. (I think they may have purged everything prior to Nov. 97, but am checking on that.) --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University

VIRGIL: Dante's allusions to Virgil

1998-04-19 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
. --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

VIRGIL: Ae.IV.-Dido

1998-04-17 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Thu, 16 Apr 1998 10:54:34 -0700 Philip Thibodeau wrote: do people believe Vergil could foresee how much his readers would care about Dido, for example? Because there were famous antecedents for Dido in literature, it seems

VIRGIL: search engine operating

1998-04-15 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
.) --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

Re: VIRGIL: search engine operating

1998-04-15 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
you wanted to search. --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

RE: VIRGIL: what is this dread longing? (A. 6.721)

1998-04-15 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Date: Thu, 16 Apr 1998 00:32:06 +0200 (MET DST) From: Neven Jovanovic [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thanks to everyone who passed in silence over my too-hasty blunder. At 6,640-1 Vergil provides the light for the Anchises' part of the Underworld: Largior hic campos aether et lumine vestit purpureo,

RE: VIRGIL: what is this dread longing? (A. 6.721)

1998-04-13 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
. --- Date: Fri, 10 Apr 1998 10:05:37 -0500 (CDT) From: Radcliffe Edmonds [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: David Wilson-Okamura [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: why does the soul lose its wings? The problem of the soul's fall into matter is not satisfactorily answered

VIRGIL: A. 12,839: supra ire deos

1998-04-11 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Date: Sat, 11 Apr 1998 01:03:49 +0200 (MET DST) From: Neven Jovanovic [EMAIL PROTECTED] Aeneid 12,838-840: Hinc genus Ausonio mixtum quod sanguine surget, supra homines, supra ire deos pietate uidebis, nec gens ulla tuos aeque celebrabit honores. In reading for _rivers of blood_, I chanced

RE: VIRGIL: what is this dread longing? (A. 6.721)

1998-04-11 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
Date: Sat, 11 Apr 1998 00:46:04 +0200 (MET DST) From: Neven Jovanovic [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Tue, 7 Apr 1998, Robert R. Dyer wrote: I think we need to remember that the soul, according to Plato, is housed in the body. It seems to me that he may think of the soul as needing a home. What does

VIRGIL: Marcellus poisoned by Livia?

1998-04-11 Thread David Wilson-Okamura
article on Marcello didn't mention anything, either. --- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of ChicagoOnline Virgil discussion, bibliography links

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