Skönlitteratur

Aeneid, Books 7–12. Appendix Vergiliana

av Virgil

Utgiven av Harvard University Press

Format

Inbunden

Sidor

608 sidor

Språk

Engelska, Latin

Utgiven

jan. 2001

Jämför priser

Från 365 kr
Adlibris
Bästa pris
365 kr
Bokus
Bästa pris
365 kr
Akademibokhandeln
479 kr

Priserna uppdateras löpande från säkra och trygga butiker.

Om boken

“The classic of all Europe.” —T. S. Eliot Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro) was born in 70 BC near Mantua and was educated at Cremona, Milan, and Rome. Slow in speech, shy in manner, thoughtful in mind, weak in health, he went back north for a quiet life. Influenced by the group of poets there, he may have written some of the doubtful poems included in our Virgilian manuscripts. All his undoubted extant work is written in his perfect hexameters. Earliest comes the collection of ten pleasingly artificial bucolic poems, the Eclogues, which imitated freely Theocritus’ idylls. They deal with pastoral life and love. Before 29 BC came one of the best of all didactic works, the four books of Georgics on tillage, trees, cattle, and bees. Virgil’s remaining years were spent in composing his great, not wholly finished, epic the Aeneid, on the traditional theme of Rome’s origins through Aeneas of Troy. Inspired by the Emperor Augustus’ rule, the poem is Homeric in metre and method but influenced also by later Greek and Roman literature, philosophy, and learning, and deeply Roman in spirit. Virgil died in 19 BC at Brundisium on his way home from Greece, where he had intended to round off the Aeneid. He had left in Rome a request that all its twelve books should be destroyed if he were to die then, but they were published by the executors of his will. The Loeb Classical Library edition of Virgil is in two volumes.

Fler böcker av Virgil

Se alla

Liknande böcker

Alla i Skönlitteratur

Boktips inom Skönlitteratur

Bästa pris365 kr
Gå till butik