Vergiliana : critical studies on the texts of Publius Vergilius Maro / Egil Kraggerud.

Author
Kraggerud, Egil, 1939- [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.
Description
xvi, 363 pages ; 25 cm

Availability

Copies in the Library

Location Call Number Status Location Service Notes
Firestone Library - Classics Collection PA6826 .K75 2017 Browse related items Request

    Details

    Subject(s)
    Bibliographic references
    Includes bibliographical references (pages 357-360) and index.
    Contents
    • Machine generated contents note: Bucolica
    • Eel. 1. 69 post aliquot aristas
    • disputed phrase in its context
    • Eel. 2. 32 A god's title
    • Pan the great innovator and model
    • Eel. 3. 62 A conjunction at stake
    • Theocr. 5. 82 in the balance
    • Eel. 4. 8 One child initiating a new age
    • letter added can make a big difference
    • Eel. 4. 28-9 Lines sharing words between them
    • Emphasis achieved by artistry
    • Eel. 4. 62-3 The nature of a baby's smile
    • Dutch scholar vindicated
    • Eel. 5. 3 "Why don't we sit down?" in Latin
    • What Vergil chose to write
    • Eel. 5 .8 Indicative or subjunctive?
    • In favour of P
    • Eel. 5. 38 The gender of narcissus
    • Our debt to an ancient grammarian
    • Eel. 5. 66 Altars for Daphnis
    • Sorting out syntactical order
    • Eel. 6. 1-12. On the genesis of Vergil's earliest poetry
    • Call. Aet. 1. 21-4 and Theocr. 16 as inspiration
    • Eel. 6. 16 Silenus' hangover
    • troublesome adverbial `cluster' procul tantum
    • Eel. 6. 24 The commonest of verbs ousted by a hapax?
    • Peerlkamp's brilliant point
    • Eel. 6. 34 A dilemma in P
    • Elided omnia in Vergil?
    • Eel. 6. 74-81 A praeteritio to fill the day
    • illustrative effect of complicated syntax
    • Eel. 7. 5 Equal and well-prepared singers
    • misleading first impression of their qualities
    • Eel. 7. 29-32 Corydon's promise to Diana
    • Variation on the usual contract between man and god
    • Eel. 7. 33-6 Thyrsis honouring Priapus
    • And, unfortunately, revealing his true self
    • Eel. 7. 37-44 Love of Galatea
    • rivals' respective `roles'
    • Eel. 7. 53-60 An inevitable transposition
    • What is either singer's `part'?
    • Eel. 7. 64 Justice for Venus
    • Equality restored by an ancient grammarian
    • Eel. 10. 44 A line revisited and clinched
    • Almost beyond belief: a double corruption
    • Notes
    • Georgica
    • G. 1. 35 Present or perfect I?
    • P and ps. Probus found trustworthy
    • G. 1. 36 Hope in Tartarus
    • example of disregarded potentialis
    • G. 1. 83 What does prefixed in- mean?
    • On homonyms with contrary' meaning
    • G. 1. 500 Two false birds with one stone
    • Minimal change can work wonders
    • G. 3. 159 An unnoticed example of ecquis
    • simplification apt to simplify future discussion
    • G. 3. 303-4 The reign of the cold Water Bearer
    • serious issue for goats
    • G. 3. 519 Present or perfect II?
    • Weighing for and against
    • Aeneis I
    • IV
    • Ille ego qui The false beginning
    • Yet requiring the best syntactical understanding
    • A. 1. 1-7 Punctuation and structure
    • beneficiary effect of a full stop in the flow of lines
    • A. 1. 48-9 Indignant Juno
    • neglected modal parallelism
    • A. 1. 380 Jove's descendant
    • How Aeneas can escape criticism
    • and save half a line
    • A. 1. 458 The protagonists of the Trojan War
    • On Seneca's version
    • A. 1. 462 A persistent stumbling block?
    • personal approach to a conclusive answer
    • A. 1. 603-5 A sense of justice and righteousness
    • To whom do these virtues properly belong?
    • A. 1. 646 A loving father's cura
    • analysis of the use of carus
    • A. 2. 121 Emphasis on a terrifying Apollo
    • Madvig's support of an anonymous conjecture
    • A. 2. 139 On an unmotivated et
    • Restoration via scriptura continua
    • A. 2. 433-4 A genitive seeking its governing noun
    • From another vantage point: `retributive actions' in context
    • A. 2. 485 In defence of (and Geymonat)
    • good, but lonely, singular needs strengthening
    • A. 2. 567-88 The Helen episode
    • a never-ending debate?
    • If accepting (1) that it is by Vergil and/or (2) meant to fill a lacuna
    • A. 2. 598 Accusative or nominative?
    • real pro et contra case
    • A. 2. 738 The heart-breaking loss of Creusa
    • proper emendation is a natural response
    • A. 2. 749 An interpolated line?
    • hysteron proteron diagnosed
    • A. 3. 417 On Helenus' prophecy I
    • challenging instance of abl. Medio
    • A. 3. 684-6 On Helenus' prophecy II
    • Nisbet's conjecture and the final clause
    • A. 4. 112 Foedera or foedere?
    • reading to give Venus' rhetoric an edge?
    • A. 4. 126 A terminable intrusion
    • Negatively affecting the context if accepted
    • A. 4. 176 The birth of Fama
    • How Bahrens did away with Farm's timidity
    • A. 4. 223-4 Jupiter describing Aeneas at Carthage
    • Restoration of the god's words by lenient surgery
    • A. 4. 375 On the language of strong emotion
    • Within acceptable linguistic bounds
    • A. 4. 469-73 Dido ~ (1) Pentheus and (2) Orestes I
    • (1) Allen introduced the Maenads, (2) ego the scene of the matricide
    • Aeneis V
    • VIII
    • A. 5. 300 A runner's name and origin
    • Parisinus Lat. 7306 accepted
    • A. 5. 851 Treacherous weather
    • Much hinges on what et combines
    • A. 6. 153 Animals to soothe the nether deities
    • Pecudes as the chief expiatory rite
    • A. 6. 293 `Hollow forms'
    • Bentley's reading adopted
    • A. 6. 438 In need of final consensus
    • opportunity to side with Timpanaro and Conte
    • A. 6. 460 Vergil `imitating' Catullus
    • jocular phrase becomes a tragic confession
    • A. 6. 466 Aeneas' last words to Dido
    • attempt to solve an enigma of grammatical analysis
    • A. 6. 561 `Air' or `ear'?
    • function of either in context
    • A. 6. 585-6 Punctuation and punishment
    • place of a full stop is no trifle
    • A. 6. 588 Where did Salmoneus challenge Zeus?
    • On the function of the adjective medius
    • A. 6. 601-2 Should we miss Tantalus?
    • In other words: is the text sound, corrupt or lacunose?
    • A. 6. 615 A hidden hendiadys
    • Lt will emerge if one letter is taken away
    • A. 6. 658-9 Eridanus below and above ground
    • Horsfall is only one letter from goal
    • A. 6. 746 Present or perfect III?
    • PR, Serv. and Tib. Don. Preferred
    • A. 6. 761 The hopeless lucis loca
    • Heinsius' suggestion seeks followers
    • A. 6. 791 Punctuation to be changed
    • Why Hic vir hic is recommended with no comma
    • A. 6. 817-23 Ultor Brutus
    • Capital Utcumque as part of an interpretation
    • A. 6. 846 Predicting a Fabius as Maximus Cunctator
    • way Vergil imitates Ennius
    • A. 6. 852 Global rule over the populi
    • Haifa line grasping its essence
    • A. 6. 893-6 The troublesome exit from Hades
    • What if lines 897-8 are put before 893-6 (excluding 896)?
    • A. 7. 129 `Disasters' or `exile'?
    • In support of R.D. Williams
    • A. 7. 377 A queen's maenadic arena
    • Interpretation based on Jasper's extension of that arena
    • A. 7. 543 A hellish creature flies to heaven
    • In support of Schaper's (Deuticke's) and Conte's dative
    • A. 7. 598-9 An old king's tragedy
    • Is the transmitted text compatible with truth and logic?
    • A. 7. 741 The annoying solid
    • simple solution should as always be heeded
    • A. 7. 773 A locus solubilis?
    • Critics favouring P have many good points
    • Aeneis IX
    • XII
    • A. 9. 51 The right place of a comma
    • Word-order reflects the viva vox of the commander
    • A. 9. 79 Cybele's eternal fame
    • Where a `but' is ill-placed
    • A. 9. 85-6 A questionable deletion
    • forest of Mount Ida differentiated
    • A. 9. 91 Cybele's concern for the Trojan fleet
    • postponed neu emphasizing
    • A. 9. 130 Jupiter at war with the Trojans
    • To understand Turnus' sneer M is preferred
    • A. 9. 140-2 Misogyny sub iudice
    • To acquit the form perosos a comma (141) has to go
    • A. 9. 215 Nisus' request for burial
    • Peerlkamp was on the right track
    • A. 9. 243 In defence of a future simple
    • It is indeed an issue according to ms. Evidence
    • A. 9.363 A spurious line?
    • definite stand may be close on duty
    • A. 9. 390-2 Where to put a question mark
    • final decision is yet to be reached
    • A. 9. 402-3 Nisus praying to Luna
    • With the author's late recognition of Ribbeck's brilliance
    • A. 9. 461-4 Turnus arming his ranks
    • author's confidence in Wagner and M
    • A. 9. 471 The neglected variant makes its claims
    • P was accepted by La Cerda
    • A. 9. 481 The gender of a predicative pronoun
    • R is still without enough support
    • A. 9. 539 Le mot juste
    • Schrader's proposal unearthed
    • A. 9. 599 `War' or `death'?
    • Burmannus helps to make the appropriate decision
    • A. 9. 709 A solitary neuter
    • One's reaction to an anomaly has its reasons
    • A. 9. 733 The shield of Turnus
    • description that confuses with its variants
    • A. 9. 764 The back of fleeing fighters
    • irregularity is sacrificed
    • A. 9. 789 A true dilemma
    • Ablative, genitive or dative?
    • A. 10. 366 More than a personal palinode
    • Not only Madvig's aquis, but also my own eos must go
    • A. 10. 705 Paris' name twice over?
    • Ellis against triumphant Bentley
    • A. 11. 50 The troublesome et yet again
    • solution is presented under A. 2. 139
    • A. 11. 256 An abnormal pronoun
    • Vergil's usage wins the day
    • A. 12. 161 A pompous mustering of forces
    • Whereby a comma has to change its place
    • A. 12. 218 Brackets or no brackets?
    • long-winded path towards emendation
    • A. 12. 286 Latinus' report of failure
    • hidden reference of referens
    • A. 12. 470 Present or perfect IV?
    • V should take the pride of place in the app. crit
    • A. 12. 648 Why not the easy way?
    • Wagner's case against Housman's
    • A. 12. 790 Exhausted heroes
    • On how to combine and interpret five words.
    ISBN
    • 9781138201347 ((hardback ; : alk. paper))
    • 1138201340 ((hardback ; : alk. paper))
    LCCN
    2016015665
    OCLC
    946031351
    Statement on language in description
    Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage. Read more...
    Other views
    Staff view

    Supplementary Information