Roman Poets of the Augustan Age
This work by William Young Sellar (1825–1890) was first published in 1877, when Sellar was well established as Professor of Humanity at the University of Edinburgh. It is a companion volume to his equally acclaimed Roman Poets of the Republic and the later continuation Horace and the Elegaic Poets, all three of which remain of value to scholars today. The book's ten chapters give an overview of the Augustan Age and Virgil's life and work in context (chapters 1-3), then moving to the Eclogues (chapter 4) and the Georgics (chapters 5-7), before devoting the remaining chapters to the Aeneid. A detailed table of contents allows the reader to navigate between analysis of the historical context, Virgil's literary forms and motives, and general literary interpretation. This work is both a meticulous work of scholarship, and, as the affectionate dedication shows, a tribute to the author's passion for his subject.
Product details
June 2010Paperback
9781108012447
440 pages
216 × 140 × 25 mm
0.56kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. General introduction
- 2. Virgil's place in Roman literature
- 3. Life and personal characteristics of Virgil
- 4. The Eclogues
- 5. Motives, form, substance, and sources of the Georgics
- 6. Relation of the Georgics to the poem of Lucretius
- 7. The Georgics: a poem representative of Italy
- 8. The Roman epic before the time of Virgil
- 9. Form and subject of the Aeneid
- 10. The Aeneid as the epic of the Roman empire
- 11. The Aeneid as an epic poem of human life.