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| | Eclogue - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The ancients referred to individual poems of Virgil's "Bucolica" as "eclogae," and the term was used by later Latin poets to refer to their own bucolic poetry, often in imitation of Virgil. |  | | Alexander Pope produced a series of eclogues in imitation of Virgil. |  | | The Latin poet Virgil took Theocritus as his master, not Hesiod, in composing his own Eclogues, and most later attempts at producing work in the genre have followed Virgil's lead. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclogue
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| | §5. Barclays "Eclogues". IV. Barclay and Skelton. Vol. 3. Renascence and Reformation. The Cambridge History ... |
 | | Bribery, in the case of influential officials and impudent servants, is mentioned, the evils of war and town life are dwelt upon, nepotism is blamed, and it is shown that court life spoils the character, and hinders a man from reading and studying. |  | | As a scholar, he represents medieval, rather than renascence, ideals; as a man, he was modest and grateful to his friends and patrons; and his writings, as well as his will, prove him a kind-hearted friend of the poor. |  | | He was certainly not an original writer; but he was a steady and conscientious worker, who did some useful work as a translator of classical and other literature, and set out on some tracks never followed by English writers before him. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/213/0405.html
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| | Bryn Mawr Classical Review 02.02.15 |
 | | This adaptation of Vergil's Eclogues and Georgics, in which the author describes himself as playing "fast and loose with Vergil," is interesting as a reminder of ideas, modes of expression, and issues familiar from the late 60's/early 70's. |  | | The book under consideration is a reprinting of the 1971/72 edition, originally published by Doubleday, with a new preface. |  | | Instead of Vergil, we encounter Slavitt and his own poetic response to the Eclogues and Georgics, very much colored, I would add, by the times in which these adaptations were conceived and composed. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1991/02.02.15.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | The Eclogues, although written in overt imitation of the Hellenistic poet Theocritus, introduce contemporary issues and characters, gesture to the city of Rome (an intrusion that is, theoretically, odd in pastoral poetry), and at points seem saturated with images of sacrifice, loss, and exile. |  | | The idea of labor participates in a scheme of contrast in the Georgics, as it is distinguished from the otium of the poet in 4.563-6. |  | | Those who deny that the lines are authentic argue that an epic poet would not begin his work with such a subjective statement; others consider the possibility that Vergil here declares himself to be a different kind of epic poet from Homer. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~jfarrell/andy/brief.html
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| | Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.09.20 |
 | | To return to the issue of silence, Vergil's unwillingness to name the god in the First Eclogue might derive from the same change that occurred during the years in which the collection was completed. |  | | As an instance of the editor's sensitivity and passion for his subject, I cite his description of the well-known adynaton in the first Eclogue: "Tityrus' 'impossibility' is a painful reality for Meliboeus; and thus prompted, he conjures up the most remote and barren regions of the earth (64-6). |  | | The commentary on each Eclogue is preceded by its own introduction and it is upon these introductions that I shall focus my attention. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1995/95.09.20.html
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| | Eclogues - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Eclogues is one of three major works by the Latin poet Virgil. |  | | The most famous of them is Eclogue 4 (PP Ecl.4), which appears to contain a Messianic prophecy, and was seized on by early Christians as such - one reason why Dante later chose Virgil as his guide through the underworld. |  | | Eclogue 10 (PP Ecl.10) is in praise of Virgil's near-contemporary, the poet Gallus. |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclogues
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| | Electronic Antiquities Volume I, Number 5 |
 | | Moreover, how Servius read the Eclogues some four centuries after their publication can only be understood in relation to his work, his era and his pedagogic intentions. |  | | For a second allegorical reading Suetonius, in de Poetis, maintains that the Daphnis of Eclogues 5 is in fact Vergil's brother Flaccus.(21) Quintilian quotes the description of lost land at Eclogues 9. |  | | Naturally, the allegory of Prudentius and the allegorical reading of the Eclogues are drawn from two different literary intentions but the basic principles are the same, i.e. |
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http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/ElAnt/V1N5/levis.html
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| | Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2005.05.49 |
 | | The book is a collection and analysis of words and passages relevant to understanding the language of Virgil's first poetry book in terms of its general qualities, its debt to the poet's literary predecessors, and its influence on subsequent authors. |  | | In terms of the sources of the names in the Eclogues, Lipka notes that Latin names are mainly those of historical figures, while Greek names are mythological or literary, drawn for the most part from Theocritus, but also from Homer, Sophron, Callimachus, Apollonius and others. |  | | An important refinement of this observation is the conclusion that the Eclogues show no evidence of Vergil drawing on names from the Greek bucolic tradition outside of Theocritus. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2005/2005-05-49.html
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| | Vergil,Virgil Latin poet,a concise description |
 | | October 15, 70 B.C.E. Publius Vergilius Maro, commonly known as Vergil or Virgil,&; Latin poet, is the author of the Eclogues, the Georgics, and the Aeneid, a narrative poem in twelve books that deserves to be called the Roman Empires national epic. |  | | However, the first of the Eclogues, written around 42 B.C.E., is taken as evidence that Octavian restored the estate, for it tells how Tityrus recovered his land through Octavians intervention and Tityrus is usually identified as Vergil himself. |  | | Dido and Turnus, who are both casualties of Romes destiny, are more attractive figures than Aeneas, whose single-minded devotion to his goal may seem almost repellent to the modern reader. |
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http://www.ohno.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/pages/vergil.htm
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| | Amazon.com: Books: The Eclogues : Dual Language Edition (Penguin Classics) |
 | | This is the fullest edition of the Eclogues to have appeared in any language and the first in English since the end of the nineteenth century. |  | | In this edition of Virgil's "Eclogues," Guy Lee provides a lively verse translation with a parallel of the original Latin text. |  | | Preceding the text, Lee gives a detailed and lengthy introduction, with summaries before each of Virgils' ten eclogues. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/014044419X?v=glance
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Books: The Eclogues (Classics S.) |
 | | In giving unforgettable expression to the disasters of the day through poetry, the "Eclogues" paved the way for the "Georgics" and the "Aeneid", the two greatest works of Latin literature, and are also a major masterpiece in their own right. |  | | Haunting and enigmatic, Virgil's "Eclogues" combined a Greek literary form with scenes from contemporary Roman life to create a work that inspired a whole European tradition of pastoral poetry. |  | | Shepherds are overwhelmed by the torments of poetic love - but they must also endure such real-life events as the tragic consequences of Julius Caesar's murder in 44 bc and a civil war. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/014044419X
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| | Amazon.ca: Books: Eclogues |
 | | Eclogues is a delight, and Guy Davenport proves a companionable and witty guide. |  | | Mixtures of myth and fable, these tales have their origins in Plutarch, Montaigne, The Acts of the Apostles, Theokritos, and the daily newspaper. |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0801846951
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| | [No title] |
 | | All that, of old, Eurotas, happy stream, Heard, as Apollo mused upon the lyre, And bade his laurels learn, Silenus sang; Till from Olympus, loth at his approach, Vesper, advancing, bade the shepherds tell Their tale of sheep, and pen them in the fold. |  | | For him, on whom his parents have not smiled, Gods deem not worthy of their board or bed. |  | | I sing but as vouchsafed me; yet even this If, if but one with ravished eyes should read, Of thee, O Varus, shall our tamarisks And all the woodland ring; nor can there be A page more dear to Phoebus, than the page Where, foremost writ, the name of Varus stands. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext95/bucoe10.txt
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| | Virgil Bibliography |
 | | Humanization of nature in Virgil’s Eclogues.’ CPh 66, 1971, 151-68. |  | | Humanization of Nature in Virgil’s Eclogues.’ CPh 66, 1971, 151-68. |  | | Galinsky, G.K. ‘Vergil’s Second Eclogue: Its Theme and Relation to the Eclogue Book.’ CandM 26, 1965, 161-91. |
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http://www.gltc.leidenuniv.nl/index.php3?m=57&c=162&garb=.44813409171865665&session=
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| | Virgil - The Eclogues - A new downloadable translation |
 | | Description of text : A new translation of Virgil's Eclogues, the ten early bucolic poems freely imitating Theocritus's Idylls. |  | | Reference : Kline, A.S., (poetry translation) "Virgil - The Eclogues" |  | | Virgil - The Eclogues - A new downloadable translation |
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http://www.tonykline.co.uk/klineasvirgileclogues.htm
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| | Great Books and Classics - Virgil |
 | | edition, Eclogues; Georgics; Aeneid (bks I-VI), translation by H. Rushton Fairclough, revised by G.P. Goold (Harvard Univ Pr, 1999, 610 pg). |  | | , translation by H. Rushton Fairclough, revised by G.P. Goold - Eclogues; Georgics; Aeneid (bks I-VI) (1999, 610 pg) |
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http://www.grtbooks.com/virgil.asp?idx=2&yr=-19&aa=VI&at=AE&lng=8
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| | Virgil - The Eclogues - Free Books 5000.com |
 | | Virgil gives a living voice to the glory and history of ancient Rome and all of Italy. |  | | But, get The CD and you can read, print, copy annotate, extract, personalize and much more. |  | | Free Books 5000 - Virgil - The Eclogues |
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http://www.freebooks5000.com/books/summary-VIRG_EC.htm
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| | Samuel Palmer (1805 - 1881) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews |
 | | Samuel Palmer, "Scarce with her rosy fingers had the dawn...", first illustration for Eclogue 8, opposite page 76 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |  | | Samuel Palmer, "_till Vesper bade the swain...", illustration for Eclogue 6, opposite page 64 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |  | | Samuel Palmer, "Untimely lost and by a cruel deathä", illustration for Eclogue 5, opposite page 54 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |
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http://wwar.com/masters/p/palmer-samuel.html
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| | The Eclogues of Virgil Index |
 | | This translation has been cross-linked at the chapter level to the original Latin text, which was not included in the MacKail version. |  | | Virgil employs this format to expound allegorical themes using the language of classical mythology, much like the bardic poetry of the Druids. |  | | The Eclogues ('Selections'), also know as the Bucolics, were Virgils' first major work. |
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http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/virgil/ecl/index.htm
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| | Other Virgil Web Sites -- virgil.org |
 | | Greenough's edition of the Latin text is available in the TeX and HTML formats from Project Libellus, with each book or eclogue in a separate file. |  | | An illustrated guide to plants and trees Virgil's Georgics (at some point, the Eclogues and Aeneid may be included as well). |  | | Readers Commentary on the Book of the Bucolics |
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http://www.virgil.org/links
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| | Cultural and poetic response in Vergil's "Eclogues" (Roman Republic). |
 | | Cultural and poetic response in Vergil's "Eclogues" (Roman Republic). |  | | Chapter three uses the third and fourth Eclogues as a case study of response between poems, showing how the Theocritean themes of Ecl. |  | | This dissertation investigates the role of response in Vergil's Eclogues, as a principle that organizes the collection intertextually, structurally and generically. |
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http://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI3125816
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| | Clausen Review : Van Sickle |
 | | All these signs that V. is intensively recapitulating and sifting out the complementary strains in his own book elicit only a postulate of evasive impotence: "Virgil frees himself from the obligation, or possibly the embarrassment, of justifying his umpire's decision" (p. |  | | As for the relations of this eclogue to its predecessors in the book, C.'s lack of concern with V.'s practice of self-citation and cumulative revision keeps him from noting how the song of Mopsus reverses motifs of eclogue four, |  | | This new arrival bears the name of the old seer, Mopsus, who challenged Calchas once, and brags of a master song newly inscribed on the bark of beech, nor will he rest in Menalcas' usual shady place. |
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http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/jvsickle/bbwclaus.htm
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| | Samuel Palmer Artworks and Fine Art at arthistorynet.com |
 | | "Scarce with her rosy fingers had the dawn...", first illustration for Eclogue 8, opposite page 76 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |  | | "Ripe apples are our supper...",third illustration for Eclogue 1, opposite page 22 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |  | | "Untimely lost and by a cruel deathä", illustration for Eclogue 5, opposite page 54 in the book An English Version of the Eclogues of Virgil by Samuel Palmer (London: Seeley & Company, 1883), 1883 |
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http://www.absolutearts.com/masters/p/palmer-samuel-works.html
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| | FreePint - Helping you use the Web for your work |
 | | The Latin text for Virgil's Eclogues can be found here. |  | | Hi, Does anyone know a web site with the latin text of Virgil's eclogues? |  | | Does anyone know a web site with the latin text of Virgil's eclogues? |
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http://www.freepint.com/go/b16867
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| | The Lad Philisides A Selection of Songs, Pastoral Eclogues and Elegies from The Countess of Pembrokes Arcadia Sir ... |
 | | The The Lad Lad Philisides Philisides A A Selection Selection of of Songs Songs Pastoral Pastoral Eclogues Eclogues and and Elegies Elegies from from The The Countess Countess of of Pembrokes Pembrokes Arcadia Arcadia Sir Sir Philip Philip Sidney Sidney Harry Harry Brockway Brockway (Illustrator) (Illustrator) lad lad |  | | Titel The Lad Philisides A Selection of Songs, Pastoral Eclogues and Elegies from The Countess of Pembrokes Arcadia Sir Philip Sidney, Harry Brockway (Illustrator) lad hier |  | | The Lad Philisides A Selection of Songs, Pastoral Eclogues and Elegies from The Countess of Pembrokes Arcadia Sir Philip Sidney, Harry Brockway (Illustrator) lad |
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http://gold.granodiorit.de/The_Lad_Philisides_A_Selection_of_Songs,_Pastoral_Eclogues_and_Elegies_from_The_Countess_of_Pembrokes_Arcadia_Sir_Philip_Sidney,_Harry_Brockway_(Illustrator)_lad.html
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| | BriefEclogueBib.html |
 | | Breed, B.W., "Silenus and the Imago Vocis in Eclogue 6." HSCP 100 (2000) 327-340, "Imitations of Originality: Theocritus and Lucretius at the Start of the Eclogues" Vergilius 46 (2000) 3-20 |  | | 246-66), "Voice, poetics and Virgil's sixth eclogue" (pp. |  | | Kidd, D.A., "Imitation in the Tenth Eclogue." BICS 11 (1964) 54-64. |
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http://www.unc.edu/~oharaj/BriefEclogueBib.html
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| | Virgil: Eclogues, Georgics, Aeneid 1-6 by Virgil, ISBN 067499583X And The Nine Numbers of the Cosmos by Michael ... |
 | | For this revised edition of the Loeb Classical Library's Virgil, G. Goold has corrected the text in accord with recent scholarship, revised the translation to reflect current idiom, and supplied a new introduction and explanatory notes. |  | | Fairclough's edition, long a faithful standard, has thus been thoroughly updated. |  | | Virgil: Eclogues, Georgics, Aeneid 1-6 by Virgil, ISBN 067499583X |
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http://bsatroop67.com/virgil.htm
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| | Virgil - Vergil's Eclogues (isbn 0807823473) - new and used books |
 | | Virgil - Vergil's Eclogues (isbn 0807823473) - new and used books |  | | ISBN > Virgil - Vergil's Eclogues (isbn 0807823473) - new and used books |  | | University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, USA, 1997 Paperback New Book from USA. |
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http://www.isbn.pl/I-0807823473/Vergil-s-Eclogues.html
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| | The Eclogues - Virgil - Penguin Group (USA) |
 | | Written between 42 and 37 b.c., ten pastoral poems believed to be the first authentic work by Virgil are presented with the original Latin on the left-hand page and the translation on the right. |  | | The Eclogues - Virgil - Penguin Group (USA) |
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http://www.penguinputnam.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,0_014044419X,00.html
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| | CLAS L427 9532 Virgil’s Eclogues and Georgics |
 | | We will read the poems in Latin (and some in translation), along with selections from other writings about farming in translation, with close attention to Latin expression, poetic traditions, and historical contexts. |  | | How does he work the beauty of nature into his instructions for planting and pruning? |  | | L427 Virgil’s Eclogues and Georgics will focus on Vergil’s Georgics (his long poem about a farming), with selections from the Eclogues (pastoral poems about nature). |
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http://www.indiana.edu/~deanfac/blspr04/clas/clas_l427_9532.html
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| | Eclogues (Revised); Virgil; Lee, Guy; Paperback; World Retail Store - English Books |
 | | Eclogues (Revised); Virgil; Lee, Guy; Paperback; World Retail Store - English Books |  | | English Books > Language, Literature And Biography > Literature: Texts > Poetry Texts & Anthologies > Poetry Anthologies: Classical, Early & Medieval > Works By Individual Poets: Classical, Early & Medieval > Eclogues (Revised) |  | | Prices subject to change to be advised on confirmation of order. |
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http://www.worldretailstore.com/item/BE-014044419X.html
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| | glbtq >> literature >> Pastoral |
 | | The ancient Greek poet Theocritus is taken as the originator of the pastoral genre. |  | | Eclogue II is a lament for Argus by the shepherds Pythias and Silvius in which Petrarch allegorically explores and recounts his own sense of personal loss at the death of his close friend, Robert of Naples. |  | | figures prominently in his pastoral and nonpastoral Idylls, as it does in the Eclogues (43-37 B.C.E.) of his most famous classical successor, the Roman poet Virgil. |
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http://www.glbtq.com/literature/pastoral.html
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| | ReadLiterature.Com English Literature - Book Review |
 | | Especially for the 10th it would be important to know when exactly it was written, because the fate of his friend Gallus became a turning point in Virgil’s work. |  | | The ‘Eclogues’ are the only poems in Virgil’s work, which refer to slaves as leading characters. |  | | The enigmatic 4th Eclogue on the birth of his patron’s child would earn Virgil the status of a prophet. |
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http://www.readliterature.com/R_eclogues_jd.htm
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| | The Eclogues - By: Virgil - Christianbook.com |
 | | In giving unforgettable expression to both the Eclogues pave the way for the Georgics and the Aeneid, the two supreme masterpieces of Latin literature. |  | | Yet despite their rustic setting and the unparalleled beauty of their phrasing, the Eclogues are anything but escapist. |  | | Virgil's shephereds, in their idyllic landscapes, suffer not only from the torments of unrequited love but also from the tragic consequences of Julius Caesar's murder in 44 B.C., when civil war tore Italy apart and peasants were evicted from their land on all sides. |
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http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=44419X
(214 words)
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| | International Eclogues Discussion -- virgil.org |
 | | If you prefer a book to a printout, there are also two or three paperback editions with the Latin text and an English translation on facing pages. |  | | This book is available from Amazon and, in Europe, from Amazon UK. |  | | A Commentary on Virgil's Eclogues, by Wendell Clausen (Oxford, 1994). |
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http://www.virgil.org/eclogues
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| | Vergil's Eclogues syllabus |
 | | Emphasis will be on the author's poetic techniques and style. |  | | Printed texts of the Eclogue readings will be distributed in class. |  | | Printed texts of the Moretum and Copa will be distributed later in the semester. |
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http://www.faculty.fairfield.edu/rosivach/la102b/syllabus.htm
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| | eclogues |
 | | A hyper-linked commentary on the Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, with associated prose translation and indexes. |  | | DANTE AND OTHERS: Meditations on the Di sextus, propertius, chaucer, troilus, criseyde, garcia, osip, mandelstam, kline, tonykline, baudelaire, petrarch, canzoniere, li po, tu fu, wang wei, raleigh, ralegh, marlowe, heroides, ars amatoria, acharnians, catullus, aucassin, eclogues, aeneid. |  | | sextus, propertius, chaucer, troilus, criseyde, garcia, osip, mandelstam, kline, tonykline, baudelaire, petrarch, canzoniere, li po, tu fu, wang wei, raleigh, ralegh, marlowe, heroides, ars amatoria, acharnians, catullus, aucassin, eclogues, aeneid. |
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http://www.all-creations.com/eclogues
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| | The Internet Classics Archive The Eclogues by Virgil |
 | | The Eclogues has been divided into the following sections: |  | | Recommend a Web site you feel is appropriate to this work, |  | | Commentary: Several comments have been posted about The Eclogues. |
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http://classics.mit.edu/Virgil/eclogue.html
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| | LAT244 - Neoteric & Pastoral: Catullus' Longer Poems & Vergil's ECLOGUES |
 | | LAT 244 SP This course will read in Latin two groups of fairly short poems (24-408 lines) written about 60-35 B.C.E. by Catullus and Vergil. |  | | We will read all of Catullus' longer poems and the ECLOGUES, studying each poem both as a self-contained work and as it relates to the others; we will also examine aspects of continuity and change from the neoteric poetry of Catullus to the earliest Augustan verse of Vergil. |  | | Catullus' longer poems (61-68) feature two marriage hymns (61-62), the self-mutilation of a religious fanatic (63), the masterful mini-epic on the wedding of Peleus and Thetis that also tells the story of Theseus and Ariadne (64) and the elegy on Catullus' lover, the Trojan War, and the death of his brother (68). |
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http://www.wesleyan.edu/wesmaps/course0102/lat244s.htm
(396 words)
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| | http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/jvsickle/bbground.htm |
 | | “The End of the Eclogues,” Vergilius 41 (1995) 114-133: styled by one correspondent a “searching review” of a diffuse commentary still devoted to “eclogues” as opposed to the Book of Bucolics. |  | | Vates -- Virgil as Poet-Prophet: Reclaiming Epic Tradition from Lucretius and Catullus in the Messianic Eclogue: new title for my 1966 dissertation, which was published as A Reading of Virgil's Messianic Eclogue (Garland 1992), augmented by a critique of scholarship since 1966, e.g. |  | | Intertextual network of first eclogue synthesized, elucidating metapoetic import of both speakers, above all Meliboeus -- the opening voice and unsung protagonist of Virgilian poetics -- building on Hunter 1999, Farrell 1991, Wright 1968, Guellius 1575, Ramus 1572, and Ursinus 1567, inter al.. |
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http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/jvsickle/bbground.htm
(908 words)
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| | Literature & Fiction / Literature - Poetry and Drama / The Eclogues & Georgics Of Virgil by J W Mackail |
 | | Mary Ward Books is an independent online bookstore specialising in second hand, out of print books and used books such as The Eclogues & Georgics Of Virgil by J W Mackail. |  | | Book Title: The Eclogues & Georgics Of Virgil |  | | Literature & Fiction / Literature - Poetry and Drama / The Eclogues & Georgics Of Virgil by J W Mackail |
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http://www.marywardbooks.com/books/The-Eclogues-&-Georgics-Of-Virgil-by-J-W-Mackail/mw00734.htm
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