The Death of Priam: Allegory and History in the Aeneid

Classical Quarterly 40 (02):470- (1990)
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Abstract

he true relation between these scenes and historic fact is more mysterious and less simple. The metamorphosis takes place on a higher plane. Historic events and the poet's inner experience are stripped of everything accidental and actual. They are removed from time and transported into the large and distant land of Myth. There, on a higher plane of life, they are developed in symbolic and poetic shapes having a right to an existence of their own. The fact, therefore, that the subjection of the storm is described in a simile for a moment highlighting a very important sphere of the poem is more decisive than a possible allusion to the younger Cato

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References found in this work

P. Vergili Maronis Aeneidos Liber Tertius.Williams Williams - 1962 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 56 (2):43.
Divus Julius.G. V. Sumner & Stefan Weinstock - 1974 - American Journal of Philology 95 (3):304.

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