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  1. Octavian and Orestes Again.Michael Dewar - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (2):580-582.
    In an earlier paper it was argued that in the famous chariot simile at the end of the first Georgic, Virgil imitates a passage from the Choephoroi of Aeschylus describing the onset of Orestes' madness. It was also suggested that Virgil may have been intentionally drawing a parallel between Octavian and the son of Agamemnon. Orestes avenged his father by murdering his mother Clytemnestra, but in so doing he deepened the guilt that afflicted Argos and thus gave new life to (...)
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  • Octavian and Orestes in the Finale of the First Georgic.Michael Dewar - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (02):563-.
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  • Octavian and Orestes Again.Michael Dewar - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (02):580-.
    In an earlier paper it was argued that in the famous chariot simile at the end of the first Georgic, Virgil imitates a passage from the Choephoroi of Aeschylus describing the onset of Orestes' madness. It was also suggested that Virgil may have been intentionally drawing a parallel between Octavian and the son of Agamemnon. Orestes avenged his father by murdering his mother Clytemnestra, but in so doing he deepened the guilt that afflicted Argos and thus gave new life to (...)
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  • Octavian and Orestes in the Finale of the First Georgic.Michael Dewar - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (2):563-565.
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