Beast and Man in the Third Book of Virgil's Georgics
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Published:1965-04
Issue:1
Volume:12
Page:64-77
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ISSN:0017-3835
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Container-title:Greece and Rome
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Greece & Rome
Abstract
When we compare Virgil's Georgics with Varro's textbook of farming, we find that what is cast in the form of a book of instruction in the prose work is transformed into a series of pictures in the Georgics. Virgil is not content with teaching his readers how to farm, he also sets before their eyes a panorama of country life. An example of this procedure is provided by the lines on animal husbandry found in Book iii. Following the framework of Varro, by leaving out certain of Varro's categories, Virgil transforms a schematic textbook arrangement into a life story, and tells this life story with the sympathy of a poet.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,Classics
Reference115 articles.
1. N.D. iii, c. 26 ad fin.
2. Sallust , Cat. 52, 29.
3. Geor. iii. 486–93.
4. Geor. iii. 517 ff.
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. animals, wild;The Virgil Encyclopedia;2013-12-31
2. The Georgics;New Surveys in the Classics;1967