In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, M W Hughes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
I suppose that we have a portrait of Ressentiment, at any rate in its
bourgeois/pompous/hypocritical form, in Drances' speech to Latinus'
Council.
Though he is also the sensible man of peace; which undercuts which?
As to the terror that the protagonists strike into each other, I
would think that Aeneas is much more terrifying to Turnus than Turnus is
to him.
Ah, it wasn't clear you meant frightening to each other, rather than to a modern reader; in that sense certainly.

Leofranc Holford-Strevens
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Leofranc Holford-Strevens
67 St Bernard's Road                                         usque adeone
Oxford               scire MEVM nihil est, nisi ME scire hoc sciat alter?
OX2 6EJ

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