RE: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ?

1999-04-15 Thread Adrian Pay
] -Original Message- From: Sarah Dever [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, April 15, 1999 9:33 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:RE: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ? However, Aeneas must defeat Turnus if he is to marry Lavinia and found Rome. Here he shows pietas

RE: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ?

1999-04-15 Thread Catherine H Tate
Aeneas becomes DUX at the end of the Aenead. He is definitely no longer pius or pietas (which ever) if for some reason you think that he is then pius near the end Aeneas is no longer a `how would you say a fledgling' he is a `dux' pietas matters no more the objective must happen and as a man

Re: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ?

1999-04-13 Thread Jim O'Hara
Possibly the idea of the second half of the Aenied being described as Vergil's 'greater labour' is to do with the struggle of Aeneas in fighting the violence and anger (furor)of others with his strengthened pietas. Before his visit to the underworld in Book 6, Aeneas was unable to look forward

Re: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ?

1999-04-13 Thread Sarah Dever
PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: VIRGIL: Re: Aeneas' 'greatest labour' ? Date: Tue, 13 Apr 1999 09:19:54 -0400 (EDT) Possibly the idea of the second half of the Aenied being described as Vergil's 'greater labour' is to do with the struggle of Aeneas in fighting the violence and anger