Vergil - A Biography by Tenney Frank
page 24 of 156 (15%)
page 24 of 156 (15%)
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to him, recent critics have usually been skeptical or downright recusant.
Some insist that it is a forgery or supposititious work; others that it is a liberally padded re-working of Vergil's original. Only a few have accepted it as a very youthful failure of Vergil's, or as an attempt of the poet to parody the then popular romances. Recent objections have not centered about metrical technique, diction, or details of style: these are now admitted to be Vergilian enough, or rather what might well have been Vergilian at the outset of his career. The chief criticism is directed against a want of proportion and an apparent lack of artistic sense betrayed in choosing so strange a character for the ponderous title-role. These are faults that Vergil later does not betray. Nevertheless, Vergil seems to have written the poem. Its ascription to Vergil by so many authors of the early empire, as well as the concensus of the manuscripts, must be taken very seriously. But the internal evidence is even stronger. Octavius, to whom the poem is dedicated, is addressed _Octavi venerande_ and _sancte puer_, a clear reference to the remarkable honor that Caesar secured for him by election to the office of pontiff[1] when he was approaching his fifteenth birthday and before he assumed the _toga virilis_. Vergil was then twenty-one years of age--nearing his twenty-second birthday--and we may perhaps assume in Donatus' attribution of the _Culex_ to Vergil's sixteenth year a mistake in some early manuscript which changed the original XXI to XVI, a correction which the citations of Statius and Lucan favor.[2] Finally, when, as we shall see presently, Horace in his second _Epode_, accords Vergil the honor of imitating a passage of the _Culex_, Vergil returns the compliment in his _Georgics_. We have therefore not only Vergil's recognition of Horace's courtesy, but, in his acceptance of it, his acknowledgment of the _Culex_ as his own.[3] |
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