Vergil - A Biography by Tenney Frank
page 53 of 156 (33%)
page 53 of 156 (33%)
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epigrams, we have as yet discovered no clue, and as they are trifles of
no poetic value we may disregard them. The fourteenth is, however, of very great interest. It purports to be a vow spoken before Venus' shrine at Sorrento pledging gifts of devotion in return for aid in composing the story of Trojan Aeneas. Si mihi susceptum fuerit decurrere munus, O Paphon, o sedes quae colis Idalias, Troius Aeneas Romana per oppida digno Iam tandem ut tecum carmine vectus eat: Non ego ture modo aut picta tua templa tabella Ornabo et puris serta feram manibus-- Corniger hos aries humilis et maxima taurus Victima sacrato sparget honore focos Marmoreusque tibi aut mille coloribus ales In morem picta stabit Amor pharetra. Adsis o Cytherea: tuos te Caesar Olympo Et Surrentini litoris ara vocat. The poem has hitherto been assigned to a period twenty years later. But surely this youthful ferment of hope and anxiety does not represent the composure of a man who has already published the _Georgics_. The eager offering of flowers and a many-hued statue of Cupid reminds one rather of the youth who in the _Ciris_ begged for inspiration with hands full of lilies and hyacinths. However, we are not entirely left to conjecture. There is indubitable evidence that Vergil began an epic at this time, some fifteen years before he published the _Georgics_. It seems clear also that the epic was |
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