Lands and Peoples in Roman Poetry: The Ethnographical TraditionCambridge Philological Society, 1982 - 144 من الصفحات Richard Thomas shows how Greek ethnographical prose influenced the poetry of Virgil, Horace and Lucan and their portrayal of real and imagined Roman landscapes and environments. A later prose tradition is also identified in the work of Tacitus. |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Aeneas Aeneid agricultural appears atque attitude Augustan poetry bees Blessed Isles bugonia Caesar Callimachus Cato Cato's chapter civilized claim climate context contrast Corycium cultural Dahlmann depiction detail diction elements environment Epistle Epode Epode 16 epyllion ethical ethnographical ethnographical description ethnographical studies ethnographical tradition etiam Faunus feature Fourth Georgic Georgics Germ Germania germanische Urgeschichte golden age haec hiems Hist Horace Horace's ideal inhabitants instance labor land landscape Latin Latium Latomus laudes Italiae Libya Livy Lucan man's moreover nature neque ninth book Norden noted Numanus Odes Orpheus Ovid parallel particularly passage patientia poem poet poetic Posidonius positive presented primitive quod res rust Reynen Roman Rome Sallust Saturn Saturnian Schroeder Scythian seems Seneca Servius setting situs society specific Stoic Strabo suggest Tacitus Tarentum temperies thaumasia theme treatment tricolon Trojans Trüdinger ulmo Utopian Varro Virgil Virgil's lines καὶ