Publication: Hesperus nelle Bucoliche di Virgilio.
Authors
Glagiardi, Paola
item.page.secondaryauthor
item.page.director
Publisher
Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones
publication.page.editor
publication.page.department
DOI
https://doi.org/10.6018/myrtia.454911
item.page.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Il trattamento del τόπος del mattino e della sera, ovvero dell’oriente e dell’occidente, (Eous
ed Hesperus) nei poeti augustei, mutuato da Cinna fr. 10 Hollis (= fr. 6 Morel) e variamente
sviluppato, sembra suggerire che esso fosse stato trattato in modo originale da Cornelio
Gallo. L’analisi di Hesperus nelle Bucoliche virgiliane sembra confermare questa
impressione, giacché il termine compare sempre in contesti riconducibili a Gallo.
The treatment of the τόπος of morning and evening, or “East / West τόπος” (Eous and Hesperus) in the Augustan poets, borrowed from Cinna fr. 10 Hollis (= fr. 6 Morel) and variously developed, seems to suggest that it had been treated in an original way by Cornelius Gallus. The analysis of Hesperus in Virgil’s Bucolics seems to confirm this impression, since the term always appears in contexts related to Gallus.
The treatment of the τόπος of morning and evening, or “East / West τόπος” (Eous and Hesperus) in the Augustan poets, borrowed from Cinna fr. 10 Hollis (= fr. 6 Morel) and variously developed, seems to suggest that it had been treated in an original way by Cornelius Gallus. The analysis of Hesperus in Virgil’s Bucolics seems to confirm this impression, since the term always appears in contexts related to Gallus.
Citation
Myrtia, Nº 35, 2020
item.page.embargo
Collections
Ir a Estadísticas
Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/