Pharsalia: High Risk Children from Birth to Adulthood
Lucan's great poem, Pharsalia, recounts events surrounding the decisive battle fought near Pharsalus in 48 B.C. during the civil war between the forces of Pompey and Julius Caesar. Though the subject of this unfinished masterpiece is historical, many of its features are characteristic of epic...
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Lucan's great poem, Pharsalia, recounts events surrounding the decisive battle fought near Pharsalus in 48 B.C. during the civil war between the forces of Pompey and Julius Caesar. Though the subject of this unfinished masterpiece is historical, many of its features are characteristic of epic poetry: Rousing battle scenes; tales of witches, monsters, and miracle; detailed catalogues; intricate similes; and speeches with a high degree of rhetorical elegance. However, Lucan's deft mix of humor and horror, of political satire, literary parody, history, and epic is entirely his own.Jane Wilson Joyce's superb translation conveys the drama and poetry of the original. Her use of natural English rhythms in a loose six-beat line comes close to matching the original Latin hexameters, wile her language preserves Lucan's sequence of images. An enlightening introduction, notes, and a full glossary augment the translation.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780801481376 (0801481376)
Publish date: December 16th 1993
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Pages no: 368
Edition language: English
Category:
Classics,
Non Fiction,
History,
Academic,
School,
Literature,
Epic,
War,
Poetry,
Roman,
Ancient
Lucan was a contemporary of Nero, and in fact died at the age of 25 when he slit his own wrists after he was discovered involved in a plot to overthrow the emperor (it seems as if this was a dignified way to die in the early empire). As such Lucan's poem regarding the civil war between Caeser and Po...
I ended up reading this for a paper for my Ancient Rome class. I think I would have enjoyed it more if I hadn't had to read it and do the paper all in the same week. I might reread it one day, to see if I would have enjoyed it otherwise. I enjoyed reading Virgil's Aeneid and Cicero's Selected Works,...