Book contents
- Propertius and the Virgilian Sensibility
- Propertius and the Virgilian Sensibility
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- About the Texts and Translations Used in This Book
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Virgil and the Propertian Sensibility
- Chapter 2 Rus in Urbe
- Chapter 3 Shades of Dido
- Chapter 4 The Shield of Propertius
- Chapter 5 Romani patria Callimachi
- Chapter 6 Propertius’ Epic Designs
- Chapter 7 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Chapter 6 - Propertius’ Epic Designs
The Virgilian Architecture of Propertius 4
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2024
- Propertius and the Virgilian Sensibility
- Propertius and the Virgilian Sensibility
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- About the Texts and Translations Used in This Book
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Virgil and the Propertian Sensibility
- Chapter 2 Rus in Urbe
- Chapter 3 Shades of Dido
- Chapter 4 The Shield of Propertius
- Chapter 5 Romani patria Callimachi
- Chapter 6 Propertius’ Epic Designs
- Chapter 7 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Summary
Drawing together and supplementing the structural and stichometric parallels observed beween Propertius and Virgil so far, this chapter refreshes an old debate about the genesis of Book 4 with the argument that the collection builds into itself a carefully designed Virgilian architecture. Or rather, architectures: Propertius 4 vacillates beween a ten-unit bucolic substructure and a twelve-unit epic superstructure; like the Georgics and the whole Virgilian corpus that encloses that work, it locates at its centre a Callimachean ‘Victoria Caesaris’, complete with Apolline temple; and in the ostensibly ‘Iliadic’ 4.7 and ‘Odyssean’ 4.8 it inverts the Homeric diptych of the two hexads of the Aeneid, but in a way that also recognizes the Virgilian sequence and how it is blurred. Symbolic of this protean book is Vertumnus in elegy 4.2, the shapeshifting god whose loquacious statue – the work of the Mamurius who fabricated the eleven copies of Numa’s legendary shield – not only replicates, en abyme, the book’s range of Virgilian lexis, but also encodes its Virgilian structure. A coda to the chapter shows that Ovid repeatedly draws on Vertumnus as ambassador of metamorphic elegiac-epic poetics.
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- Propertius and the Virgilian SensibilityElegy after 19 BC, pp. 328 - 378Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024