EPIC POETRYBIBLIOGRAPHY
- Sellar, The Roman Poets of the Republic: Nævius and his Historical
Epic, pp. 57-61; Ennius and the Annales, pp. 62-79, 88-119.
- Sellar, The Roman Poetry of the Augustan Age: Vergil.
- Tyrrell, Latin Poetry: Lost Augustan Poets, pp. 20-26; Vergil, pp. 26,
126-161; Post-Augustan Epics, p. 27; Lucan, pp. 262-269.
- Nettleship, Essays in Latin Literature: Suggestions Introductory to a
Study of the Æneid, pp. 97-142.
- Conington, Miscellaneous Writings: Early Roman Epic Poetry, pp.
324-347; Later Roman Epic, pp. 348-384.
- Shairp, Aspects of Poetry: Vergil as a Religious Poet, pp. 136-163.
- Shairp, Poetic Interpretation of Nature: Nature in Lucretius and
Vergil, pp. 153-169.
- Boissier, The Country of Horace and Vergil: The Legend of Æneas, pp.
119-346.
- Simcox, History of Latin Literature: Ennius, the Annals, Vol. I, pp.
22-30; Vergil, Vol. I, pp. 253-282; Lucan and his successors, Vol. II,
pp. 35-74.
- Mommsen, History of Rome: Early Roman Epic, Nævius and Ennius, Vol.
II, pp. 519-540.
- Miller and Nelson, Dido, an Epic Tragedy: A dramatization of the story
of Æneas and Dido.
Transcriber Notes:
- Punctuation corrected without note.
- "+ +" indicates Greek transliteration.
- Pg 051, "his" changed to "has" (all that has passed)
- Pg 053, "Phromio" changed to "Phormio" (the shrewdness of Phormio)