VERGIL
"The noble sage who knew everything."
—Dante
Song.—Opening Lines of the Aeneid.
An Experiment with the Opening Lines of the Aeneid. J. Raleigh Nelson. School Review. Vol. vii, p. 129.
Dido. An Epic Tragedy. Miller and Nelson. P. 57.
Vergil.
Outline for the Study of Vergil's Aeneid. Maud Emma Kingsley. Education. Vol. xxiii, p. 148.
Vergil. Harper and Miller. Introduction.
In Vergil's Italy.
Frank Justus Miller. Chautauqua. Vol. xxxiv, p. 368.
Dido
: A Character Study.
J. Raleigh Nelson. School Review. Vol. xii, p. 408.
Vergil. Harper and Miller.
Vergil's Estimate of his Æneid.
Rome: The Eternal City. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, P. 636.
Poem.—The Doom of the Slothful.
John Addington Symonds.
Essay.—Paris and Helen.
Adventures among Books. Andrew Lang. P. 235, or Cosmopolitan. Vol. xviii, p. 173.
Legends Connected with Vergil.
A History of Roman Literature. Charles Thomas Cruttwell. P. 278.
Vergil in Maine.
Martha Baker Dunn. Atlantic Monthly. Vol. c, p. 773.
Vergil's Influence.
On Teaching Vergil. H. H. Yeames. School Review. Vol. xx, p. 1.
A Travesty on the Taking of Troy.
Roba di Roma. William W. Story. P. 186.
North American Review. Vol. xcvii, p. 255.
St. Paul's Visit to Vergil's Tomb.
Rome: The Eternal City. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, p. 640.
Poem.—To Vergil.
Poetical Works. Alfred Tennyson. P. 511.
Littell's Living Age. Vol. clv, p. 2.