| PAGE | ||
| [VIRGIL] | ||
| Orpheus and Eurydice | [3] | |
| Praise of Italy | [14] | |
| Happy Husbandmen | [17] | |
| A Tarentine Garden | [25] | |
| A Golden Age | [29] | |
| Limbo and Tartarus | [36] | |
| Elysium | [72] | |
| To the Unknown God | [90] | |
| The Gates | [91] | |
| The Ghosts | [92] | |
| Euryalus and Pallas | [93] | |
| Things | [94] | |
| [LUCRETIUS ‘DE RERUM NATURA’] | ||
| Hymn to Venus | [97] | |
| Philosophy | [101] | |
| ‘Musical as is Apollo’s Lute’ | [105] | |
| The Fear of Death | [107] | |
| Earth’s Decay | [121] | |
| Primeval Man | [124] | |
| Iphigenia | [139] | |
| Maternal Love | [142] | |
| Echo | [144] | |
| The Seasons | [147] | |
VIRGIL
Orpheus and Eurydice
P. Virgilii Maronis Georgicon, Bk. IV. vv. 453-527
This is the tale old Proteus by the sea
Erst told of Orpheus and Eurydice.
Virgil at Parthenope overheard,