Stephen Harrison, Victorian Horace: Classics and Class |
Brill's Companion to the Reception of Senecan Tragedy: Scholarly, Theatrical and Literary Receptions , Eric Dodson-Robinson (ed.) |
Craig Kallendorf, The Protean Virgil. Material Form and the Reception of the Classics |
The Publications of the Peplos of Aristotle in the Modern Era |
Hindsight as Foresight: Virgilian Retrospective Prophecy in Coopers Hill and The Destruction of TroyAbstractThis article discusses how the Virgilian intertexts of the stag hunt in the 1642 edition of Coopers Hill support the interpretation of the passage as a commentary on the trial and execution of the Earl of Strafford, and how they allow Denham to criticize Charles I's involvement in Strafford's death. Despite this criticism, other texts, including Denham's revised (1653/5) edition of the poem, subsequently adapted the stag-hunt episode to commemorate Charles's own trial and execution. The false presentation of the 1653/5 Coopers Hill as an edition that prints an original, authentic version of the poem from 1640 draws on the Virgilian technique of retrospective prophecy to make its status as a commentary on Charles's execution more explicit. Denham repeated this technique in The Destruction of Troy (1656), which heavily revised an excerpt from his 1630s manuscript translation of Aeneid II–VI, and asserts the composition date of this earlier version in order to 'foretell' Charles's execution. Analysing these Virgilian post eventum prophecies shows how both texts simultaneously censure and mourn Charles I, and also identifies increasingly self-recriminatory elements to Denham's own royalism. |
"Io ho tutto tradotto fedelmente e senza timore": la Farsaglia di Gaetano Polidori (1841) |
'Casual Classicism': In Conversation with Marc Quinn |
Reading Suetonius in the Seventeenth Century: The First Political Commentaries |
England's Stilicho: Claudian's Political Poetry in Early Modern England |
Classics Transformed, ed. Giancarlo Abbamonte and Craig Kallendorf, Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2018, pp. 164, ISBN: 9788846751683, 20€ |
Anapafseos 5 . Agios Nikolaos
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