Aeneid Scholar Quotes

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If modern scholars overlook the entertainment motive, dominant in the Iliad, and treat Homer as a Virgil, Dante, or Milton, rather than as a Shakespeare or Cervantes, they are doing him a great disservice. The Iliad, Don Quixote and Shakespeare’s later plays are life—tragedy salted with humour; the Aeneid, the Inferno and Paradise Lost are literary works of almost superhuman eloquence, written for fame not profit, and seldom read except as a solemn intellectual task. The Iliad, and its later companion-piece, the Odyssey, deserve to be rescued from the classroom curse which has lain heavily on them throughout the past twenty-six centuries, and become entertainment once more; which is what I have attempted here. How this curse fell on them can be simply explained.
Robert Graves (The Anger of Achilles: Homer's Iliad)
Scholars have come to doubt the claim of Servius that Virgil had been commissioned by Augustus to produce an epic of the founding of Rome to rival the greatest epics of Greece.38 But at the very least Virgil did so on his own initiative. The Aeneid was neither conceived nor designed as a disinterested history of the Roman past. It was unapologetically an encomium on the glories of the world’s greatest city and, in particular, a tribute to its greatest ruler.
Bart D. Ehrman (Journeys to Heaven and Hell: Tours of the Afterlife in the Early Christian Tradition)
This spirit of humanity breathes in Cicero and Virgil. Hence the veneration paid to the poet of the Aeneid by the fathers and throughout the middle ages. Augustine calls him the noblest of poets, and Dante, "the glory and light of other poets," and "his master," who guided him through the regions of hell and purgatory to the very gates of Paradise. It was believed that in his fourth Eclogue he had prophesied the advent of Christ. This interpretation is erroneous; but "there is in Virgil," says an accomplished scholar,84 "a vein of thought and sentiment more devout, more humane, more akin to the Christian than is to be found in any other ancient poet, whether Greek or Roman. He was a spirit prepared and waiting, though he knew it not, for some better thing to be revealed.
Philip Schaff (History Of The Christian Church (The Complete Eight Volumes In One))