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 The Aeneid  

The Aeneid
Virgil

Vintage, 1990 - 442 pages

average customer review:based on 56 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended




FITZGERALD vs. MANDELBAUM

I've read both translations, many many times. From an educational perspective, especially for the classics student, I would recommend the Mandelbaum translation, as the language more closely matches the visually breathtaking Latin of the original. However, for someone just picking it up to read it, with perhaps little side-knowledge, the Fitzgerald version is far more captivating. It is an easier read, more like modern prose (relatively speaking, of course), and the images are far clearer.


Great Story, Great Translation

The Aeneid is the least known of the classical triumvirate of the Iliad, Odyssey, and Aeneid. Some parts are boring, but overall it has a great story. It's basically How Aeneus fled Troy after it's fall to find New Troy, or more commonly known as a little city called Rome. Also, many have ignored the great battle scenes of books 6-12. This is really where the story of the Trojan horse comes from and the phrase "don't trust Greeks bearing gifts" (actually, it's really supposed to be: "Even when Greeks bring gifts, I fear them, gifts and all!") This is the best translation there is, Fitzgerald is a master.


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I sing of a great translation...

Roman society was enamoured of Greek culture -- many of the best 'Roman' things were Greek; the major gods were derivative of the Greek pantheon; philosophy, literature, science, political ideals, architecture -- all this was adopted from the Greeks. It makes sense that, at the point of their ascendancy in the world, they would long for an epic history similar to the Homeric legends; the Iliad and the Odyssey, written some 500 years after the actual events they depict, tell of the heroism of the Greeks in their battle against Troy (Ilium). The Aeneid, written by Vergil 700 years after Homer, at the commission of Augustus (himself in the process of consolidating his authority over Rome), turns the heroic victory of the much-admired Greeks on its head by postulating a survivor from Troy, Aeneas, who undergoes as journey akin to the Odyssey, even further afield.

Vergil constructs Aeneas, a very minor character in the Iliad, as the princely survivor and pilgrim from Troy, on a journey through the Mediterranean in search of a new home. According to Fitzgerald, who wrote a brief postscript to the poem, Vergil created a Homeric hero set in a Homeric age, purposefully following the Iliad and Odyssey as if they were formula, in the way that many a Hollywood director follows the formulaic pattern of past successful films. Vergil did not create the Trojan legend of Roman origins, but his poem solidified the notion in popular and scholarly sentiment.

Vergil sets the seeds for future animosity between Carthage and Rome in the Aeneid, too -- the curse of queen Dido on the descendants of Aeneas of never-ending strife played into then-recent recollections of war in the Roman mind. Books I through VI are much more studied than VII through XII, but the whole of the Aeneid is a spectacular tale.

Fitzgerald's modern and accessible translation makes the Aeneid really come to life for modern readers. It is a verse translation, not forced into word-by-word construction nor into false, flowery and stuffy structured verse that would seem formal and distant. This is a language familiar to modern readers, just as Vergil's Latin would have been readily accessible to the listeners and readers of his time.

Vergil died before he could complete the story. He wished it to be burned; fortunately, Augustus had other ideas. Still, there are incomplete lines and thoughts, and occasional conflicts in the storyline that one assumes might have been worked out in the end, had more editing time been available. Despite these, the Aeneid remains a masterpiece, and Fitzgerald's translation will be a standard bearer for some time to come.


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A classic is a classic despite what this reader feels

What happens when you read a work you know is great, know is evaluated highly by those more learned than you which you simply do not like? The 'Aeneid ' like the pious Aeneas himself was for me one of the works most difficult to get through. Plodding, serious, structured and fierce it moves ahead like a Roman legion devastating and conquering all before it. There are of course humanly moving elements in the work, the cry of Dido at her abandonment by Aeneas, the burning of the city and the dramatic rescue upon the shoulders, father and son- but the work as a whole including its many battles and slayings rated high along with Spenser's ' Faerie Queen' in my mind as one of the most boring of all the great masterpieces.
This of course says more about my own limitations as a reader than it does about the work itself. And I should at least mention the virtues of loyalty and courage so clearly embodied in this most Roman of works. However no matter how I try this celebration of Augustus Empire, this Roman prelude to the greater Dante always seemed to me so relentlessly humorless ,
as to be skimmed through rapidly rather than really chewed and digested.


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, page 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12



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