The works of Virgil (70-19 BCE) define the 'golden age' of Latin poetry
and have inspired a long tradition of interpretation and adaptation that
starts in his own time and extends to important modern authors. His
ascent from the lesser genre of pastoral (the Bucolics) through a more
ambitious didactic mode (the Georgics) to the soaring heights of epic
(the incomparable Aeneid) shaped the canonical writings of other
authors, from his younger contemporary Ovid through the medieval writers
Dante and Petrarch to the early modern poets Spenser and Milton and well
beyond. Virgil, as Alison Keith shows, has never gone out of critical or
popular fashion.
This wide-ranging introduction appraises a figure of central importance
in the history of Western music, art and literature. Offering close
readings of the Bucolics, Georgics and Aeneid, Keith places Virgil
and his poetry in historical context before tracing their impact at key
moments in the culture of the West. Emphasis is placed on Virgil's
reception of the classical literary and philosophical traditions, and on
how his poetry has attracted modern interest from writers as diverse as
T. S. Eliot and Ursula K. Le Guin.