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Virgil

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Virgil (70–19 BC)

Roman poet. He wrote the Eclogues (37 BC), a series of pastoral poems; the Georgics (30 BC), four books on the art of farming; and his epic masterpiece, the Aeneid (30–19 BC). He was patronized by Maecenas on behalf of Octavian (later the emperor Augustus).

Born near Mantua, Virgil was educated in Cremona and Mediolanum (Milan), and later studied philosophy and rhetoric at Rome. He wrote his second work, the Georgics, in honour of his new patron, Maecenas, to whom he introduced Horace. He passed much of his later life at Naples and devoted the last decade of it to the composition of the Aeneid, often considered the most important poem in Latin literature. In 19 BC Virgil went to Greece and caught a fever while visiting the ruins of Megara. Returning to Italy, he died soon after landing at Brundisium. The Aeneid, which he had wanted destroyed, was published by his executors on the order of the emperor Augustus.

Later Christian adaptations of his work, in particular of the prophetic Fourth Eclogue, greatly enhanced his mystical status in the Middle Ages, resulting in his adoption by Dante as his guide to the underworld in the Divine Comedy.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
But, as they are merely school-boys now, their business is to construe Virgil.
Hence Virgil, through the mouth of Dido, excuses the inhumanity of her reign owing to its being new, saying:
When not engaged in reading Virgil, Homer, or Mistral, in parks, restaurants, streets, and suchlike public places, he indited sonnets (in French) to the eyes, ears, chin, hair, and other visible perfections of a nymph called Therese, the daughter, honesty compels me to state, of a certain Madame Leonore who kept a small cafe for sailors in one of the narrowest streets of the old town.
 
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