Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Virgil: A Pentheus to the Germans in the Eighteenth Century?
- 2 Virgil Both Read and Unread
- 3 Virgil the Rhapsode
- 4 Theorizing Genre: From Pastoral to Idyll
- 5 The German Idyll and the Virgilian Muse
- Conclusion: Proximity and Estrangement
- Works Cited
- Index
3 - Virgil the Rhapsode
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Virgil: A Pentheus to the Germans in the Eighteenth Century?
- 2 Virgil Both Read and Unread
- 3 Virgil the Rhapsode
- 4 Theorizing Genre: From Pastoral to Idyll
- 5 The German Idyll and the Virgilian Muse
- Conclusion: Proximity and Estrangement
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
The Aeneid and the Problematic Prestige of Epic
Literary tradition stretching back to antiquity ensures that for a national literature of any pretension a great national epic remains imperative. Virgil owes much of his preeminence to his accomplishment of this feat. Yet by the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the genre is deeply problematic. The imperative and Virgil's accomplishment are undiminished, yet precisely how to compose a poem according to the definition that will do more than simply illustrate adherence to the definition remains a standing challenge; and one that many attempt, confident that epic represents the supreme achievement of culture. In this vein Dryden will begin his “Dedication of the Aeneis” with the sentence, “A heroick poem, truly such, is undoubedly (sic) the greatest Work which the Soul of Man is capable to perform.” Boileau too continues the preferment of epic to drama, accomplishing in his L'Art poetique the transition from tragedy to epic with the understatement that epic is “d'un air plus grand encore.” Gottsched, as noted previously, repeats and propagates this truism of criticism for German readers in his Critische Dichtkunst; epic is “das rechte Hauptwerk und Meisterstück der ganzen Poesie.”
This same tradition has also with equal dogmatism fixed the subject matter of epic in a manner that makes it impossible for the modern poet to produce a work that will hold a place in the vernacular similar to that achieved by Homer among the Greeks and Virgil among the Latins.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Decline and Fall of Virgil in Eighteenth-Century GermanyThe Repressed Muse, pp. 96 - 135Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2006