Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T04:25:06.307Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Double Visions of Pompey and Caesar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2015

John L. Penwill*
Affiliation:
La Trobe University, [email protected]

Extract

A small but significant aspect of Lucan's presentation of both Pompey and Caesar in the Bellum Civile is the use of complementary and contrasting doublets. In the case of Pompey, the doublet comprises the two dreams narrated at the beginning of Book 3 (of his dead wife Julia) and the beginning of Book 7 (of the crowd acclaiming him in his theatre); in the case of Caesar, it comprises the apparitions that mark the beginning and end of his presence in the poem, the first of the goddess Roma and the second of Scaeva, which because of their position have an obvious framing function.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Australasian Society for Classical Studies 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ahl, F. (1972), ‘Pharsalus and the Pharsalia’, C&M 29, 124–61.Google Scholar
Ahl, F. (1976), Lucan: An Introduction (Ithaca and London).Google Scholar
Ambühl, A. (2005), ‘Thebanos imitata rogos’, in Walde, (2005) 261–94.Google Scholar
Batinski, E.E. (1993), ‘Julia in Lucan's Tripartite Vision of the Dead Republic’, in DeForest, (1993) 264–78.Google Scholar
Braund, S.H. (trans.) (1992), Lucan: Civil War (Oxford).Google Scholar
DeForest, M. (ed.) (1993), Woman's Power, Man's Game: Essays on Classical Antiquity in Honor of Toy K. King (Wauconda).Google Scholar
Duff, J.D. (ed. and trans.) (1928), Lucan: The Civil War (Cambridge MA and London).Google Scholar
Esposito, P. and Nicastri, L. (1999), Interpretare Lucano: miscellanea di studi (Naples).Google Scholar
Fantham, E. (1992), Lucan De Bello Civili Book 2 (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Gagliardi, D. (1975), M. Annaei Lucani Belli Civilis Liber Septimus (Florence).Google Scholar
Gall, E. (2005), ‘Masse, Heere und Feldherren in Lucans Pharsalia’, in Walde, (2005) 89110.Google Scholar
Green, C.M.C. (1991), ‘stimulos dedit aemula virtus: Lucan and Homer Reconsidered’, Phoenix 45, 230–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J.G.W. (1998), ‘Lucan: The Word at War’, in Fighting for Rome (Cambridge) 165211 (orig. pubi. Ramus 16 [1987] 122-64).Google Scholar
Hunink, V. (1992), M. Annaeus Lucanus Bellum Civile Book 3: A Commentary (Amsterdam).Google Scholar
Lebek, W. (1976), Lucans Pharsalia: Dichtungsstruktur und Zeitbezug (Göttingen).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leigh, M. (1997), Lucan: Spectacle and Engagement (Oxford).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Little, D. (trans.) (1989), Lucan: Pharsalia (Dunedin).Google Scholar
Maes, Y. (2005), ‘Starting Something Huge: Pharsalia 1.83-193 and the Virgilian Intertext’, in Walde, (2005) 125.Google Scholar
Masters, J. (1992), Poetry and Civil War in Lucan's Bellum Civile (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Mills, F.L. (2002), ‘pernubila fulmen: Lucan's Caesar’ (diss. La Trobe).Google Scholar
Morford, M.P.O. (1967), The Poet Lucan: Studies in Rhetorical Epic (Oxford).Google Scholar
Narducci, E. (1976), ‘Allusività e autodemistificazione: Lucano VII 254–263’, Maia 28,127–8.Google Scholar
Narducci, E. (1985), ‘Ideologia e tecnica allusiva nella “Pharsalia”’, ANRW 2.32.3, 1538–64.Google Scholar
Narducci, E. (2002), Lucano, un epico contro l'impero: interpretazione della Pharsalia‘ (Rome and Bari).Google Scholar
Peluzzi, E. (1999), ‘turrigero … vertice: la prosopopea della Patria in Lucano’, in Esposito, and Nicastri, (1999) 127–55.Google Scholar
Radicke, J. (2004), Lucans poetische Technik: Studien zum historische Epos (Leiden and Boston).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rossi, A. (2005), ‘sine fine: Caesar's Journey to Egypt and the end of Lucan's Bellum Civile’, in Walde, (2005) 237–60.Google Scholar
Rutz, W. (1963), ‘Die Träume des Pompeius in Lucans Pharsalia’, Hermes 91 (1963), 334–45.Google Scholar
Thompson, L. and Braère, R.T. (1968), ‘Lucan's Use of Virgilian Reminiscence’, CP 63 (1968) 121.Google Scholar
Walde, C. (ed.) (2005), Lucan im 21 Jahrhundert (Munich and Leipzig).CrossRefGoogle Scholar