Virgil — "Love conquers all things; let us too surrender to Love."
Love conquers all things; let us too surrender to Love.
Love conquers all things; let us too surrender to Love.
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"The descent to Hell is easy."
"Sequiturque patrem non passibus aequis."
"I sing of arms and the man."
"The course of fate is fixed, and cannot be revoked."
"The greatest remedy for anger is delay."
Roman poet of the Augustan age whose Aeneid is the founding national epic of Rome and Western literature's most-imitated hexameter poem. Closely associated with Ovid (younger Augustan poet of Metamorphoses) and Horace (third Augustan-era major poet). For an intellectual contrast, see Lucan, Roman poet (39-65 CE) of the Pharsalia — Lucan's Pharsalia explicitly rejected Virgilian Augustan epic by writing a civil-war epic that refused divine machinery and treated Roman empire as tragedy rather than destiny. Lucan's Pharsalia is a 60-years-later rebuke of the Aeneid's imperial theology — civil war as crime instead of providence.
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