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  1. Transforming Arma Virvmqve: Syntactical, Morphological and Metrical Dis- Membra-Ment in Statius’ Thebaid.Helen E. B. Dalton - 2020 - Classical Quarterly 70 (1):286-309.
    Arma uirumque cano… ‘Je chante les armes et l'homme …’ ainsi commence l’Énéide, ainsi devrait commencer toute poésie.It is far from an overstatement to make the claim that in the surviving corpus of Latin poetry no phrase is more immediately identifiable than the pronouncement of the Virgilian narrator on the ‘arms and the man’ of his subject matter. The presence ofarma uirumquein a particular formation cannot fail to put us in mind of theAeneidand its concomitant ideological associations. A consequence of (...)
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  • The Nautilus, the Halycon, and Selenaia: Callimachus's "Epigram" 5 Pf. = 14 G. - P.Kathryn Gutzwiller - 1992 - Classical Antiquity 11 (2):194-209.
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