Othello, Virgil, And Montaigne
Noting that there are recurrent references to antra vasta in the Aeneid, Kenneth Muir has identified the poem as a probable source for Shakespeare's use of the Latinate 'antres' in Othello's speech to the Venetian Council. Muir is interested in the frequency of the Virgilian phra...
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description | Noting that there are recurrent references to antra vasta in the Aeneid, Kenneth Muir has identified the poem as a probable source for Shakespeare's use of the Latinate 'antres' in Othello's speech to the Venetian Council. Muir is interested in the frequency of the Virgilian phrase rather than the identificationof a particular passage, though he does note that there are references to antra vasta in Aeneid III. Here, Dewar-Watson elaborates that the possibility of a localized debt to Aeneid III deserves further examination. She notes that the focus of the cavernous landscape which is described in this section of Virgil's poem is the Cyclops, himself a cave-dweller. |
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subjects | Dramatists Literary criticism Muir, Kenneth Poetry Shakespeare, William (1564-1616) |
title | Othello, Virgil, And Montaigne |
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