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M^VTO :3-52Silius Italicus. Punica. Edited and translated by J. D. Duff. 2 vols. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976. Smith, Macklin. Prudentius’ “Psychomachia:” A Reexamination. Prince¬ ton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1976. Snyder, Jane. Puns and Poetry in Lucretius’ “De Rerum Natura.” Am¬ sterdam: B. Gruner, 1980. Spence, Sarah. Rhetorics of Reason and Desire: Vergil, Augustine, and the Troubadours. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1988.
Springer, A. R. “Prudentius, Pilgrim and Poet: The Catacombs and Their Paintings as Inspiration for the Liber Cathemerinon.” Diss., University of Wisconsin at Madison, 1984. Statius. Silvae. Edited by Aldo Marastoni. Leipzig: Teubner, 1970. -. Thebais. Edited by Alfredus Klotz. Leipzig: Teubner, 1973. Stevenson, James. The Catacombs: Rediscovered Monuments of Early Christian Art. London: Thames Sc Hudson, 1978. Suetonius. C. Suetoni Tranquili Quae Supersunt Omnia. Edited by C. L. Roth. Leipzig: Teubner, 1893.
Selected Bibliography Teixidor, Javier. The Pagan God: Popidar Religion in the Greco-Roman Near East. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1977. Tertullian. Apologia, De Spectaculis, Minucius Felix. Edited and trans¬ lated by T. R. Glover, Gerald Randall, and W. C. A. Kerr. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, Loeb Classical Library, 1931. Testini, Pasquali. “Di alcune testimonianze relative a Ippolito.” In Ricerchesu Ippolito, pp. 45-63. Studia Ephemeridis Augustinianum 13. Rome: Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum, 1977. -. “S. Ippolito all’ isola sacra.” Rendiconti della Pontificia Accademia Romana dArcheologia 51 (i978):23—46. Thraede, Klaus. Studien zu Sprache und Stil des Prudentius. Hypomnemata 13. Gottingen: Vandenhoeck Sc Ruprecht, 1965. Thury, Eva M. “Lucretius’ Poem as a Simulacrum of the Rerum Natura.” AJPh 108 (i987):27o-294Trape, Agostino. “Augustinus et Varro.” In Atti del Congresso Internazionale di Studi Varroniani, vol. 2, pp. 553—563. Rieti: Centro di studi Varroniani, 1976. Vergil. Aeneid. Edited with commentary by R. D. Williams. 2 vols. London: Macmillan, 1972. Witke, Charles. Numen Litterarum: The Old and the New in Latin Poetry from Constantine to Gregory the Great. Leiden: Brill, 1971. Zahn, T. Cyprian von Antiochen und die deutsche Faustsage. Erlagen, 1882. Zeitlin, Froma. “Cultic Models of the Female: Rites of Dionysos and Demeter.” Arethusa 15 (1982): 140—155.
188
Index of Passages Quoted
Aristotle Metaphysics 985b 16—19:
Ovid Metamorphoses 1.5—25: 143
29 -Nichomachean Ethics 3.1.5—7: 142 Ausonius Cento Nuptialis preface 36-42: 36-38 -Epigrams 41.1-4: 96^9 Claudian In Rufinum 2.351—360:
51 52 2 396 399 49 -
-
-
:
Petronius Bellum Civile 271—277: 71 288-295: 71 Philostratus the Elder Imagines 24.2-4: 87 Prudentius Apotheosis praefatio 1—24 102-103 27-28: 104 -Cathemerinon 3.26—30: 76 -Contra Symmachum 1.502—505:
2.410-420: 53, 55 Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum 5.6240: 83 Diodorus Siculus Library of History 20.14.4-6: 1360.17
23 2.45-46: 88
2-53-54: 92n-18 2.61-64: 90 -Hamartigenia 236—250: 74-75 961-966: 44-46 -Peristephanon 3.206—210:
Horace Odes 4.4.1-4: 164 4.10:122
175n-29 10.896—910: 1 i8n.3 11.17—20: 94
Jerome Commentarius in Hiezechielem 40: 109
101 11.69-76: 95 11.77—80: 96 11-35-38:
Livy Ab Urbe Condita 1.4.2—8: 156-
n-95-104: 97
!57 1.28.9—11: ioon.22 Lucan Pharsalia 1.70—82: 73 Lucretius De Rerum Natura 1.814— 829: 28
11.111—112: 11.111 — 122: 11.123-144: 11.155—168: 11.159-162, 11.183-186:
3° 189
102 98 84-85 104—105 167—168: 108 111
Index of Passages Quoted .)
Prudentius (cont
Seneca the Elder
Controversiae
1.2.21: i64n. 12
13.1— 6, 11 — 14: 117
Hercules Furens
Seneca
13-25-3o: 125
13- 49-52: 131
668—672:
107
-Phaedra
1367-69: l4°
710-714: 1700.24
908-922: i54n.4
1370-75: 138
Servius
13.76-87: 141
ad Aen.
1.262:42
1-314: 75
13.87-88: 147 14.1- 9: 150-151
Silius Italicus
Punica
1.81—98: 131 —
132
14.10—14: 158
4.765-767: 135
14.15-20:158-159
Silvae 3.4.84-85: 123 -Thebaid 2.94-100: 6in. 12
14.21-28: 159-160
Statius
14- 38-49: 163 14.61-63: 153
53-i54>
1489-79: i
169-170
Tertullian
14.81-84: 155
De Spectaculis
29: 500.4
14-91-93: 155 14.130-133: 176
Vergil
-Praefatio 1-5: 76-77
Aeneid
4.504-516: 133
5-588-591: i°5
16—21:21
6.126-128: 106
43-45: 77
6.201—204: 640.13
-Psychomachia 278—279: 67
6.268—272: 107
665-669:59
6.273-281: 55-56
670-680: 61-62
7.415-418: 60
683-688: 59-60
7.767: 31
705-714: 63, 94
7.778-779: 92n. 18
715-718: 65
8.642-665: 99
720-725: 98-99
8.700-703: 70 9.184-185: 139
Quintilian
Institutio Oratoria
9.2.67:
9-197: 139 10.390-396: 32-34
5
ICfO
General Index
Adonis, 6—7, 124—125, 168—169 Agnes, Saint, 8, 78, 83, 149-177
Agnus, agna, 152, 157, 172, 174 Agnus castus, 172—177, 180 Allecto, 60—61, 68—69,
71
Amputation, 32-35, 118-121 Anagrammatic wordplay, 33, 42,
Cyprian of Carthage, 8, 78, 83, 115-148, 178-179
Dido, 130—136 Discordia, 23, 48, 58-78, 92-101, 103, 137, 178
Discrimen, 32—34, 120-121, 141 — 144
44-46, 52, 65 Atomistic wordplay, 27-31, 36 Ausonius, 14, 17-18, 23—26, 35— 38, 41, 86, 96m 19
Dismemberment, 23, 48, 52—54, 58, 65-66, 84, 92-93, 95, 98101 Dissolution, 73-75, 78, 95—101,
Binding imagery.
See Weaving
Brothel, 8, 152-153, 156, 162-167,
120, 137, 149 Donatism, 127—130, 148, 179
172 Ecphrasis, 86, 106, 110-113 Candida Massa, 8, 115, 136, 140— 148, 159, 179 Cassian, Saint, 43
Etymology of proper names, 42, 430.17, 63-64, 81-83, 960.19, 115, 147, 174-177, 180
Catacombs, 80, 82, 104, 108-110; catacomb paintings, 25, 38, 82,
Fides, 58, 65
84—86, 110—113 Centos, 24, 35-39, 41
Golden lines, 61, 65, 75—76
Circumcellions, 129, 148 Claudian, 14-16, 23, 47-54
Heresy, 92-94, 101-104, 178;
Concordia, 58—69, 72, 93—101, 137
Novatian heresy, 92, 101; Pris-
Crowns, 44, 76-77, 151, 174-177,
cillian heresy, 22.
180
Cupid Crucified, 24—25 Cyprian of Antioch, 8, 115-116, 121,134
See also Discor¬
dia Hippolytus, 31, 59,
79“1 *3>
124>
137, 140, 149, 154, 165, 167, 170, 178
General Index Labyrinth, 1, 9, 89, 94, 105-106,
Rhetoric, 116-119, 121; erotic, 137-140
112—113
Lamb. See
Agnus, agna
Romanus, Saint, 118-119
Lime, 137, 141-148 Lucan,
Romulus, 44, 149-151, 153, 156
73-74
Lucretius,
Rufinus, Flavius, 21, 23, 48-55,
27-31,
65-69
36, 91
Lugos. See Agnus castus Lukos. See Wolf Lupa. See Wolf Lupanar. See Brothel
Seduction, 116, 126, 137, 169-170 Sterility, 122-127, 148, 158 Stoicism, 72—75 Suicide, 129, 132-136, 148
Magic, 115, 132-134, 137, 148
Superbia, 67
Marriage, 116, 126, 137, 148, 165— 169,172-173
Thascius, 147.
Medusa, 161 — 163
Carthage
Cyprian of
Tongues, 65, 117—120
Mens Humilis, 67
Metis,
See also
160, 174-175, 180
Minerva, 152, 159—162
Varro, 33, 42 Venus, 116, 122-127, 166
Optatian, 39-41
Virginity, 149—161, 164—177, 179 Virtues and Vices, 55n.7, 57-69, 94
Passio Polychronii, Personification,
81,100— 1 o 1
55—57
Weaving: imagery of, 58, 61-64,
Phaedra, 83-84, 101, 154, 167, 170
72-78’ 95-1°4’ J49’ 161, 174-
Proba, Faltonia Betitia, 24, 41
177, 180
Prometheus, 174—177, 179—180
Wolf, 149, 156-157, 172
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Malamud, Martha A., 1957— A poetics of transformation. (Cornell studies in classical philology; v. 49) Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Prudentius, b. 348—Criticism and interpretation. 2. Christian poetry, Latin—History and criticism. 3. Mythology, Classical, in literature. I. Title. II. Series. PA6648.P7M34 1989 871'.01 88—43290 ISBN 0—8014—2249—3 (alk. paper) 792