The Fall of Troy [electronic resource] / Quintus Smyrnaeus ; with an English translation by A.S. Way.
2014
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Details
Title
The Fall of Troy [electronic resource] / Quintus Smyrnaeus ; with an English translation by A.S. Way.
Published
Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, 2014.
Description
1 online resource.
Associated name
Series statement
Loeb Classical Library ; 19
Summary
In The Fall of Troy, Quintus Smyrnaeus (Fourth century CE?) seeks to continue in Homer's style the tale of Troy from the point at which the Iliad closes. Quintus's fourteen-book epic poem includes the death of Achilles and the making of the Wooden Horse. It ends with the great storm that by the wrath of heaven shattered the departing Achaean fleet. Quintus was a poet who lived at Smyrna some four hundred years after Christ. His work, in fourteen books, is a bold and generally underrated attempt in Homer's style to complete the story of Troy from the point at which the Iliad closes. Quintus tells us the stories of Penthesilea, the Amazonian queen; Memnon, leader of the Ethiopians; the death of Achilles; the contest for Achilles' arms between Ajax and Odysseus; the arrival of Philoctetes; and the making of the Wooden Horse. The poem ends with the departure of the Greeks and the great storm which by the wrath of heaven shattered their fleet.
Language Note
Text in Greek with English translation on facing pages.
Note
This record was provided by a vendor. It may contain incorrect or incomplete information.
Bibliography, etc.
Includes bibliography and indexes.
Digital file characteristics
text file
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Series
Loeb classical library ; 19.
Linked resources
Place of creation/publication
United States -- Massachusettes.
Item Details
Call number
Available onsite only