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Bill Thayer

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Aetna

The Text on LacusCurtius

The Latin text and its English translation by J. Wight Duff and Arnold M. Duff, as well as the Introduction, are those found in Volume I of the Loeb Classical Library's Minor Latin Poets, pp351‑419.

As almost always, I retyped the text by hand rather than scanning it — not only to minimize errors prior to proofreading, but as an opportunity for me to become intimately familiar with the work, an exercise which I heartily recommend: Qui scribit, bis legit. (Well-meaning attempts to get me to scan text, if success­ful, would merely turn me into some kind of machine: gambit declined.)

This transcription has been minutely proofread. In the table of contents below, the items are therefore shown on blue backgrounds, indicating that I believe the texts to be completely errorfree. As elsewhere onsite, the header bar at the top of each chapter's webpage will remind you with the same color scheme. Should you spot an error, however . . . please do report it.

Copyright

As mentioned, text and translation are those printed in Volume I of the Loeb Classical Library's Minor Latin Poets, first published in 1934 and revised in 1935. It is now in the public domain pursuant to the 1978 revision of the U. S. Copyright Code, since the copyrights expired in 1962 and 1963 and were not renewed at the appropriate time, which would have been in 1961, 1962 or 1963. (Details here on the copyright law involved.)

Line Numbering, Local Links

In the Latin, each line is a local link; in the translation, each paragraph. The links follow a consistent scheme, for which you should see the sourcecode; you can therefore link directly to any passage. As elsewhere in the texts on my site, the little flags allow you to toggle back and forth between the languages: each language opens in its own window.

Apparatus

The Loeb edition provides a fairly detailed, but not comprehensive, apparatus criticus to the Latin text; I've reproduced it.



[image ALT: A photograph of a volcano, several peaks of which are seen receding into the distance, along with a patch of sulfur on the right, emitting a plume of smoke rising several hundred meters into the sky at an angle of about 40° to the ground. It is my icon for the Aetna.]

The icon with which I indicate this work comes to me kind courtesy of (and copyright ©) Jolanda Romein, whose photograph of Mount Etna it is. The full-sized view, and several others, may be seen on the page at Livius (see navigation bar below).


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Site updated: 10 Dec 16