Saturday, September 29, 2007

The dangers of the interweb

I know you really can't reduce everything to the worst if its kind, but I found this on a site purporting to help teachers and students:

Virgil’s epic ‘Aenead’ tells the story of two brothers Romulus and Remus, direct descendents of the Trojan prince Aeneas founding the city of Rome on April 21st, 753 B.C. Romulus killed Remus and became the first of the seven kings of Rome. However, another legend suggests that a woman Roma founded Rome.
Keep your students away from such sites!

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Try and fly

An interesting little column in the Detroit Free Press (which should please Eric) notes too things that have occurred to me. The first (the derivation of 'flied' in baseball) I've always agreed with, the second ('and' used in place of the infinitive) is one that I considered but discounted, and now I'm reconsidering my position. Leave it to Fowler to find the poetry in a common construction. (The classical connection: hendiadys.)

Epic vade mecum

The BMCR has gotten around to publishing its review of John Miles Foley's A Companion to Ancient Epic (2005), and it's a star-studded behemoth: nearly 700 pages by the likes of Gregory Nagy, Walter Burkert, Michael Putnam, and Craig Kallendorff. The incredible range of topics, the eminence of the authors, and the lack of a single theoretical bias—a plague among most companions—mean that I will definitely purchase of this book—if they ever publish a paperback edition. Unless, of course, some dear reader wants to donate $149.