Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, 1922, Vol. 53
In the light of nineteenth-century criticism all of these poems were pronounced non-virgilian, and Gudeman voices the general verdict of the age when he says that their spuri ousness is established by incontrovertible proofs (cited by Rand). With the twentieth century the pendulum has swung in the other direction. In 1901 Skutsch reopened a discussion of the problem, when in his Aus Vergils Friihzeit he argued that the ciris belonged to Virgil's own age. Skutsch however did not claim for the poem Virgilian authorship. He was convinced that the Ciris was the work of Virgil's friend, Cornelius Gallus, from whom by way of compliment the greater poet later borrowed many verses. Even as late as 1911 Mackail could say of the Ciris together with the Dime and Lydia: No one in modern times has seriously argued that they are by Virgil himself (lectures on Poetry, p.
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