Translated by John Dryden.
With an Introduction by James Morwood.
'Something greater than the Iliad is being brought to birth', wrote
Virgil's contemporary Propertius, in Western literature's most famous
flourish of advance publicity. The Aeneid was published after Virgil's
death, and at once established itself as Rome's national poem. The
hero Aeneas flees from the sack of Troy, and after much suffering carves
out a foothold for the future Romans in Italy. While defining and celebrating
what it means to be Roman, the Aeneid confronts, with a bleak pathos,
the tragedy involved in Rome's destiny.