Vergil & Caesar key passages · Grammar reference · Literary devices · FRQ strategies
| Author / Work | Required Books | Purpose / Theme | Style Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vergil — Aeneid | Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 12 (selected) | Founding of Rome; pietas; fate; Roman mission; love vs. duty | Dactylic hexameter; hyperbaton; extended simile; divine machinery |
| Caesar — Gallic War | Books 1, 4, 5, 6 (selected) | Roman conquest of Gaul; Roman virtus; political self-promotion | 3rd-person self-reference; indirect statement chains; ablative absolute; dense subordination |
| Case | Primary Uses | Key Prepositions |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | Subject; predicate nominative | (none) |
| Genitive | Possession; partitive; description; objective genitive | (none) |
| Dative | Indirect object; reference; possession; purpose; agent with passive periphrastic | (none) |
| Accusative | Direct object; extent/duration; motion toward | ad, in (motion), per, ante, post, inter, trans, propter |
| Ablative | Means/instrument (gladio); manner (magna cum vi); accompaniment (cum); separation; time when; absolute | a/ab, cum, de, e/ex, in (location), pro, sine, sub |
| Vocative | Direct address | (none) |
| Type | Ending | Time | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present active | -ns, -ntis | Same as main verb | "while [verb]-ing" / "[verb]-ing" |
| Perfect passive | -tus/-itus/-sus | Before main verb | "having been [verb]ed" |
| Future active | -turus/-surus | After main verb | "about to [verb]" / "intending to" |
| Ablative absolute | Abl. + abl. participle | Contextual | "when/after/since/with [noun] having been [verb]ed" |
| Use | Marker / Context | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | ut/ne + subj. | "in order to/that" |
| Result | ut/ut non + subj. (after tam, ita) | "so that [result]" |
| Indirect command | ut/ne after ordering verb | "to do X" / "that they do X" |
| Indirect question | Question word + subj. | "[He asked] what/where/why…" |
| Cum temporal | cum + impf./plupf. subj. | "when / while / since [background]" |
| Cum causal | cum + subj. | "since / because" |
| Conditional | si + pres. subj. | "If X should happen, Y would…" (future less vivid) |
| Main Verb Tense | Sequence | Subj. Tense to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Present, Future, Future Perf. | Primary | Present subj. (same time / future) or Perfect subj. (completed) |
| Imperfect, Perfect, Pluperfect | Secondary | Imperfect subj. (same time / ongoing) or Pluperfect subj. (completed before) |
| Device | Definition | Example | Effect in Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hyperbaton | Adjective separated from its noun across several words | magna… pugna — adjective and noun 3 words apart | Emphasizes the adjective; creates reading tension resolved at the noun |
| Extended simile | qualis / ut… talis / sic comparison structure | Aeneas compared to Apollo or a bull | Elevates heroes to divine/natural level; slows narrative for emphasis |
| Alliteration | Repeated initial consonant sounds | litora longa resonant | Mimics sound; creates emotional tone |
| Chiasmus | ABBA word order reversal | arma virum / virum arma | Creates balance and emphasis; signals parallelism or contrast |
| Anaphora | Repetition of same word at start of successive clauses | nunc… nunc… nunc | Creates urgency, rhythm, emotional intensity |
| Synchysis | Interlocked ABAB word order (adj-noun-adj-noun interleaved) | magna virum versans animo… acerbas | Forces re-reading; represents mental chaos or complexity |
| Apostrophe | Direct address to absent person (vocative) | Vergil addressing Nisus and Euryalus directly | Breaks narrative frame; creates emotional immediacy |
| Tricolon | Three parallel elements, often with crescendo | Three clauses of increasing length | Creates completion, finality, or rhetorical power |
| Golden line | AAVNN pattern: adj-adj-verb-noun-noun in one hexameter line | Two balanced noun-adjective pairs flanking the verb | Vergilian ornamentation; signals a climactic or beautiful moment |
| Enjambment | Syntactic unit runs beyond line end | Main verb at start of next line | Creates forward momentum; defers emphasis to line beginning |
| Theme | Vergil Angle | Caesar Angle |
|---|---|---|
| Pietas / Duty | Aeneas sacrifices Dido for divine mission | Soldiers' loyalty; Rome's right to conquer |
| Leadership | Leads through endurance, divine support, self-sacrifice | Decisive, rational, always in control |
| Roman Mission | tu regere imperio populos — pacify and govern | Gauls as barbaric; conquest as civilization |
| Fate vs. Will | Fatum inescapable; Juno delays but cannot prevent | Success = Roman virtus and planning (more secular) |
| Courage / Virtus | Courage bound to pietas and divine duty | Military effectiveness; disciplined aggression |