null
US
Sign In
Sign Up for Free
Sign Up
We have detected that Javascript is not enabled in your browser. The dynamic nature of our site means that Javascript must be enabled to function properly. Please read our
terms and conditions
for more information.
Next up
Copy and Edit
You need to log in to complete this action!
Register for Free
2949970
How does Virgil build up tension in the death of Nisus?
Description
VIRGIL 10 MAKER ANSWER ROUGH GUIDELINE POINTS NOTES OCR GCSE LATIN LITERATURE SET TEXTS AENEID YEAR 11 A* EXAM REVISION
No tags specified
virgil
nisus
euryalus
aeneid
ocr
latin
gcse
set texts
literature
classics
latin
n + e
Mind Map by
mouldybiscuit
, updated more than 1 year ago
More
Less
Created by
mouldybiscuit
over 9 years ago
241
2
1
Resource summary
How does Virgil build up tension in the death of Nisus?
'me, me, adsum'
'It's me, me, I'm here'
Repetition portrays desperation
'o Rutuli!'
'Rutulians'
Vocative case: calling on enemy
desperation
Exclamation: vivid + dramatic
'omnis, nihil'
'It is all, none of it'
Juxtaposition of all and nothing
depicts chaos of war
adds tension
'amicum'
'friend'
Emphatic positioning
last word of line
depicts distance between N + E
'dabat'
'he was still saying'
Imperfect tense
fast pace of actions/ events
'aut tantum potuit perferre dolorem'
'nor could he tolerate so much grief'
poignant
emphasis on N + E's close friendship
Juxtaposition of hard and soft sounds
N about to break out into tears?
crying?
'purpures... flos'
Metaphor
vivid + poignant
N is not in a comfortable situation
N is not emotionally stable
Tension: what next?
E's death
'purple flower'
'moratur... instant'
'He wants... He presses on'
N lost identity
foreshadow death
'it auor'
'the blood trickled'
E's death
Empathic positioning
at start
show slow death
detailed description
grotesque death
E is humanised: no longer divinely beautiful
'moriens animam abstulit hosti'
'as he died, he stole his enemy's life spirit too'
Assonance of 'a'
powerful ending
avenged E's death
faithful friend
powerful thoughts
even when he died, he caused harm to enemy
faithful soldier
loss of a hero: tense+ poignant
Show full summary
Hide full summary
Want to create your own
Mind Maps
for
free
with GoConqr?
Learn more
.
Similar
Latin Literature Exam Techniques
mouldybiscuit
OCR GCSE History-Paper Two: The Liberal Reforms 1906-14 Poverty to Welfare State NEW FOR 2015!!!
I Turner
Greek Drama
williamus11
Geography Quiz - Tectonics
oscartaylor
4. Civil War
ShreyaDas
WJEC Level 2 Latin Language Vocabulary (A)
Gian Hernandez
Oedipus Vocabulary
vanillalove
WJEC Level 2 Latin Language Vocabulary (T)
Gian Hernandez
Latin Vocab
georgieandbritz
WJEC Level 2 Latin Language Vocabulary (E&F)
Gian Hernandez
WJEC Level 2 Latin Language Vocabulary (O&P)
Gian Hernandez
Browse Library