Saturday, April 22, 2023

 

Decline

Vergil, Georgics 1.199-200 (tr. H. Rushton Fairclough):
                                    Thus by law of fate all things
speed towards the worse and slipping away fall back...

                                     sic omnia fatis
in peius ruere ac retro sublapsa referri...
T.E. Page ad loc.:
199. sic omnia...] 'So by fate do all things ever hasten to the worse and slipping backwards retrograde.' A characteristic instance of Virgil's 'pessimism,' and also of the art by which he embellishes his subject with philosophical reflections.

200. ruere and referri are historic infinitives. Observe the alliteration in ruere, retro, referri, expressing the uninterrupted retrogression, cf. 203 praeceps prono rapit alveus amni.
On the so-called historic infinitive see Raphael Kühner and Carl Stegmann, Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache, Band II: Satzlehre, Teil I (Hannover: Hahn, 1912), pp. 135-138 (§ 34: "Infinitivus adumbrativus"), and Harm Pinkster, The Oxford Latin Syntax, Vol. I: The Simple Clause (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 527-530 (§ 7.71: "The use of the present infinitive as main verb").



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