Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA)

 - Class of 1931

Page 69 of 76

 

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 69 of 76
Page 69 of 76



Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 68
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Page 69 text:

f A .BEEKEEPER'S BOY By PAT FAIR, January, 1931 Two centuries ago, on an early summer morning, a boy was lying on the end of a fallen tree that hung out over a stream. He was peering down into its clear undimmed waters, where a huge orange- spotted trout lay hidden. In the boy's eagerness to see more clearly a lock of his thick black hair split the top of the quiet pool, which sent the frightened trout quickly out of sight. With a start he jumped to his feet, sprang into the brook, and waded across to the opposite shore. The delicate slenderness of this tall boy with his black hair gave him a faun-like appearance. The premature wisdom in his gray eyes was difficult to understand, while his mouth showed a keen sense of feeling, acutely alive to impressions. His nose was the only feature characteristicof his Roman forefathers. This youth was Virgil. Destiny was to make him the greatest of Roman poets! VValking along the stream's edge through the birch and poplar trees or spying on the bright-eyed squirrels or resting happily on some fallen log was his never-tiring satisfaction. It was not his father's delight by far to see his son dreaming when he should be helping him, a beekeeper and a busy farmer. So the lad, suddenly remembering he should be home, pruning the olive trees, left his fairy land and started on a run down a lane which led over to the hills and home. As he ran, the cold morning wind tipped his nose and chin with pink, while two crows overhead cawed in derision at him. Soon he came to the cornfield back of his house and then stopped at the well to drink. His mother's voice carried his name across the meadows. Answering, he ran to the arbor where she sat. Virgil, my son, said his mother, smiling, word has come from Rome that the school has accepted you. Andronicus, the potter, i671 ,adam Y Y... ,

Page 68 text:

, ,. Zig . ...M---..,.,.,,,,, .- f Li T Nw 4 xii--Y R xx I r CQ, ,,,. -' ALT ,... ls. f, . .- Q 1, 1 . gg, L,- 'Q X A AFTER TWENTY CENTURIES By JAMES SMITH, June, 1931 How the heart thrills at the mention of that magic name--Virgil! His gifts to the world are some of the greatest works of literature eyer known. Yet, in spite of the shining honor and fame which were his, he remained quiet, seclusive, and, as far as possible, shun- ning all publicity. Publius Virgilius Maro was born in a little village near Mantua, called Andes, in 70 B. C. His father, a humble farmer, sought to give his son the highest education possible. Accordingly, Virgil was sent in turn to Cremona, where he studied until he was sixteen years of age then to Mediolanum, and then to Neopolis. At N eo- polis he studied under Syro, a celebrated teacher. He returned to his father's farm, only to be bereft of it after a few weeks, due to the war of the triumvirates. However, through the assistance of Augustus, it was restored to him. This extensive study to which the poet was devoting the first part of his life was destined to make of him, together with his natural poetic genius, a man who is hon- ored and studied even up to the present day. Some of his great works are the Eclogues, or Bucolics, a series of pastorals, the Georgics, four books dealing with husbandry, and, last and greatest, the Aeneid, one of the greatest poetical works of literature ever created. Through a pulmonary disease, however, Virgil was unable to finish the Aeneid. At Athens he began to have 'hemorrhages of the lungs, and when he embarked for Mantua, the motion of the vessel seeped out his last remaining bit of vitality, and he died soon after landing, on September ZZ, 19 B. C. A . We say that Virgil died, but in reality did he? He died in material form, yes, but his works have given him a place in history that will never be corrupted. Virgil, the greatest Roman poet that ever lived, will never die! ,mei K, ,,,, ---. , ., 1 . -A



Page 70 text:

'N X. . N1 x will take you in his cart tomorrow morning. She kissed him and bade him pack his things for the journey. That night, when he took off his tunic and sandals to lie down gy the fire to rest, he dreamed of the wonders of the great city, ome. Y B581 im' ' I I 5

Suggestions in the Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) collection:

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 22

1931, pg 22

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 47

1931, pg 47

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 15

1931, pg 15

Virgil Junior High School - Forum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 59

1931, pg 59


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