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Acrostic articles

 * Abad del Vecchio, J. (2021). "Literal bodies (somata): A telestich in Ovid". Classical Quarterly 71 (2):688–692 somata
 * Ábel Tamás (2023). "Muses in the Sky: Lucretius’ Invocative Telestich and its Multiple Revivals in Latin Poetry". Classical Journal, Volume 119, Number 1, October/November 2023, pp. 1–43. MuSAS/MuSIS, sofia, Ennius's M A R S
 * Adkin, N. (2006). "Further Vergilian Etymologizing: Georg., 3, 515-6; Aen. 1, 500-1; Aen., 6, 285-7". L'Antiquité Classique, 75, pp. 171-175
 * Adkin, N. (2011). "Etymologizing in Virgil, Eclogue I 11–15". L'Antiquité Classique, 80, 163–166.
 * Adkin, N. (2014). "Read the edge: Acrostics in Virgil's Sinon Episode". Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis acuso, dea Dio, si tu es aci, fesi (Ec. 5), osci, laesis, f(orm)onsum, pinati, Mars has, discusses disce, ihtip / pithi (Aen. 2.102, 142), siet / vino, didi, tu das
 * Adkin, N. (2015). "Quis est nam ludus in undis? (Virgil, Eclogue IX 39–43)". ''Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis᾽᾽, 51, 43–58.
 * Adkin, N. (2015). "A Political Acrostic in Virgil (Ecl. 6.14–24)". Bollettino di Studi Latini 45 (2015), 433–455
 * Adkin, N. (2015). "On a New Virgil Acrostic: Aeneid 6.77-84." Mnemosyne- brill.com
 * Adkin, N. (2016). "Acrostic Shit (Ecl. IV 47-52)". Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis
 * Adkin, N. (2017). "Valerius Flaccus’ Laniabor-Acrostic (Argon. 4,177-184)”, Classical Quarterly n. s. 67, 327–328.
 * Adkin, N. (2017). "An Unidentified Acrostic in Virgil (Georg. I 409–414)". Maia 69, 501–506.
 * Adkin, N. (2017). Who is the Dedicatee of Virgil’s Eighth Eclogue?: A New Acrostic. Latomus 76, 1065–1067.
 * Adkin, N. (2018). "MA VE PU again: Kill Caesar! (Georg. I 424–471)" Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum
 * Adkin, N. (2019). "Horace’s ‘Cleopatra’ Ode: A Crapulent Crux (I 37, 23–24)". Latomus 78, 192–196.
 * Adkin, N. (2019). "Corydon’s Can-Can: A ‘Gammy’ Gamma-Acrostic (Virgil, Ecl. II 23–25)". InvLuc 41, 7–15.
 * Adkin, N. (2019). "An Acrostic in Apollonius of Rhodes (Argon. 3.1008-1011)". Mnemosyne, 72(6), 1029–1035.
 * Adkin, N. (2020). "A Virgilian Onomastic (Aen. VI 641–657)". BStudLat 50, 482–497.
 * Adkin, N. (2021). "Virgilian Acrostics: A Typology". BStudLat 51, 128–136.
 * Adkin, N. (2022). "ACROSTIC CONVERSATION: HORACE, ODE I 18". Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis
 * Arnott, W. G. (1977). "Swan Songs." G&R 24:149-153.
 * Bernstein, F. M. (2020). "Patronage, Poetic Lineage, and Wordplay: A New Dedicatory Acronym in Vergil's Sixth Eclogue". Antichthon MAEC?
 * Biddau, F. (2016). "A proposito di acrostici virgiliani"- torrossa.com
 * Bing, P. (1990). "A Pun on Aratus' Name in Verse 2 of the Phainomena" HSCP 93:281-285.
 * Brown, E. L. (1963). Numeri Vergiliani. Studies in «Eclogues» and «Georgics», Bruxelles. (Collection Latomus LXIII), pp. 102–104.  MA VE PU
 * Casteletti, C. (2012). "Following Aratus' plow: Vergil's signature in the Aeneid". Museum helveticum - JSTOR a stilo mar
 * Casteletti, C. (2012). "A 'Greek' Acrostic in Valerius Flaccus (3.430-4)". Mnemosyne, 2012, Fourth Series, Vol. 65, Fasc. 2 (2012), pp. 319–323. aidos
 * Clauss, J. J. (1997). "An Acrostic in Vergil (Eclogues 1.5-8): The Chance that Mimics Choice." Aevum Antiquum 10:267-287.
 * Courtney, E. (1990). "Greek and Latin Acrostichs." Philologus 134:3-13.
 * Danielewicz, J. (2013). "Vergil's certissima signa reinterpreted: the Aratean LEPTE-acrostic in Georgics I". Eos, 100(2), 287–295. scies signa, pte ...le, pasa
 * Danielewicz, J. (2005). "Further Hellenistic Acrostics: Aratus and Others", Mnemosyne 58, 321‒34  inanis, ἔπαθε, ἀν-ήρ
 * Danielewicz, J. (2019). "ASTER, ASTER, ASTER: A Triple Transliterated Greek Acrostic in Vergil's Eclogue 4". Philologus, 63(2), 361-366.
 * Domenicucci, P. (2000). "THE COMET OF 44 BC AND CAESAR'S FUNERAL GAMES". Rivista di cultura classica e medioevale, 109–120. haedo (Ec. 9) vid. Katz (2008). and cf. review
 * Estévez Sola, J. A.(2023). "NEW ACROSTICS IN OVID?". The Classical Quarterly
 * Evans, B. (fc). "Τwo beginnings: acrostic commencements in Horace (Epod. 1.1–2) and Ovid (Met. 1.1–3)". Classical Quarterly (forthcoming) iambi, libellum, incohas, incipiam
 * Feeney, D. C.; Nelis, D. P. (2005). "Two Virgilian Acrostics: certissima signa?", Class. Quart. 55, pp. 644–646.
 * Fowler, D. P. (1983). "An Acrostic in Vergil (Aeneid 7.601-604)?", Class. Quart. (1983) 33: 298  Mars
 * Gale, M. R. (2018). "Name puns and acrostics in didactic poetry: reading the universe". In Canevaro and O'Rourke, Didactic Poetry or Greece and Rome 2018
 * Giusti E. (2015). "Caesar Criss-Crossing the Rubicon: A Palindromic Acrostic in Lucan (1.218–22)". The Classical Quarterly. tepet
 * Gore, J., & Kershaw, A. (2008). "An unnoticed acrostic in Apuleius Metamorphoses and Cicero De divinatione 2.111–12". The Classical Quarterly, 58(1), 393-394. mons
 * Grishin, A. A. (2008). "Ludus in undis: An Acrostic in Eclogue 9". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 104 (2008), pp. 237–240.
 * Hanses, M. (2016). "Love's Letters: an Amor-Roma Telestich at..." - Wordplay and Powerplay in Latin Poetry, 2016 - books.google.com
 * Hanses, M. (2020). "Naso Deus: Ovid's Hidden Signature in the Metamorphoses". Readings: Transformation, Language, and Gender in …,books.google.com
 * Haslam, M. (1992) "Hidden Signs: Aratus Diosemeiai 46ff., Vergil Georgics 1.424ff". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Vol. 94 (1992), pp. 199–204.
 * Hawkins, S. (2014). "Catullus 60: Lesbia, Media, Clodia, Scylla". The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 135, No. 4 (WINTER 2014), pp. 559–597
 * Hejduk, J. D. (2018). "Was Vergil reading the Bible? Original sin and an astonishing acrostic in the Orpheus and Eurydice". Vergilius (1959-), 64, 71–102. pota (Horace),, ISAIA AIT, VAE, MI IT ISAIA, DUSAS ICIT OS
 * Hejduk, J. D. (2022). "ACROSTIC REFLECTIONS ON DIVINE VIOLENCE IN THE AENEID". Vergilius (1959-)  disce, avidi, pota, DII VI IUTA, SIET O NI VI, DI VI,, FATA, IUVA, DIRA,
 * Hejduk, J. D. (2023). "Cynthia's Birthday Acrostic (3.10. 1–5): Propertius on Elegiac Time and Eternity". The Classical Quarterly, 73(2), 714–720. MANE(T) ROSA RUES
 * Hilton, J. (2013). "The Hunt for Acrostics by Some Ancient Readers of Homer." Hermes 141 : 88–95.
 * Hosle, P. K. (2020). "An acrostic in Aeneid 11.902–6". The Classical Quarterly duces
 * Jacques, J. M. (1960). "Sur un acrostiche d'Aratos (Phén., 783-787)". Revue des études anciennes, 62(1), 48-61. λεπτή
 * Katz, J. T. (2007). "An Acrostic Ant Road in Aeneid", Mat. disc. 59, pp. 77-86; J.T. Katz, Introduction, in J. Kwapisz - D. Petrain - M. Szymański (eds.), The Muse at Play. Riddles and Wordplay in Greek and Latin Poetry, Berlin 2013, pp. 1-30.
 * Katz, J. T. (2008). "Vergil Translates Aratus: Phaenomena 1-2 and Georgics 1.1-2". Materiali e discussioni per l'analisi dei testi classici, 2008, No. 60 (2008), pp. 105–123/
 * Katz, J. T. (2016). "Another Vergilian Signature in the..." Wordplay and Powerplay in Latin Poetry - books.google.com
 * Kearey, T. (2019) "Two acrostics in Horace's Satires (1.9.24–8, 2.1.7–10)". The Classical Quarterly. amico, otia, has useful biblio
 * Kronenberg, L. (2017). "The Tenth of Age of Apollo and a New Acrostic in Eclogue 4", Philologus 161, 337‒9.
 * Kronenberg, L. (2018). "Tibullus the Elegiac Vates: Acrostics in Tibullus 2.5". Mnemosyne, 71(3), 508–514.
 * Kronenberg, L. (2018). "Seeing the light, Part II: The reception of Aratus’s LEPTĒ acrostic in Greek and Latin literature". Dictynna. Revue de poétique latine, (15).
 * Kronenberg, L. (2019). "The Light Side of the Moon: A Lucretian Acrostic (LUCE, 5.712–15) and Its Relationship to Acrostics in Homer (LEUKĒ, Il. 24.1–5) and Aratus (LEPTĒ, Phaen. 783)" …Classical Philology
 * Laterza, G. (2015). "Aeneid VII 53-57, an acrostic". Maia, 2015 - academia.edu AMATA
 * Mairs, R. (2013). "Sopha grammata: acrostichs in Greek and Latin inscriptions from Arachosia, Nubia and Libya". The Muse at Play: Riddles and Wordplay in Greek and Latin Poetry, 279-305.
 * Marron, G. A. (2019). "¿ Un acróstico (más) en Virgilio? (Eneida 10, 693-697)" [ri.conicet.gov.ar]
 * Morgan (1993). disce
 * Mitchell, K. (2020). "Acrostics and telestichs in Augustan poetry: Ovid's edgy and subversive sideswipes". The Cambridge Classical Journal
 * Piacenza, N. (2023). "The Shadow of the Bellum Perusinum in the Ending of Vergil’s Eclogues". Classical Philology, 118(3), 403–408. perusia
 * Rick, E. P. (2019). "Cicero belts Aratus: the bilingual acrostic at Aratea 317–20". The Classical Quarterly, 69(1), 222–228.  zona
 * Robinson, M. (2019). "Looking edgeways. Pursuing acrostics in Ovid and Virgil". The Classical Quarterly Erato
 * Robinson, M. (2019) "Arms and a mouse: approaching acrostics in Ovid and Vergil"
 * Simon, J. A. (1899). Akrosticha bei den augustischen Dichtern. Exoterische Studien. Zweiter Teil, mit einem Anhang. Akrostichische und telestichische Texte aus der Zeit von Plautus bis auf Crestien von Troies und Wolfram von Eschenbach, Köln-Leipzig 1899.
 * Somerville, T. (2010). "Note on a Reversed Acrostic in Vergil Georgics 1.429–33". Classical Philology  MA VE PU
 * Takeshita, T. (2021). "Symmetrical wordplay in the first book of Manilius’ Astronomica". In Acta Classica: Proceedings of the Classical Association of South Africa (Vol. 64, No. 1, pp. 316–320). Classical Association of South Africa (CASA). mons
 * Thompson, S. V. (n.d.) "A Telestic in Virgil's Eclogue 8.77-82". Academia.  sontes; (inanis)
 * Vos, G. P. (2023). "Opvs Imperfectvm? Completing the Unfinished Acrostic at Ovid, Metamorphoses 15.871–5". The Classical Quarterly, 1-7. incip-iam
 * Wheeler, J. K. (2021). "The Elements of Slaughter: On a Prophetic Acrostic in Lucan Bellum Civile 7.153–58". Classical Philology

Georgic 1 acrostics

 * λεπτὴ μὲν καθαρή τε περὶ τρίτον ἦμαρ ἐοῦσα
 * εὔδιός κʼ εἴη, λεπτὴ δὲ καὶ εὖ μάλʼ ἐρευθὴς
 * πνευματίη, παχίων δὲ καὶ ἀμβλείῃσι κεραίαις
 * τέτρατον ἐκ τριτάτοιο φόως ἀμενηνὸν ἔχουσα
 * ἢ νότῳ ἄμβλυνται ἢ ὕδατος ἐγγὺς ἐόντος.


 * Si vero solem ad rapidum lunasque sequentis
 * ordine respicies, numquam te crastina fallet	425
 * hora, neque insidiis noctis capiere serenae.
 * luna revertentis cum primum colligit ignis,
 * si nigrum obscuro comprenderit aera cornu,
 * MAximus agricolis pelagoque parabitur imber;
 * at si virgineum suffuderit ore ruborem,	430
 * VEntus erit: vento semper rubet aurea Phoebe.
 * sin ortu quarto (namque is certissimus auctor)
 * PUra neque obtunsis per caelum cornibus ibit,
 * Totus et ille dies et qui nascentur ab illo
 * Exactum ad mensem pluvia ventisque carebunt,	435
 * votaque servati solvent in litore nautae
 * Glauco et Panopeae et Inoo Melicertae.


 * sol quoque et exoriens et cum se condet in undas
 * SIGNA dabit; solem certissima signa sequentur,
 * Et quae mane refert et quae surgentibus astris.	440
 * Ille ubi nascentem maculis variaverit ortum
 * Conditus in nubem medioque refugerit orbe,
 * Suspecti tibi sint imbres: namque urget ab alto
 * arboribusque satisque Notus pecorique sinister.
 * aut ubi sub lucem densa inter nubila sese	445
 * diversi rumpent radii, aut ubi pallida surget
 * Tithoni croceum linquens Aurora cubile,
 * heu, male tum mitis defendet pampinus uvas:
 * tam multa in tectis crepitans salit horrida grando.
 * hoc etiam, emenso cum iam decedit Olympo,	450
 * profuerit meminisse magis; nam saepe videmus
 * ipsius in vultu varios errare colores:
 * caeruleus pluviam denuntiat, igneus Euros;
 * sin maculae incipiunt rutilo immiscerier igni,
 * omnia tum pariter vento nimbisque videbis	455
 * fervere: non illa quisquam me nocte per altum
 * ire neque a terra moneat convellere funem.
 * at si, cum referetque diem condetque relatum,
 * Lucidus orbis erit, frustra terrebere nimbis
 * Et claro silvas cernes Aquilone moveri.	460
 * denique, quid Vesper serus vehat, unde serenas
 * ventus agat nubes, quid cogitet umidus Auster,
 * sol tibi signa dabit. solem quis dicere falsum
 * audeat? ille etiam caecos instare tumultus
 * saepe monet fraudemque et operta tumescere bella;	465
 * ille etiam exstincto miseratus Caesare Romam,
 * cum caput obscura nitidum ferrugine texit
 * impiaque aeternam timuerunt saecula noctem.
 * Ille etiam exstincto miseratus Caesare Romam,
 * Cum caput obscura nitidum ferrugine texit    470  Hejduk
 * Impiaque aeternam timuerunt saecula noctem.
 * Tempore quamquam illo tellus quoque et aequora ponti,
 * Obscenaeque canes importunaeque uolucres
 * Signa dabant.