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The article proposes a dialogue between Virgilʼs Georgics and Johnʼs Apocalypse as a means of illuminating Revelationʼs view of the natural world. A comparison of the two works reveals a common understanding of the natural order as at once beautiful and terrifying, majestic and vulnerable. While irreconcilable religious differences remain (particularly concerning the figure of Augustus), the two works can still be read in a complementary way. Virgilʼs lyrical evocations of the Italian countryside give a new depth to the tragedy of the destruction of the natural order in Revelation, while Johnʼs theology of hope supplies a theological focus lacking in the Latin poet. |