Lyrics by Virgil

Do you love Virgil's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Virgil's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

We have compiled all the lyrics of Virgil's songs we could find so that those who, like you, are looking for songs by Virgil, find them all in one place.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Virgil.

Here you can find out which songs by Virgil are the most searched.

  1. Amazing
  2. Amnesia
  3. Amor Inexplicável
  4. Backwards
  5. Shirayuki

Publius Vergilius Maro (Classical Latin: [ˈpuːbliʊs wɛrˈɡɪliʊs ˈmaroː]; 15 October 70 BC – 21 September 19 BC), usually called Virgil or Vergil ( VUR-jil) in English, was an ancient Roman poet of the Augustan period. He composed three of the most famous poems in Latin literature: the Eclogues (or Bucolics), the Georgics, and the epic Aeneid. A number of minor poems, collected in the Appendix Vergiliana, were attributed to him in ancient times, but modern scholars generally regard these works as spurious, with the possible exception of a few short pieces. Already acclaimed in his own lifetime as a classic author, Virgil rapidly replaced Ennius and other earlier authors as a standard school text, and stood as the most popular Latin poet through late antiquity, the Middle Ages, and early modernity, exerting inestimable influence on all subsequent Western literature. Geoffrey Chaucer assigned Virgil a uniquely prominent position among all the celebrities of human history in The House of Fame (1374–85), describing him as standing on a pilere / that was of tinned yren clere ("on a pillar that was of bright tin-plated iron"), and in the Divine Comedy, in which Virgil appears as the author's guide through Hell and Purgatory, Dante pays tribute to Virgil with the words tu se' solo colui da cu'io tolsi / lo bello stile che m'ha fatto onore (Inf. I.86–7) ("thou art alone the one from whom I took the beautiful style that has done honour to me"). In the 20th Century, T. S. Eliot famously began a lecture on the subject "What Is a Classic?" by asserting as self-evidently true that "whatever the definition we arrive at, it cannot be one which excludes Virgil – we may say confidently that it must be one which will expressly reckon with him."

You might not be a big fan of Virgil, maybe you're here for just one song by Virgil that you like, but take a look at the rest, they might surprise you.

It often happens that when you like a song by a specific group or artist, you like other songs of theirs too. So if you like a song by Virgil, you'll probably like many other songs by Virgil.

Sometimes Virgil's songs help us express what we think or feel. Is that the case for you?