Odes and EpodesUniversity of Chicago Press, 11. okt. 2013 - 264 sider The writings of Horace have exerted strong and continuing influence on writers from his day to our own. Sophisticated and intellectual, witty and frank, he speaks to the cultivated and civilized world of today with the same astringent candor and sprightliness that appeared so fresh at the height of Rome's wealthy and glory. In 23 B.C., when he published the first three books of his lyrics, Horace was 42 years old, secure in the favor of the emperor Augustus, and living in ease and comfort as a country gentleman on his Sabine farm. Serenity is reflected in these lyrics, certainly, but so are other experiences, for Horace had lived through three major political crises in a society that was the center of the world, that was sophisticated, refined—and beginning to decay. A worldly, high-spirited, cultivated man, Horace responds in his poetry to the myriad elements of Roman life he knew so well. The Odes and Epodes of Horace collects the entirety of his lyric poetry, comprising all 103 odes, the Carmen Saeculare ("Festival Hymn"), and the earlier epodes. Joseph P. Clancy has achieved a mirroring of the originals that is worthy in its own right as English verse, and his introductions to each book of lyrics are both lively and informed. |
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Side 1
... Roman education : the mark of his rhetorical training is everywhere in Horace , sometimes , one feels , too obtrusively present , as in Odes ii . 9 ; he is no Lucretius , but both the Stoic concept of virtue and the Epicurean concept of ...
... Roman education : the mark of his rhetorical training is everywhere in Horace , sometimes , one feels , too obtrusively present , as in Odes ii . 9 ; he is no Lucretius , but both the Stoic concept of virtue and the Epicurean concept of ...
Side 2
... Roman republicanism and the army of Brutus . Both were defeated at Philippi in 42 B.C. Horace's father had died , and his inheritance was confiscated by Octavian . But the following year Octavian granted a gen- eral amnesty : Horace ...
... Roman republicanism and the army of Brutus . Both were defeated at Philippi in 42 B.C. Horace's father had died , and his inheritance was confiscated by Octavian . But the following year Octavian granted a gen- eral amnesty : Horace ...
Side 3
... Roman life itself , and the poet's imagination responds equally to contrasting experiences . The Roman ideal of the soldier- farmer , trained to a life of privation , to sacrifice his private wishes to the needs of the fatherland , to ...
... Roman life itself , and the poet's imagination responds equally to contrasting experiences . The Roman ideal of the soldier- farmer , trained to a life of privation , to sacrifice his private wishes to the needs of the fatherland , to ...
Side 5
... Roman Imperial Civilisation ( New York , 1959 ) , pp . xv , 315 . 3 Some indication of these meters will be found in the Introduction to Books I - III , but I have not thought it necessary to attempt a detailed exposition of them . My ...
... Roman Imperial Civilisation ( New York , 1959 ) , pp . xv , 315 . 3 Some indication of these meters will be found in the Introduction to Books I - III , but I have not thought it necessary to attempt a detailed exposition of them . My ...
Side 9
... Roman World provides a basic historical background in Volumes V and VI , by Frank Burr Marsh and Edward T. Salmon , re- spectively . Harold Mattingly's Roman Imperial Civilisation ( New York , 1959 ) is a helpful exposition of various ...
... Roman World provides a basic historical background in Volumes V and VI , by Frank Burr Marsh and Edward T. Salmon , re- spectively . Harold Mattingly's Roman Imperial Civilisation ( New York , 1959 ) is a helpful exposition of various ...
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