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 6
... stanzas . Horace calls himself " a painstaking minor poet , shaping my lyrics " ( iv . 2 ) . Nowhere does he take more ... stanza . A 4 L. P. Wilkinson , Horace and His Lyric Poetry ( Cambridge , 1951 ) , pp . 145 , 156 . simpler example ...
... stanzas . Horace calls himself " a painstaking minor poet , shaping my lyrics " ( iv . 2 ) . Nowhere does he take more ... stanza . A 4 L. P. Wilkinson , Horace and His Lyric Poetry ( Cambridge , 1951 ) , pp . 145 , 156 . simpler example ...
Side 8
... stanzas : this was one of my earliest attempts ; I should not do it this way if I were starting over again , but my attempts at revision have all been weaker poetically , and I prefer to let it stand . I have tried to keep some of the ...
... stanzas : this was one of my earliest attempts ; I should not do it this way if I were starting over again , but my attempts at revision have all been weaker poetically , and I prefer to let it stand . I have tried to keep some of the ...
Side 14
... stanza is a frequent one in the lyrics , quatrains consisting of two Second Asclepiadean couplets : v . ; With the fourth lyric we are into a typically Horatian cele- bration of spring that leads to the shadow of death and its con ...
... stanza is a frequent one in the lyrics , quatrains consisting of two Second Asclepiadean couplets : v . ; With the fourth lyric we are into a typically Horatian cele- bration of spring that leads to the shadow of death and its con ...
Side 17
... stanzas . The final attribute , Mercury's love of a trick , leads naturally into the next two stanzas , the first dealing with a comic trick , the second with a trick that aids the tragic figure of Priam . The last stanza springs ...
... stanzas . The final attribute , Mercury's love of a trick , leads naturally into the next two stanzas , the first dealing with a comic trick , the second with a trick that aids the tragic figure of Priam . The last stanza springs ...
Side 18
... stanzas , though we may be- gin to suspect the hyperbolic quality of the geographical allu- sions . The next two stanzas keep a perfectly straight face , but we cannot , as the poet advances his proof of the power of recti- tude and ...
... stanzas , though we may be- gin to suspect the hyperbolic quality of the geographical allu- sions . The next two stanzas keep a perfectly straight face , but we cannot , as the poet advances his proof of the power of recti- tude and ...
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Achilles Actium Adriatic Aeacus Aegean Sea Alcaeus Apollo Apulia Asia Minor Augustus Bacchus battle BISTONIAN bitter blessed blood bring brother burning Caecuban Caesar celebrate century B.C. chant coast conquered Consul Cotiso death defeated Diana drink earth enemy Epistles epode Etruscan father Faunus fear festival fields flock garlands gifts girl give goddess gods Greek hair heaven Hercules honor Horace Horace's Horatian hurry Italy Jove Jupiter killed Latin Latium leave legendary king Lesbos live lover Lydia lyre lyric poet Maecenas Mars Marsian meters mighty mother mountain Muse never night once Parthians Phoebus poems poetry praise prayers river Roman Rome Romulus Sabine sacred Scythians shining ship sing slave soldiers song Southwind stanza stars Tarentum Telephus temple Teucer Thessaly Thrace Thracian Tiber Tibur Tityos town tree tribe triumph Troy turn Venus Venusia virgin waters waves wife wild winds wine young