The Odes of Horace: A Critical StudyIndiana University Press, 1967 - 365 sider |
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Side 18
... seem little more than a ceremony , a convenient way to define his role for the public . In the first Ode the gestures toward Polyhymnia and Euterpe are perfunctory . Any private significance he feels in his calling seems reserved for ...
... seem little more than a ceremony , a convenient way to define his role for the public . In the first Ode the gestures toward Polyhymnia and Euterpe are perfunctory . Any private significance he feels in his calling seems reserved for ...
Side 285
... seems to have emerged with a symbolic meaning rather than to have begun with one clearly in mind . What- ever the imaginative progress , the scene communicates a reminder of mortality hardly less explicit than the warning in the stanzas ...
... seems to have emerged with a symbolic meaning rather than to have begun with one clearly in mind . What- ever the imaginative progress , the scene communicates a reminder of mortality hardly less explicit than the warning in the stanzas ...
Side 333
... seems a little bare . We may suspect that Horace means his prayer to signify something more meaningful , but our suspicions receive scant support from the lines themselves . The Ode to Grosphus ( C. 2.16 ) hardly appears concerned with ...
... seems a little bare . We may suspect that Horace means his prayer to signify something more meaningful , but our suspicions receive scant support from the lines themselves . The Ode to Grosphus ( C. 2.16 ) hardly appears concerned with ...
Indhold
STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ODES | 50 |
QUALITIES OF IMAGINATION | 99 |
THE POLITICAL ODES | 160 |
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Actium Alcaeus Alexandrian amatory Apollo Augustan Augustus avarus Bacchus become Caesar Callimachus Carmen Saeculare Catullus Chloe Chloris Cleopatra context contrast death Diehl divine elegiac elegists emotions Ennius Epod equally fact Faunus feelings fourth Roman Ode Fraenkel gods Greek Hesiod Hirpinus Homer Horace seems immortality inspiration invokes Iullus labor Lalage Latin less Ligurinus lines literary lover Lucilius Lucretius Lydia lyre lyric Maecenas meaning metaphor mihi moral Musa Muses myth nature neque nunc Octavian Ode Horace Ode's Ovid parody peace Philippi Pindar Plancus poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry political praise Propertius puer Pyrrha quae quid Quintilian R. S. Conway references reminds Rome Rome's Romulus Sabine farm Satires semper sense similar song Soracte stanzas Stesichorus suggests symbol TAPA Teucer themes tibi Tibullus Tibur tion Troy Valgius Venus Verg Vergil verse wine words write youth