Horace, Bind 73Twayne Publishers, 1969 - 171 sider |
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Side 22
... Satires I , 4 , that he “ jots down notes " to im- prove his character , is disingenuous . His explanation in Satires I , 10 , that he selected satire as a free field , pre - empted by no able contemporary and suitable , as a minor ...
... Satires I , 4 , that he “ jots down notes " to im- prove his character , is disingenuous . His explanation in Satires I , 10 , that he selected satire as a free field , pre - empted by no able contemporary and suitable , as a minor ...
Side 35
... Satires I , 10 , he redefines his satiric mode , still contrasting it to that of Lucilius ( lines 9-15 ) : Be brief ... Satires II , 3 and II , 7 , where , as we saw , the Mad Satirist is controlled dramatically ; indeed , the over - all ...
... Satires I , 10 , he redefines his satiric mode , still contrasting it to that of Lucilius ( lines 9-15 ) : Be brief ... Satires II , 3 and II , 7 , where , as we saw , the Mad Satirist is controlled dramatically ; indeed , the over - all ...
Side 154
... Satires of Horace and Juvenal , " American Journal of Philology , LXXXI ( 1960 ) , 225-60 , and " The Roman Socrates : Horace and his Satires , " in Critical Essays on Roman Literature : Satire , ed . by J. P. Sullivan ( London , 1963 ) ...
... Satires of Horace and Juvenal , " American Journal of Philology , LXXXI ( 1960 ) , 225-60 , and " The Roman Socrates : Horace and his Satires , " in Critical Essays on Roman Literature : Satire , ed . by J. P. Sullivan ( London , 1963 ) ...
Indhold
Preface Chronology | 9 |
The Rose and the Vine | 11 |
The Transformation of Satire 1271 | 23 |
Copyright | |
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