Horace, Bind 73Twayne Publishers, 1969 - 171 sider |
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Side 17
... imagination we are learning to move with the assurance bred of familiarity , and whose figure — playful , ironic , elusive , yet simplex munditiis — we are surely beginning to discern . III Continuity of Growth Let us look further ...
... imagination we are learning to move with the assurance bred of familiarity , and whose figure — playful , ironic , elusive , yet simplex munditiis — we are surely beginning to discern . III Continuity of Growth Let us look further ...
Side 42
... imagination . Only there is happiness possible . A variation of the same attitude appears in the earliest satires , whose detached cynicism is idealism reversed . Virgil's call to escape is different.27 He never wilfully cuts him- self ...
... imagination . Only there is happiness possible . A variation of the same attitude appears in the earliest satires , whose detached cynicism is idealism reversed . Virgil's call to escape is different.27 He never wilfully cuts him- self ...
Side 132
... imagination . Here was another and a greater Anniversary to be thankful for . When the poet appeals to the Birth Goddess to " carry on the race " and foster marriage laws , he is concerned with propaganda in the root sense . The [ 132 ] ...
... imagination . Here was another and a greater Anniversary to be thankful for . When the poet appeals to the Birth Goddess to " carry on the race " and foster marriage laws , he is concerned with propaganda in the root sense . The [ 132 ] ...
Indhold
Preface Chronology | 9 |
The Rose and the Vine | 11 |
The Transformation of Satire 1271 | 23 |
Copyright | |
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acceptance ace's Actium Aeneas Aeneid Alcaeus atque attitude Augustan Augustus beautiful Bullatius Callimachus Carmen Carmen Saeculare Catullus civil classical Commager contrast critical death decorum diatribe drinking Eclogue emotional epic Epicurean Epicurus Epistles Epode fear feeling fool Fraenkel Georgics gods Greek happiness heart Hellenistic Horace Horace's poetry Horatian Horaz human humor imagination ironic irony Klingner Latin leisure limit lines literary live Lollius Lucilius Lucretius lyre lyric poetry Maecenas meaning ment metaphor mind modus moral Muse nature nature's neque never nunc Octavian once passion peace perhaps Philol philosophy Pindar play poem poet poet's poetic political praise quae quid reality renewal rhythm right growth Roman Odes Rome Sabine farm Satires satirist Secular Games sense shows social society spirit stanza Stoic supra symbolic themes things thought tibi Tibullus Tibur tion Vergilius verse Virgil wine words write youth