The Works of Horace: Translated Into English Verse, with a Life and Notes, Tom 1W. Blackwoods, 1881 |
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Strona xi
... , • • VIII . PREVAILING BELIEF IN ASTROLOGY . - HORACE'S VIEWS OF A HEREAFTER . - RELATIONS WITH MECENAS . - BELIEF IN THE PERMANENCE OF HIS OWN FAME , · cxxvii CXXXviii IX . HORACE'S RELATIONS WITH AUGUSTUS . HIS clii LOVE PAGE.
... , • • VIII . PREVAILING BELIEF IN ASTROLOGY . - HORACE'S VIEWS OF A HEREAFTER . - RELATIONS WITH MECENAS . - BELIEF IN THE PERMANENCE OF HIS OWN FAME , · cxxvii CXXXviii IX . HORACE'S RELATIONS WITH AUGUSTUS . HIS clii LOVE PAGE.
Strona xiv
... fame- " Je suis vilain , et très vilain . " The Roman poets of the pre - Augustan and Augustan periods , unlike Horace , were all well born . Catullus and Calvus , his great predecessors in lyric poetry , were men of old and noble ...
... fame- " Je suis vilain , et très vilain . " The Roman poets of the pre - Augustan and Augustan periods , unlike Horace , were all well born . Catullus and Calvus , his great predecessors in lyric poetry , were men of old and noble ...
Strona xxi
... fame is blurred since he was in the manner caught . The reasons why this should be shunned , and why that should be sought , The sages will explain ; enough for me , if I uphold The faith and morals handed down from our good sires of ...
... fame is blurred since he was in the manner caught . The reasons why this should be shunned , and why that should be sought , The sages will explain ; enough for me , if I uphold The faith and morals handed down from our good sires of ...
Strona xxvii
... fame of Brutus as a puller- down of kings , which it must have required some courage to publish , when Augustus was omnipotent in Rome . " But Grecian Persius , after he Had been besprinkled plenteously With gall Italic , cries , ' By ...
... fame of Brutus as a puller- down of kings , which it must have required some courage to publish , when Augustus was omnipotent in Rome . " But Grecian Persius , after he Had been besprinkled plenteously With gall Italic , cries , ' By ...
Strona xxxi
... fame it be- gets is bought dearly at the cost of life - long enmities and many after - regrets . That Horace in his early writings was personal and abusive is very clear , both from his own language and from a few of the poems of this ...
... fame it be- gets is bought dearly at the cost of life - long enmities and many after - regrets . That Horace in his early writings was personal and abusive is very clear , both from his own language and from a few of the poems of this ...
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arms Augustus Bacchus bard BATTLE OF PHILIPPI beauty beneath blest brows Brundusium Brutus Cæsar Catullus charms Chimæra Cinara dear death deep delight divine dost doth dread earth Epistles Epode fair fame fate father Faunus fear feeling fierce fire following Ode fresh Gelonian give gods grace Gyges hair hand happy hath heart honours Horace Horace's hour Jove live lord Lydia lyre Mæcenas morals Muse ne'er never night noble nobler numbers o'er Octavius once Orcus passion Phidyle Phyllis poem poet poet's poetry poor praise Pyrrha rich Roman Rome round Sabine Satires says Scythian shalt shore sing sire slaves smile song soul spare spirit stars strain stream sure sweet Sybaris Tarentum taste Telephus Teucer thee thine thou thought Thracian throng Tibullus translation Tyndaris Venus Venusia verse Virgil wealth Whilst wild wind wine young youth