The Works of Horace: Translated Into English Verse, with a Life and Notes, Tom 1W. Blackwoods, 1881 |
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Strona xxi
... taste lawful joys elsewhere ; ' Trebonius ' 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 ...
... taste lawful joys elsewhere ; ' Trebonius ' 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 ...
Strona xxxi
... tastes and keenly alive to beauty is exposed in a luxurious city , where the prizes he values most are carried off , yet scarcely valued , by the wealthy vulgar , he was especially open to the besetting temptation of clever young men to ...
... tastes and keenly alive to beauty is exposed in a luxurious city , where the prizes he values most are carried off , yet scarcely valued , by the wealthy vulgar , he was especially open to the besetting temptation of clever young men to ...
Strona xxxii
... taste of his riper years led him to avoid that most worthless form of satire which attacks where rejoinder is impos- sible , and irritates the temper but cannot possibly amend the heart . In others , the lash is applied with no less ...
... taste of his riper years led him to avoid that most worthless form of satire which attacks where rejoinder is impos- sible , and irritates the temper but cannot possibly amend the heart . In others , the lash is applied with no less ...
Strona xlvi
... tastes , his great wealth was more than suffi- cient . He reclaimed the Esquiline Hill from being the public nuisance we have already described , laid it out in gardens , and in the midst of these built himself a sump- tuous palace ...
... tastes , his great wealth was more than suffi- cient . He reclaimed the Esquiline Hill from being the public nuisance we have already described , laid it out in gardens , and in the midst of these built himself a sump- tuous palace ...
Strona xlix
... taste in literature was , however , better than his execution . His style was diffuse , affected , and obscure ; but Seneca , who tells us this , and gives some examples which justify the criticism , tells us at the same time that his ...
... taste in literature was , however , better than his execution . His style was diffuse , affected , and obscure ; but Seneca , who tells us this , and gives some examples which justify the criticism , tells us at the same time that his ...
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