The Works of HoraceUriah Hunt, 1899 - 357 |
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Strona 5
Horace. THE FIRST BOOK OF THE. ODES. OF. HORACE . ODE I. TO MÆCENAS . All men have different attachments : Horace's taste is for Lyric Poetry , for the success of which he depends upon the patronage of Mæcenas . MECENAS , descended from ...
Horace. THE FIRST BOOK OF THE. ODES. OF. HORACE . ODE I. TO MÆCENAS . All men have different attachments : Horace's taste is for Lyric Poetry , for the success of which he depends upon the patronage of Mæcenas . MECENAS , descended from ...
Strona 26
... MÆCENAS . The poet intimates to Mæcenas , who had offered him- self to be his guest , that he should only treat him with common wine , unless he himself brought better along with him . My dear knight Mæcenas , you shall drink at my ...
... MÆCENAS . The poet intimates to Mæcenas , who had offered him- self to be his guest , that he should only treat him with common wine , unless he himself brought better along with him . My dear knight Mæcenas , you shall drink at my ...
Strona 53
... you bid her hasten with her ivory lyre , not stay- ing to dress her hair , but being content to have it collected into a careless knot , after the Spartan fashion . ODE XII . TO MÆCENAS . That he was so 5 * 53 ODE XI. ...
... you bid her hasten with her ivory lyre , not stay- ing to dress her hair , but being content to have it collected into a careless knot , after the Spartan fashion . ODE XII . TO MÆCENAS . That he was so 5 * 53 ODE XI. ...
Strona 54
... Mæcenas , with more propriety shall recount the battles of Cæsar , and the necks of haughty kings led in triumph through the streets , in historical prose . It was the Muse's will that I should cele- brate the sweet strains of my ...
... Mæcenas , with more propriety shall recount the battles of Cæsar , and the necks of haughty kings led in triumph through the streets , in historical prose . It was the Muse's will that I should cele- brate the sweet strains of my ...
Strona 59
... MÆCENAS . He comforts Mæcenas , labouring under a perpetual fever , and denies that he can possibly survive him . WHY do you kill me with your complaints ? it is neither agreeable to the Gods , nor to me , that you should depart first ...
... MÆCENAS . He comforts Mæcenas , labouring under a perpetual fever , and denies that he can possibly survive him . WHY do you kill me with your complaints ? it is neither agreeable to the Gods , nor to me , that you should depart first ...
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