Horace Odes 3Oxford University Press, 2002 - 280 strán (strany) The aim of this book is to provide a translation and commentary which will help newcomers to Horace, whether or not they know Latin, to understand how the poetry works. This third book of Odes begins with the 'Roman odes' in praise of Augustus, the ruthless politician who had won control over the whole known world. These poems should, therefore, interest historians as poetic presentations of an ideology, and students of literature as the work of a man who found ways of praising while asserting his independence. Part of his strategy is to follow the political odes with an array of poems on love, friendship, country life, religion, and on poetry, all of them filled with delight in life and a unique sense of humour. |
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Actium adjective Aeneas Aeneid Alcaeus allusion Antony Asclepiad Asterie Augustan Augustus auspex Bacchus beginning Caesar Camenae Cassius Dio Catullus celebration Chloe Chloris Cleopatra death drinking Enipeus Epicurean Epistles Europa example farm father Faunus Formiae Galatea girl give goddess gods Greek Gyges Hebrus hint honour Horace Horace's Horatian humour husband hymn Hypermestra interpretation Inventory Italian Italy Jupiter king Latin Libitina live lover Lucretius Lupercalia Lyde Lydia lyre lyric Maecenas marriage mean Mercury metaphor metre moral Murena Muses myth Nearchus neque Nisbet and Hubbard nunc Octavian patron Phidyle Pindar poem poet poetry praise quae quod readers reference Regulus Res Gestae Roman Odes Rome Romulus Sabine estate Satires sense sexual slave stanza Suetonius suggests syllables Syndikus Telephus tibi tone translation trochees Venus verb villa Virgil virtue wealth wife wine woman word young