Quinti Horati Flacci opera omnia: The odes, Carmen saeculare, and epodes |
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Results 1-5 of 61
Page 5
... whole Odes in Book I , Odes 3-7 , 9 , 11 , 33 and 34 ; in Book III , Ode 3 ; and of Book IV , Odes 3 and 15 , besides parts of twenty - one more Odes and Epodes , viz . Odes 1. 10. 14 , I. 15. 20–32 , 1. 16. 15–28 , 1. 17. 15 , 16. 1 ...
... whole Odes in Book I , Odes 3-7 , 9 , 11 , 33 and 34 ; in Book III , Ode 3 ; and of Book IV , Odes 3 and 15 , besides parts of twenty - one more Odes and Epodes , viz . Odes 1. 10. 14 , I. 15. 20–32 , 1. 16. 15–28 , 1. 17. 15 , 16. 1 ...
Page 7
... whole , therefore , it exhibits a worse text , more blunders and fatuities . On the other hand it is tenacious of the true text where the intelligent interpolators of class 2 have obscured it . In it are placed generally F ( = ) , X ...
... whole , therefore , it exhibits a worse text , more blunders and fatuities . On the other hand it is tenacious of the true text where the intelligent interpolators of class 2 have obscured it . In it are placed generally F ( = ) , X ...
Page 19
... whole can have been published , is fixed mainly by the reference in Od . 1. 12. 45–48 . Marcellus died in the autumn of B. C. 23. It is in- conceivable that these lines should be ( as Ritter suggests ) a complimen- tary allusion to one ...
... whole can have been published , is fixed mainly by the reference in Od . 1. 12. 45–48 . Marcellus died in the autumn of B. C. 23. It is in- conceivable that these lines should be ( as Ritter suggests ) a complimen- tary allusion to one ...
Page 25
... whole collection was complete , it is of course beyond our power to guess : but we mean that the three Books were arranged as we have them by Horace himself , at one time , and intended to be read as a whole . 6 § 10. This can hardly be ...
... whole collection was complete , it is of course beyond our power to guess : but we mean that the three Books were arranged as we have them by Horace himself , at one time , and intended to be read as a whole . 6 § 10. This can hardly be ...
Page 26
... whole - as e . g . in the relation of 4. I to 1. 19 and 3. 26 , as one of the earliest and the latest of the love Odes of his earlier poetry . Above all , it is only when this unity is recognized that we perceive that full significance ...
... whole - as e . g . in the relation of 4. I to 1. 19 and 3. 26 , as one of the earliest and the latest of the love Odes of his earlier poetry . Above all , it is only when this unity is recognized that we perceive that full significance ...
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Common terms and phrases
adjective Aesch Alcaeus Apollo Apulia Asclepiad atque Augustus Bentley Caesar Cicero clause Compare consul contrast cura death deorum Diana Dill Dion domos dulce edition Ennius epithet Epod expression Faunus foll genitive gives Greek Hadriae Horace Horace's imply inter interpretation Introd Iovis Iuppiter Keller Line lyra Madv Maecenas manus mare meaning metaphor metre mihi nefas neque nunc Octavianus omnes Orelli Ovid pater perhaps poem poet poetry Porph probably puer quae quam quibus quid quis quod quotes reading reference Ritter Roman Rome Schol Scholia Scholiasts seems semper sense Sextus Pompeius sive Soph stanza Suetonius suggested Telephus Teucer tibi Tibur tion Troy unda Venus verb verse Virg Virgil wine word δὲ ἐν καὶ μὲν τε τὸ
Popular passages
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Page 161 - Ule et nefasto te posuit die, quicumque primum, et sacrilega manu produxit, arbos, in nepotum perniciem opprobriumque pagi ; illum et parentis crediderim sui fregisse cervicem...
Page 16 - Maecenas signa tabellis/ dixeris, experiar: 'si vis, potes' ad dit et instat. 40 septimus octavo propior iam fugerit annus, ex quo Maecenas me coepit habere suorum in numero, dumtaxat ad hoc, quem tollere rueda vellet iter faciens, et cui concredere nugas hoc genus, 'hora quota est? Thraex est Gallina Syro par? 45 matutina parum cautos iam frigora mordent : ' et quae rimosa bene deponuntur in aure.
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Page 187 - ODI profanum vulgus et arceo : favete linguis ; carmina non prius audita Musarum sacerdos virginibus puerisque canto, regum timendorum in proprios greges, reges in ipsos imperium est lovis, clari Giganteo triumpho, cuneta supercilio moventis.