The Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Horace and the Elegiac Poets, Volume 2 |
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Page xxix
... Moral Philosophy . He was a man of noble character and of striking appearance , the ideal of what a philosopher should be . His wife and his family were remarkable for humour and social charm , and many famous people in literature ...
... Moral Philosophy . He was a man of noble character and of striking appearance , the ideal of what a philosopher should be . His wife and his family were remarkable for humour and social charm , and many famous people in literature ...
Page xxx
... Moral Philosophy at Oxford , and Fellow of Merton College . Mr. Wallace was so easily our foremost scholar , that competition with him was hardly to be dreamed of . But the stimulus of competition was needless to all who were able to ...
... Moral Philosophy at Oxford , and Fellow of Merton College . Mr. Wallace was so easily our foremost scholar , that competition with him was hardly to be dreamed of . But the stimulus of competition was needless to all who were able to ...
Page xxxii
... moral strength , of the great and genial Augustan poet . To appreciate Horace is not given to boys ; intelligence and love of him come with the maturer mind . And yet , one still has an instinct which tells one that , of the two lyrists ...
... moral strength , of the great and genial Augustan poet . To appreciate Horace is not given to boys ; intelligence and love of him come with the maturer mind . And yet , one still has an instinct which tells one that , of the two lyrists ...
Page 3
... Moral Epistles . The criticism which the age needed , and which , so far as criticism could , pointed the way to a more masculine type of poetry than that actually realised by the poets who came after him , was expounded in the poetical ...
... Moral Epistles . The criticism which the age needed , and which , so far as criticism could , pointed the way to a more masculine type of poetry than that actually realised by the poets who came after him , was expounded in the poetical ...
Page 10
... moral tendencies which fitted him to be the genial satirist of his age . Another , and quite different gift , he seems first to have become conscious of in the early years passed near Venusia . He has , like the other great Italian ...
... moral tendencies which fitted him to be the genial satirist of his age . Another , and quite different gift , he seems first to have become conscious of in the early years passed near Venusia . He has , like the other great Italian ...
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The Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Horace and the Elegiac Poets William Young Sellar Limited preview - 2010 |
Common terms and phrases
addressed admiration Alcaeus ancient appears artistic Augustan age Augustus battle of Actium Caesar career Catullus character charm Cicero composition connexion contemporaries criticism Cynthia death Delia didactic earlier earliest Edinburgh Academy elegiac poets elegies enjoyed Ennius Epicureanism Epistles Epodes ethical expression familiar favour feeling friends genial genius Greek happiness honour Horace Horace's human idealising imagination impression influence inspiration interest intimacy irony Italian Julius Florus Juvenal later Latin letters lines literary literature living Lucilius Lucretius lyrical art lyrical poets Maecenas Messalla metre mind modern mood moral nature Odes Ovid passages passion philosophy pleasure poem poetical poetry probably Propertius realised recognise reflexion relation Republic Roman poets Rome Sabellian Sabine farm Satires satirist second book seems Sellar sense serious shows social society speaks spirit style sympathy Tacitus taste temper thought Tibullus Tibur tion tone Varius Venusia verse Virgil words writings written youth καὶ
Popular passages
Page 114 - Munus et officium, nil scribens ipse, docebo ; Unde parentur opes ; quid alat formetque poetam ; Quid deceat, quid non ; quo virtus, quo ferat error.
Page xxvii - Myself when young did eagerly frequent Doctor and Saint, and heard great argument About it and about : but evermore Came out by the same door where in I went...
Page 302 - Ordiar et caeso moenia firma Remo, Eductosque pares silvestri ex ubere reges, Crescet et ingenium sub tua iussa meum...
Page 168 - Non possidentem multa vocaveris Recte beatum; rectius occupat Nomen beati, qui deorum Muneribus sapienter uti Duramque callet pauperiem pati Peiusque leto flagitium timet, Non ille pro caris amicis Aut patria timidus perire.
Page 318 - ... nec tibi clamatae somnus amarus erit. sola eris et solos spectabis, Cynthia, montes et pecus et fines pauperis agricolae. illic te nulli poterunt corrumpere ludi, fanaque peccatis plurima causa tuis. 10 illic assidue tauros spectabis arantes, et vitem docta ponere falce comas ; atque ibi rara feres inculto tura sacello, haedus ubi agrestes corruet ante focos ; protinus et nuda choreas imitabere sura ; omnia ab externo sint modo tuta viro.
Page 315 - ... niger clauderet ora liquor : 'Di maris Aegaei quos sunt penes aequora, Venti, Et quaecumque meum degravat unda caput, Quo rapitis miseros tenerae lanuginis annos?
Page 111 - Vivere si recte nescis decede peritis. Lusisti satis, edisti satis atque bibisti : Tempus abire tibi est, ne potum largius aequo Rideat et pulset lasciva decentius aetas.
Page 243 - Messalla meus, cui dulcia poma Delia selectis detrahat arboribus: Et tantum venerata virum, hunc sedula curet, Huic paret atque epulas ipsa ministra gerat.