The Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Horace and the Elegiac Poets

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Clarendon Press, 1892 - 362 páginas
 

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Página 308 - I was confirmed in this opinion, that he, who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem...
Página 300 - Nam mihi non maior carae custodia matris, Aut sine te vitae cura sit ulla meae: Tu mihi sola domus, tu, Cynthia, sola parentes, Omnia tu nostrae tempora laetitiae. Seu tristis veniam seu contra laetus amicis, 25 Quidquid ero, dicam: 'Cynthia causa fuit.
Página xxii - 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...
Página 308 - Acherontis ad undas: nudus ad infernos, stulte, vehere rates. 15 victor cum victis pariter miscebitur umbris: consule cum Mario, capte lugurtha, sedes. Lydus Dulichio non distat Croesus ab Iro. optima mors, par cae quae venit acta die.
Página 39 - in me iacis ? est auctor quis denique eorum 80 vixi cum quibus? absentem qui rodit amicum, qui non defendit alio culpante, solutos qui captat risus hominum famamque dicacis, fingere qui non visa potest, commissa tacere qui nequit, hie niger est, hunc tu, Romane, caveto.
Página 241 - ... sic placeam vobis: alius sit fortis in armis, sternat et adversos Marte favente duces, 30 ut mihi potanti possit sua dicere facta miles et in mensa pingere castra mero.
Página 306 - Paete, quid aetatem numeras ? quid cara natanti Mater in ore tibi est ? non habet unda deos. Nam tibi nocturnis ad saxa ligata procellis Omnia detrito vinculo fune cadunt.
Página 246 - Scyllaque virgineam canibus succincta figuram, 90 nec te conceptam saeva leaena tulit, barbara nec Scythiae tellus horrendave Syrtis, sed culta et duris non habitanda domus et longe ante alias omnes mitissima mater isque pater quo non alter amabilior.
Página 277 - Ut, quod non esses, esse putaret amor, Et color est totiens roseo collatus Eoo, Cum tibi quaesitus candor in ore foret: Quod mihi non patrii poterant avertere amici, Eluere aut vasto Thessala saga mari.
Página 241 - Et procul ardentes , hinc procul . abde faces. Vos celebrem cantate Deum , pecorique vocate Voce; palam pecori, clam sibi quisque vocet : Aut etiam sibi quisque palam : nam turba jocosa \ Obstrepit , et Phrygio tibia curva sono. Lud ¡t«; jamNox jungit equos, cunumque sequuntur Matris lascivo Sidera fulva choro. Postque venit tacitus fuscis circumdatus alis Somnus , et incerto Somnia nigra pede.

Acerca del autor (1892)

Andrew Lang was born at Selkirk in Scotland on March 31, 1844. He was a historian, poet, novelist, journalist, translator, and anthropologist, in connection with his work on literary texts. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy, St. Andrews University, and Balliol College, Oxford University, becoming a fellow at Merton College. His poetry includes Ballads and Lyrics of Old France (1872), Ballades in Blue China (1880--81), and Grass of Parnassus (1888--92). His anthropology and his defense of the value of folklore as the basis of religion is expressed in his works Custom and Myth (1884), Myth, Ritual and Religion (1887), and The Making of Religion (1898). He also translated Homer and critiqued James G. Frazer's views of mythology as expressed in The Golden Bough. He was considered a good historian, with a readable narrative style and knowledge of the original sources including his works A History of Scotland (1900-7), James VI and the Gowrie Mystery (1902), and Sir George Mackenzie (1909). He was one of the most important collectors of folk and fairy tales. His collections of Fairy books, including The Blue Fairy Book, preserved and handed down many of the better-known folk tales from the time. He died of angina pectoris on July 20, 1912.

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