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  1. Horace 'The Epodes' and 'Carmen Saeculare': a new, downloadable English translation.

  2. At any rate it represents Horace's feelings in the years imniediately following Philippi, before he became the friend of Maecenas and accepted the rule of Octavian. Cf. Sellar, p.120, 'Horace seems to express the feelings of the losing side before the peace of Brundisium.

  3. Horace The Odes, Epodes, Satires, Epistles, Ars Poetica and Carmen Saeculare. A new complete downloadable English translation of the Odes and other poetry translations including Lorca, Petrarch, Propertius, and Mandelshtam.

  4. The Epodes (Latin: Epodi or Epodon liber; also called Iambi) are a collection of iambic poems written by the Roman poet Horace. They were published in 30 BC and form part of his early work alongside the Satires .

  5. Epode II. The praise of country life in the manner of Vergil (Georg. 2.458 sqq.), with touches rescuibling, if not suggested by, the idyllic passages in Aristophanes (Pax, 569; Νῆσοι, 1). 'The profusion of detail is a mark of Horace's earlier muse' (Sellar), but the poem is very beautiful, and is converted into a satire only by the ...

  6. The poetry of Horace (born 65 BCE) is richly varied, its focus moving between public and private concerns, urban and rural settings, Stoic and Epicurean thought. Here is a new Loeb Classical Library edition of the great Roman poet's Odes and Epodes, a fluid translation facing the Latin text.

  7. A new, unexpurgated English translation of Horace’s Epodes, and Carmen Saeculare. Horace’s The Epodes is a collection of 17 poems utilising a variety of metres that were largely influenced by the Greek poet Archilochus.

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