icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Log out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Horace and His Influence

Chapter 4 Horace the Prophet

Word Count: 972    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

er part is detached and judicial estimation of his work, a second part literary convention, and

rests upon him preserved him in the rout at Philippi, rescued him from the Sabine wolf, saved him from death by the falling tree and the waters of shipwreck. He will abide under its shadow wherever he may go,-to his favorite haunts in Latium, to the 071 far north where fierce Britons offer up the stranger to their gods, to the far east and the blazing sands of the Syri

ge; let no one

mly show of g

me, who shall

empty honor

ong men, ever springing afre

ronze nor pyr

ll outlive my

I build, to

n, nor raging

ng through the

troy. I shall

l have of me b

praise shall

7

iest and sile

steep, tongues

orace rose a

us's rushin

and where rustic

ht Grecian num

ure. Muse! th

I am thine til

lpomene, O

elphic bay gir

known. The Muse forbids him to attempt the epic strain or the praise of Augustus and Agrippa. In the face of grand themes like these, his genius is slight. He will not essay even the strain of Simonides in the lament for an Empire stained by

t, especially as he grows older and more philosophic, and perhaps less lyri

ride nor a

Theban ea

ith supre

e azure de

orld the poem that henceforth can never be recalled. The only inspiration he claims for Satire and Epistle, which, he says, approximate the style of spoken discourse, lies in the aptness and patience with which he fashio

with some secret pride, but surely with a philosophic resignation that is like good-humored despair, he sees that the path is pedagogical. In reproachful tones, he addresses the book of Epistles that is so eager to try its fortune in the big world: But if the prophet is not blinded by disgust at your foolishness, you will be prized at Rome until the charm of youth has left you. Then, soiled and worn by much handling of

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
1 Chapter 1 Horace the Poet2 Chapter 2 Horace the Interpreter of His Times3 Chapter 3 Horace the Philosopher of Life4 Chapter 4 Horace the Prophet5 Chapter 5 Horace and Ancient Rome6 Chapter 6 Horace and the Middle Age7 Chapter 7 Horace and the Literary Ideal8 Chapter 8 No.89 Chapter 9 Horace and Literary Creation10 Chapter 10 VITAS HINNULEO11 Chapter 11 No.1112 Chapter 12 No.1213 Chapter 13 No.1314 Chapter 14 Horace in the Living of Men15 Chapter 15 No.1516 Chapter 16 No.1617 Chapter 17 No.1718 Chapter 18 No.1819 Chapter 19 20 Chapter 20 No.2021 Chapter 21 No.2122 Chapter 22 NOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY23 Chapter 23 No.2324 Chapter 24 John A. Scott, Northwestern University.25 Chapter 25 David M. Robinson, The Johns Hopkins University.26 Chapter 26 Louis E. Lord, Oberlin College.27 Chapter 27 Charles D. Adams, Dartmouth College.28 Chapter 28 Lane Cooper, Cornell University.29 Chapter 29 Alfred E. Zimmern, University of Wales.30 Chapter 30 Francis G. Allinson, Brown University.31 Chapter 31 Charles Knapp, Barnard College, Columbia University.32 Chapter 32 Karl P. Harrington, Wesleyan University.33 Chapter 33 George Depue Hadzsits, University of Pennsylvania.34 Chapter 34 Edward K. Rand, Harvard University.35 Chapter 35 Grant Showerman, University of Wisconsin.36 Chapter 36 John William Mackail, Balliol College, Oxford.37 Chapter 37 Richard Mott Gummere, The William Penn Charter School.38 Chapter 38 G. Ferrero, Florence.39 Chapter 39 Paul Nixon, Bowdoin College.40 Chapter 40 Alfred Edward Taylor, University of Edinburgh.41 Chapter 41 John L. Stocks, University of Manchester, Manchester.42 Chapter 42 Robert Mark Wenley, University of Michigan.43 Chapter 43 Roland G. Kent, University of Pennsylvania.44 Chapter 44 (Greek) W. Rhys Roberts, Leeds University.45 Chapter 45 Walter W. Hyde, University of Pennsylvania.46 Chapter 46 Gordon J. Laing, University of Chicago. 17947 Chapter 47 Jane Ellen Harrison, Newnham College, Cambridge.48 Chapter 48 Clifford H. Moore, Harvard University.49 Chapter 49 James T. Allen, University of California.50 Chapter 50 Ernest Barker, King's College, University of London.51 Chapter 51 Frank Frost Abbott, Princeton University.52 Chapter 52 Roscoe Pound, Harvard Law School.53 Chapter 53 M.T. Rostovtzeff, Yale University.54 Chapter 54 E.S. McCartney, University of Michigan.55 Chapter 55 Roy J. Deferrari, The Catholic University of America.56 Chapter 56 Henry Osborn Taylor, New York.57 Chapter 57 David Eugene Smith, Teachers College, Columbia University.58 Chapter 58 H.R. Fairclough, Leland Stanford Junior University.59 Chapter 59 Franz Cumont, Brussels.60 Chapter 60 Arthur Fairbanks, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.61 Chapter 61 Alfred M. Brooks, Swarthmore College.62 Chapter 62 Alexander P. Gest, Philadelphia.63 Chapter 63 Charles Burton Gulick, Harvard University.64 Chapter 64 Walton B. McDaniel, University of Pennsylvania.65 Chapter 65 Andrew F. West, Princeton University.66 Chapter 66 Paul Shorey, University of Chicago.67 Chapter 67 Théodore Reinach, Paris.68 Chapter 68 Rodolfo Lanciani, Rome.