Horace: Odes II: Vatis Amici

Horace author David West editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:19th Nov '98

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Horace: Odes II: Vatis Amici cover

In these odes Horace creates lyric poetry in Latin which stands comparison with anything written by his brilliant predecessors in Greek. Of the three books published together in 23 BC the second is in many ways the most rewarding. The first ode, for instance, looks back at the civil wars fought by Caesar and Pompey, and by Octavian and Antony, from the point of view of Horace and his friend Pollio who both took part in them. There are also poems of friendship which give insight into the social and intellectual tone of the age of the first Roman emperor Augustus, and Horace's unique, elusive sense of humour is in evidence throughout. This book contains the Latin text (from the Oxford Classical Text), a translation which attempts to be close to the Latin while catching as much as possible of the flavour of the original, and a commentary which tries to suggest how these poems work as poetry.

David West takes a refreshing approach insofar as academic questions are sobered by looking at how the poems work as poems. * Quadrant No.405 *
The translation is characteristically clear and vivid, the commentary lucidly exegetical, providing almost all the historical, philosophical and literary information the reader (however general) needs for the interpretation of these densely allusive poems ... no reader of Horace's 'Odes' from scholar to school student will fail to gain a good deal from this book. * Stephen Harrison, Times Literary Supplement *

ISBN: 9780198721635

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 11mm

Weight: unknown

180 pages