The Satires and Epistles of Horace : a modern English verse translation /

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Horacio
Otros Autores: Bovie, Smith Palmer (tr.)
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Latín
Publicado: Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1959.
Colección:Phoenix books (Chicago, Ill.) ; P39.
Materias:
Aporte de:Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí
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035 |a (OCoLC)351522 
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041 1 |a eng  |h lat 
049 |a U@SA 
050 0 0 |a PA6396.S3  |b B63 1959 
100 0 |a Horacio. 
240 1 0 |a Satirae.  |l Inglés. 
245 1 4 |a The Satires and Epistles of Horace :  |b a modern English verse translation /  |c by Smith Palmer Bovie. 
260 |a Chicago :  |b University of Chicago Press,  |c 1959. 
300 |a vii, 318 p. :  |b 1 mapa ;  |c 21 cm. 
490 1 |a Phoenix books ;  |v P39 
500 |a Poemas latinos. 
504 |a Incluye referencias bibliográficas. 
505 0 |a [I] Satires: Introduction to Book One -- 1. Don't go overboard ; 2. Adultery is childish ; 3. But no one asked you to sing ; 4. And when I have time, I put something down on paper ; 5. From Rome to Brindisi, with stops ; 6. I am only a freedman's son ; 7. King Rex: off with his head ; 8. A little Walpurgisnacht music ; 9. Bored to distraction ; 10. The fine art of criticism -- Introduction to Book Two -- 1. To write or not to write? (A talk with my lawyer) ; 2. Plain living and high thinking ; 3. A Stoic sermon ; 4. Gourmet a la mode ; 5. How to recoup your losses ; 6. The town mouse and the country mouse ; 7. My slave is free to speak up for himself ; 8. Nasidienus has some friends in for dinner -- [II] Epistles: Introduction to Book One -- 1. To Maecenas (20 B.C.): Philosophy has clipped my wings ; 2. To Lollius Maximus (22 B.C.): Homer teaches us all how to live, but we have to do it ourselves ; 3. To Julius Florus, campaigning with Tiberius (20 B.C.): How are you out there with all those officers? What are you doing with your spare time? ; 4. To Albius Tibullus (24 B.C.): Don't be depressed, my friend. I'm not! ; 5. To Torquatus (22 B.C.): Come to dinner tonight, the twenty-second ; 6. To Numicius (no date): Nil admirari ; 7. To Maecenas (no date): I won't be coming to town this winter. Sorry! ; 8. To Celsus Albinovanus, campaigning with Tiberius (20 B.C.): I'm depressed. Hope you aren't ; 9. To Tiberius (20 B.C.): Recommending to you my friend Septimius ; 10. To Aristius Fuscus (21 B.C.): You can have the city. I'll take the country ; 11. To Bullatius (no date): How was your trip? ; 12. To Iccius, in Sicily (20 B.C.): Hope you are doing well in your work for the Department of External Revenue. But do look up Pompeius Grosphus. Here's the latest news from Rome ; 13. To Vinius Asina (23 B.C.): Please give these odes to Augustus, and watch what you're doing! ; 14. To the foreman on my farm (no date): You can have the city; I'll take the country ; 15. To Numonius Vala (22 B.C.): I'm planning to come south for the winter. What's it like down there? ; 16. To Quinctius (25 B.C.): Virtue is wisdom ; 17. To Scaeva (no date): How to win friends and influence patrons ; 18. To Lollius Maximus (20 B.C.): How to influence patrons: be yourself! ; 19. To Maecenas (20 B.C.): My lyric poetry is not derivative, it's contributive ; 20. To my first book of epistles (20 B.C.): I guess it's up to you to make your own way in the world -- Introduction to Book Two -- 1. The Epistle to Augustus: The literary tradition, and the role of our Roman writers ; 2. To Julius Florus, still campaigning with Tiberius: Literary ambitions, and how to survive them ; 3. The art of poetry. 
651 0 |a Rome  |v Poetry. 
651 7 |a Roma  |v Poesía.  |2 UDESA 
700 1 |a Bovie, Smith Palmer,  |e tr. 
700 0 2 |a Horacio.  |t Epistulae.  |l Inglés. 
830 0 |a Phoenix books (Chicago, Ill.) ;  |v P39.