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  2. Horace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace

    Now at the start of the third millennium, poets are still absorbing and re-configuring the Horatian influence, sometimes in translation (such as a 2002 English/American edition of the Odes by thirty-six poets) [nb 38] and sometimes as inspiration for their own work (such as a 2003 collection of odes by a New Zealand poet). [nb 39]

  3. Odes (Horace) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odes_(Horace)

    The Roman writer Petronius, writing less than a century after Horace's death, remarked on the curiosa felicitas (studied spontaneity) of the Odes (Satyricon 118). The English poet Alfred Tennyson declared that the Odes provided "jewels five-words long, that on the stretched forefinger of all Time / Sparkle for ever" (The Princess, part II, l ...

  4. Gaius Asinius Pollio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaius_Asinius_Pollio

    Gaius Asinius Pollio (75 BC – AD 4) [1] was a Roman soldier, politician, orator, poet, playwright, literary critic, and historian, whose lost contemporaneous history provided much of the material used by the historians Appian and Plutarch. Pollio was most famously a patron of Virgil and a friend of Horace and poems to him were dedicated by ...

  5. Ovid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovid

    Ovid is most famous for the Metamorphoses, a continuous mythological narrative in fifteen books written in dactylic hexameters. He is also known for works in elegiac couplets such as Ars Amatoria ("The Art of Love") and Fasti. His poetry was much imitated during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, and greatly influenced Western art and literature.

  6. Latin prosody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_prosody

    The following article provides an overview of those laws as practised by Latin poets in the late Roman Republic and early Roman Empire, with verses by Catullus, Horace, Virgil and Ovid as models. Except for the early Saturnian poetry, which may have been accentual, Latin poets borrowed all their verse forms from the Greeks, despite significant ...

  7. Gaius Maecenas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaius_Maecenas

    However, since the organization of the Odes is not entirely chronological, and their composition followed both books of Satires and the Epodes, this argument is plainly specious; but doubtless the milieu of Maecenas's circle influenced the writing of the Roman Odes (III.1–6) and others such as the ode to Pollio, Motum ex Metello (II.1).

  8. Catullus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catullus

    Catullus's poems have been preserved in an anthology of 116 carmina (the actual number of poems may slightly vary in various editions), which can be divided into three parts according to their form: approximately sixty short poems in varying meters, called polymetra, nine longer poems, and forty-eight epigrams in elegiac couplets. Each of these ...

  9. Tibullus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibullus

    The three poems constitute the longest poetic project in Roman literature having homosexual love as theme. [11] The first of these poems, 1.4, begins with an imprecation of the poet to the god Priapus, asking for advice on how to win over beautiful boys. The god advises patience and that the man in love yield to the beloved boy's every whim and ...