Horace

Horace

EnglishPaperback / softback
Armstrong, David
Yale University Press
EAN: 9780300045734
Available at distributor
Delivery on Thursday, 25. of June 2026
CZK 567
Common price CZK 630
Discount 10%
pc
Do you want this product today?
Megabooks Praha Korunní
not available
Librairie Francophone Praha Štěpánská
not available
Megabooks Ostrava
not available
Megabooks Olomouc
not available
Megabooks Plzeň
not available
Megabooks Brno
not available
Megabooks Hradec Králové
not available
Megabooks České Budějovice
not available
Megabooks Liberec
not available

Detailed information

Among the greatest names in Roman—and European—poetry has always been that of Horace.  Through all the centuries since his death in 8 B.C., his superb poetic craftsmanship has remained unassailable.  Yet the full range and depth of his humanity continue to prove curiously elusive, especially for the nonspecialist reader to whom above all this book is directed.  In the days when Latin was generally read, Horace was too often seen as the poet of establishments, whether the establishment involved was the imperial Roman court, the aristocracy of Augustan England, or the nineteenth-century educational system, and something of that reputation has lingered on even into our own day. 
To see him thus is the entire aim of David Armstrong’s new study.  From it emerges not just the illustrious master (“famous, calm, and dead”) in the arts of lyric and satiric poetry, but the freedman’s son who struggled through the terrible upheavals of the collapsing Roman Republic to become, by sheer force of genius, a member of the brilliant circle surrounding the Emperor Augustus.  To the very end of that adventurous career on the fringes of power, Horace retained an extraordinary candor, independence, and common sense.  It is as the ultimate critic and connoisseur, not merely of literature but also of love and life itself, that he surveys the Augustan scene: the tragicomedy of bisexual politics in the demi-monde, the pretentious fashions of middle-class dinner parties, the pomposity of jurists and philosophers, the idiocies of the literati, and not least the grandeur and terror of a novel political entity—an empire almost coextensive with the known world.  The poetry thus restored to life proves to be a poetry for all thinking and feeling people. 
 
EAN 9780300045734
ISBN 0300045735
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher Yale University Press
Publication date March 7, 1990
Pages 192
Language English
Dimensions 210 x 140
Country United States
Readership Professional & Scholarly
Authors Armstrong, David
Series Hermes Books Series
Manufacturer information
The manufacturer's contact information is currently not available online, we are working intensively on the axle. If you need information, write us on [email protected], we will be happy to provide it.