Tag: Horace
A number of the heavy-weights of Roman literature were freed slaves. Terence, for example, was an African slave, brought to Rome by a senator. His master became impressed with his literary talent and, insensitive to the demotion in quality of life and pay it would mean, freed him from slavery to become a playwright. Horace, … Read More
Ovid was “revered among Elizabethan pedagogues” according to R.W. Maslen (Shakespeare’s Ovid, p. 17). It sounds like a terrible fate, to be revered by a pedagogue, let alone a bunch of Elizabethan ones. I don’t know for certain what happens if one reveres you, but if one kisses you, I think you get warts. Or … Read More
Book XV is more than the coda to the Metamorphoses. It too is a transformation. Here at the end of Ovid’s poem, he turns from fable to the real historical figure of Julius Caesar so that mythology itself metamorphoses into history. In this same Book, Ovid invites Pythagoras into the narrative as spokesman for the … Read More
It’s almost shocking how modern and relevant Horace’s social commentary reads today. Every character type he attacks I recognize from my own experience. Every flaw he describes in himself I recognize in myself. He’s caustic, crude, witty, self-deprecating, down-to-earth, and wise in his guidance on how to live and how to write. His voice is … Read More