By Propertius, W. A. Camps

Propertius, although his works are small in quantity, is without doubt one of the most effective poets of the Augustan age, and his writing has a undeniable entice sleek tastes (witness the admiration of Ezra Pound). ebook I is principally compatible for the reader short of a consultant choice of Propertius’ poetry. It stands by itself, having seemed within the first position as a separate assortment; it displays a unique section of the poet’s job (and of his emotional development); and it's the e-book which made his acceptance. This version is designed for the pocket of the college scholar, however it should still discover a wider viewers between classicists of every age. The advent presents the mandatory ancient and significant historical past and relates booklet I to the remainder of the elegies; the notes are useful and to the purpose; and the textual content has an affordable minimal of kit. There aren't any glossy variants of this dimension and scope.

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The poet is prisoner of a passion from which, at least with half of himself, he longs to be free. Of the motives used in developing the theme a number resemble motives that are used also by Tibullus and Horace, though not in identical applications. Compare for instance lines 1-4 with Tib. 11, iv, 1-4, line 7 with Tib. fT. with Tib. 1, iv, 47-50, lines 19 and 24 with Tib. I, ii, 45-6, line 25 with Hor. Epod. xi, 25-6, lines 27-8 with Tib. 1, v, 5-6 (where Tibullus uesires as punishment for his failing the same painful treatment that Propertius desires as a means of liberation), line 33 with Tib.

Liv. XXXVIII, xxxiii, 3 and xxxix, xii, 4; also Ter. Eun. 139. It is commonly understood here as standing for data acceptaquefideand meaning 1 as we have vowed to one another to do' or ' in accordance with our mutual pledges'. 17. non impune feres: cf. Cat. LXXVIII, 9 uerum idnon im- pune feres; Ov. Met. n , 474 haud impune feres 10-20. nee tibi m e . committee . nee te quaeret: she will not let Propertius keep company any more with Bassus, and she will not visit or invite {quaeret could mean either) Bassus herself.

Ille e t i a m . . : with this series compare 1, iii, 41-3 nam modo. rursus et. interdum. The present passage is said to be the only one in classical Latin poetry in which modo — Sometimes* in the first member of a series has not corresponding to it in the second member a word such as modo, saepe, turn, rursus, etc. 11. antris here = * rocky glens', as sometimes elsewhere in poetry (see Housman on Manilius v, 311). The word more regularly means a grotto, or the space sheltered by an overhanging rock.

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