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The Epistles of Horace: Bilingual Edition
 
 
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The Epistles of Horace: Bilingual Edition [Paperback]

David Ferry (Author)

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Book Description

0374528527 978-0374528522 September 30, 2002 First Edition
My aim is to take familiar things and make
Poetry of them, and do it in such a way
That it looks as if it was as easy as could be
For anybody to do it . . . the power of making
A perfectly wonderful thing out of nothing much.
--from "The Art of Poetry"

When David Ferry's translation of The Odes of Horace appeared in 1997, Bernard Knox, writing in The New York Review of Books, called it "a Horace for our times." Now Ferry has translated Horace's two books of Epistles, in which Horace perfected the conversational verse medium that gives his voice such dazzling immediacy, speaking in these letters with such directness, wit, and urgency to young writers, to friends, to his patron Maecenas, to Emperor Augustus himself. It is the voice of a free man, talking about how to get along in a Roman world full of temptations, opportunities, and contingencies, and how to do so with one's integrity intact. Horace's world, so unlike our own and yet so like it, comes to life in these poems. And there are also the poems -- the famous "Art of Poetry" and others -- about the tasks and responsibilities of the writer: truth to the demands of one's medium, fearless clear-sighted self-knowledge, and unillusioned, uncynical realism, joyfully recognizing the world for what it is.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Best known to English readers as the author of the imposing Odes, Horace began and ended his career with the more personal and metrically less complex Satires and Epistles (the famous "Ars Poetica" among them). Having tackled the Odes (as well as Virgil's Eclogues), Ferry here uses a base of iambic pentameter as an equivalent to Horace's hexameter, and the freeness of the translation gives free reign to Horace's elegance and aphoristic wisdom. While the volume offers the Latin text on the facing page, those with a more scholarly bent are apt to be somewhat disappointed: no line correspondence or facilitating line numbers, and only a minimal glossary and notes are provided. And the translation may be a little too free. A passage truncated by Ferry as: "It's that I follow whatever is bad for me/ And shun the things that might be good for me," is given in full by Jacob Fuchs (Horace's Satires and Epistles) as: "I seek what injures me, flee what I think may help./ The wind blows me: in Rome I love Tibur, in Tibur Rome." Ferry's language is certainly smoother, but some readers may not know what they're missing. Still, most will find that Ferry's casually metrical renderings get the spirit and formal feeling right. (Aug. 13) Forecast: Ferry's selected poems, Of No Country I Know (Univ. of Chicago), recently won $10,000 prizes from the Academy of American Poets and the Library of Congress. While not having quite Robert Pinsky's (or even Robert Fagles's) name recognition as a poet-translator, Ferry's versions, backed by the FSG brand, should sell steadily and solidly, reeling in most browsers and comparison shoppers for the foreseeable future.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Horace's hexameter verse letters to his patron Maecenas, the Emperor Augustus, and his friends, including the famous "To the Pisos" (Ars Poetica), a classic statement on Roman poetics, are masterpieces of wit and wry wisdom. Latin inflections give Horace a conciseness and rhetorical snap that allow him to be both sententious and light at the same time. Ferry (emeritus, English, Wellesley Coll.; Of No Country I Know: New and Selected Poems and Translations) comes well equipped to translate Horace, having produced a version of The Odes of Horace as well as The Eclogues of Virgil. He renders The Epistles in fluent iambic pentameter. Because of the uninflected nature of English, his translations are accurate but less concise and rhetorically sharp. Smith Bovie's modern verse translations (1959. o.p.) come closer to Horace's tone, while Ferry is closer to the word. Ferry's version provides the Latin on the facing page and includes brief notes to identify names. Recommended for both public and academic libraries. T.L. Cooksey, Armstrong Atlantic State Univ., Savannah, GA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Prima dicte mihi, summa dicende Camena, spectatum satis et donatum iam rude quaeris, Maecenas, iterum antiquo me includere ludo? Read the first page
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