This wide-ranging selection showcases the work of one of ancient Rome's
master poets--and originator of the phrase "carpe diem"--whose influence
on poetry can be traced through the centuries into our own time.
Quintus Horatius Flaccus, who lived from 65 to 8 BCE, saw the death of
the Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire and was
personally acquainted with the emperor Augustus and the poet Virgil. He
was famous during his lifetime and since for his odes and epodes, for
his satires and epistles, and for Ars Poetica. His lyric poems, brief
and allusive, have been translated into English by a range of famous
poets, including Milton, Ben Jonson, John Dryden, William Cowper, A. E.
Housman, Ezra Pound, Louis MacNeice, Robert Lowell--and even Queen
Elizabeth I and the Victorian prime minister William Gladstone.
Horace's masterly verses have inspired poets from antiquity to
modernity, and his injunction to "seize the day" has echoed through the
ages. This anthology of superb English translations shows how Horace has
permeated English literature for five centuries.