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  • Beginning Latin Poetry Reader: 70 Selections from the Great Periods of Roman Verse and Drama

    Beginning Latin Poetry Reader by Betts, Gavin; Franklin, Daniel;

    70 Selections from the Great Periods of Roman Verse and Drama

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    Product details:

    • Publisher McGraw Hill
    • Date of Publication 16 September 2006

    • ISBN 9780071458856
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages320 pages
    • Size 226x152x14 mm
    • Weight 433 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Embrace your Roman muse!

    As a learner of Latin, you want to experience the Roman world by reading its writers in their original language. But you may be unsure where to begin in the classical canon or you may worry that your Latin skills are insufficient to tackle authentic texts.

    Requiring only a grounding in the basics, Beginning Latin Poetry Reader lets you explore the rich and diverse range of Latin verse, including epics, comedies, satires, lyric poetry, and even graffiti! Inside you'll find seventy selections from authors of the early Republic such as Plautus and Terrance as well as those of the Golden and Silver Ages such as Vergil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal--all supported by helpful footnotes and English translations. This book also includes a clear overview of Latin syntax and the metrics of its verse, a glossary of all Latin words found in the readings, and a time line showing the historical and literary context of each author.

    Lose yourself in:

    • the sparkling comedies of Plautus
    • the intimate love poetry of Catullus
    • the majestic hexameters of Vergil
    • the elegant lyricism of Horace
    • the refined sensuality of Ovid
    • the compelling satires of Juvenal
    • the bristly epigrams of Martial

    More

    Long description:

    Embrace your Roman muse!

    As a learner of Latin, you want to experience the Roman world by reading its writers in their original language. But you may be unsure where to begin in the classical canon or you may worry that your Latin skills are insufficient to tackle authentic texts.

    Requiring only a grounding in the basics, Beginning Latin Poetry Reader lets you explore the rich and diverse range of Latin verse, including epics, comedies, satires, lyric poetry, and even graffiti! Inside you'll find seventy selections from authors of the early Republic such as Plautus and Terrance as well as those of the Golden and Silver Ages such as Vergil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal--all supported by helpful footnotes and English translations. This book also includes a clear overview of Latin syntax and the metrics of its verse, a glossary of all Latin words found in the readings, and a time line showing the historical and literary context of each author.

    Lose yourself in:

    • the sparkling comedies of Plautus
    • the intimate love poetry of Catullus
    • the majestic hexameters of Vergil
    • the elegant lyricism of Horace
    • the refined sensuality of Ovid
    • the compelling satires of Juvenal
    • the bristly epigrams of Martial


    Embrace your Roman muse!

    As a learner of Latin, you want to experience the Roman world by reading its writers in their original language. But you may be unsure where to begin in the classical canon or you may worry that your Latin skills are insufficient to tackle authentic texts.

    Requiring only a grounding in the basics, Beginning Latin Poetry Reader lets you explore the rich and diverse range of Latin verse, including epics, comedies, satires, lyric poetry, and even graffiti! Inside you'll find seventy selections from authors of the early Republic such as Plautus and Terrance as well as those of the Golden and Silver Ages such as Vergil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal--all supported by helpful footnotes and English translations. This book also includes a clear overview of Latin syntax and the metrics of its verse, a glossary of all Latin words found in the readings, and a time line showing the historical and literary context of each author.

    Lose yourself in:

    • the sparkling comedies of Plautus
    • the intimate love poetry of Catullus
    • the majestic hexameters of Vergil
    • the elegant lyricism of Horace
    • the refined sensuality of Ovid
    • the compelling satires of Juvenal
    • the bristly epigrams of Martial

    More

    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    A Time Line of Latin Literature
    A Map of Italy, Greece, and the Troad
    A Map of Rome in Late Antiquity
    Forma Urbis Romae
    Abbreviations
    POETRY SELECTIONS
    ENNIUS The Dream of Ilia
    PLAUTUS A Quarrel Between Slaves
    TERENCE An Insolent Slave
    —Verse Epitaphs
    CATULUS The New Eroticism
    LUCRETIUS The Inevitability of Death
    True Piety
    CATULLUS Love and Rejection
    The Effect of Love
    Lesbia's Sparrow
    Dental Hygiene in the Provinces
    A Social Climber
    An Invitation to Dinner
    A Brother's Tears
    Ariadne on Naxos
    PUBLILIUS SYRUS Worldly Wisdom
    VERGIL Unrequited Love
    Italy
    Orpheus and Eurydice
    Of Arms and the Man
    The Capture of a Royal Palace
    The Shade of Dido
    The Emperor Augustus
    The Roman Mission
    HORACE Hope Not for Immortality
    The Death of a Friend
    A Quiet Drink
    Seize the Day!
    An Old Love Revived
    Caught by a Bore!
    The Lessons of Homer
    Live How We Can, Yet Die We Must
    The Favor of the Muse
    PROPERTIUS An Intoxicated Lover
    Love's Miseries
    Therefore Is Love Said to Be a Child ...
    The End of a Wild Party
    TIBULLUS The Golden Age
    A Face That's Best by Its Own Beauty Blest ...
    LYGDAMUS You Are My Heart's Desire
    OVID Sophistication Ars amātōria 3.113–128
    The Immortality of Verse
    Ovid's Last Night in Rome
    Deucalion and Pyrrha
    A Storm at Sea
    Arion and the Dolphin
    Ovid's Early Life
    Pyramus and Thisbe
    MANILIUS The Folly of Human Desires
    PHAEDRUS The Horse and the Wild Boar
    PERSIUS An Atypical Poet
    SENECA Is There Life After Death?
    LUCAN Pompey and Caesar
    Cato at the Oracle of Jupiter Ammon
    VALERIUS FLACCUS A Pep Talk
    STATIUS Insomnia
    SILIUS ITALICUS Scipio and Syphax
    MARTIAL A Pleasant Retirement
    Some Odd Characters
    Wisecracks
    The Happy Life
    A Roman's Day
    JUVENAL The Necessity of Writing Satire
    An Adventurous Woman
    The Emptiness of Military Glory
    —The Vigil of Venus
    CLAUDIAN The Happy Peasant
    Grammar
    Metrics
    Translations
    Glossary

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