Horace's Narrative Odes

Front Cover
Clarendon Press, 1997 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 382 pages
Narrative has not traditionally been a subject in the analysis of lyric poetry. This book deconstructs the polarity that divides and binds lyric and narrative means of representation in Horace's Odes. While myth is a canonical feature of Pindaric epinician, Horace cannot adopt the Pindaric mode for aesthetic and political reasons. Roman Callimacheanism's privileging of the small and elegant offers a pretext for Horace to shrink from the difficulty of writing praise poetry in the wake of civil war. But Horace by no means excludes story-telling from his enacted lyric. On the formal level, numerous odes contain narration. Together they constitute a larger narrative told over the course of Horace's two lyric collections. Horace tells the story of his development as a lyricist and of the competing aesthetic and political demands on his lyric poetry. At issue is whether he can ever truly become a poet of praise.

From inside the book

Contents

The Poetics of PresenceThe Poetics of Immortality
14
Degrees of Relevance
97
Civil War
138
Personal Narrative and the Fantastic or the Poet
187
The Roman Odes
224
Narrative Seduction
266
Praising Caesar
317
References
353
Index Locorum
369
General Index
375
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1997)

Michèle Lowrie is at New York University.

Bibliographic information