Horace, Odes 3.7: An Erotic _Odyssey_?

Classical Quarterly 38 (01):186- (1988)
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Abstract

Horace's Asterie ode has been somewhat neglected by critics. Fraenkel, uninterested in the erotic odes, fails to mention it, and others see it as merely counterbalancing the preceding six Roman Odes by its frivolity and light irony. However, it is one of Horace's most subtle and best-organized erotic odes, matching the more obvious conventions of Latin love-elegy with a romanticized Odyssey as an underlying framework

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A Pattern of Word Order in Latin Poetry.T. E. V. Pearce - 1968 - Classical Quarterly 18 (2):334-354.
A Pattern Of Word Order In Latin Poetry.T. E. V. Pearce - 1968 - Classical Quarterly 18 (2):334-354.

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