The Sixteenth Epistle of Horace

Classical Quarterly 10 (3-4):205- (1960)
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Abstract

Wishing to forestall an inquiry from Quinctius about the produce of his farm, Horace says that he will describe its forma et situs . What follows is not an impersonal description, but an account directed at Quinctius who is thought of as passing judgement on the farm . This involvement of Quinctius in the description must be extended to the protasis of the opening sentence of the description: continui montes si dissocientur opaca/valle…, temperiem laudes where the sense is something like ‘if you were to find yourself in a place where the mountains, which crowd close to one another, are parted…, you would praise its temperate climate

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Horace and Pacuvius.H. J. Rose - 1926 - Classical Quarterly 20 (3-4):204-.
Horace and Pacuvius.H. J. Rose - 1926 - Classical Quarterly 20 (3-4):204-206.

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