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  1.  2
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 4, the Early Principate.E. J. Kenney & Wendell Vernon Clausen (eds.) - 1983 - Cambridge University Press.
    'Perfection is finality; finality is death'. The poets and prose writers of the first and early second centuries AD were not deterred by the towering stature of their Augustan predecessors from attempting new and often brilliant variations on the now traditional themes and genres. The so-called 'Silver' Age of Latin literature has tended to be characterized in terms of dismissive or question- begging stereotypes - 'decadent', 'rhetorical', 'baroque', 'mannerist' - as a substitute for close critical argument. From the sympathetic but (...)
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  2.  4
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 3, the Age of Augustus.E. J. Kenney & Wendell Vernon Clausen (eds.) - 1983 - Cambridge University Press.
    The sixty years between 43 BC, when Cicero was assassinated, and AD 17, when Ovid died in exile and disgrace, saw an unexampled explosion of literary creativity in Rome. Fresh ground was broken in almost every existing genre, and a new kind of specifically Roman poetry, the personal love-elegy, was born, flourished, and succumbed to its own success. Latin literature now became, in the familiar modern sense of the word, classical: a balanced fusion of what was best and most stimulating (...)
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  3.  2
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 2, the Late Republic.E. J. Kenney & Wendell Vernon Clausen (eds.) - 1983 - Cambridge University Press.
    This volume covers a relatively short span of time, rather less than the first three-quarters of the first century BC; but it was an age of profoundly important developments, with enduring consequences for the subsequent history of Latin literature. Original and innovative in widely differing ways as was the work of Lucretius, Sallust and Caesar in particular, the scene is dominated, historically, by two figures: Cicero and Catullus. Cicero was a politician and a man of affairs as well as a (...)
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