Latin Literature
Latin Literature
Book Excerpt
erse, he who first brought down from lovely Helicon a garland of evergreen leaf to sound and shine throughout the nations of Italy," was no less than due from a poet who owed so much to Ennius in manner and versification.
It is not known when the Annales were lost; there are doubtful indications of their existence in the earlier Middle Ages. The extant fragments, though they amount only to a few hundred lines, are sufficient to give a clear idea of the poet's style and versification, and of the remarkable breadth and sagacity which made the poem a storehouse of civil wisdom for the more cultured members of the ruling classes at Rome, no less than a treasury of rhythm and phrase for the poets. In the famous single lines like--
Non cauponantes bellum sed belligerantes,
or--
Quem nemo ferro potuit superare me auro,
or--
Ille vir haud magna cum re sed plenu' fidei,
or the great--
Moribus antiquis res stat Romana virisq
Editor's choice
(view all)Popular books in Language, Fiction and Literature
Readers reviews
0.0
LoginSign up
Be the first to review this book
Popular questions
(view all)Books added this week
(view all)
No books found