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Horace Poetry Foundation

Horace  Poetry Foundation

Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) was a Roman poet, satirist, and critic. Born in Venusia in southeast Italy in 65 BCE to an Italian freedman and landowner, he was sent to Rome for schooling and was later in Athens studying philosophy when Caesar was assassinated. Horace joined Brutus’s army and later claimed to have thrown away his shield in his panic to escape. Returning to Rome, Horace began his career as a scribe, employment that gave him time to write. He befriended poets and important figures of his day such as Virgil and the Emperor Augustus, and he eventually achieved great renown. Horace is known for detailed self-portraits in genres such as epodes, satires and epistles, and lyrics. By offering a poetic persona who speaks to so many human concerns, Horace has encouraged each reader to feel that he or she is one of the poet’s circle, a friend in whom

After Horace by Carolyn Kizer

Priapus by Horace, Poetry Magazine

Yeats Revisited by Horace Gregory

Marianne Moore and the Idea of Freedom by Philip…

Balquhidder at Morning by Horace Gregory

The New Swallows by Margaret Stanley-Wrench, For…

Reunion at Washington Square by Horace Gregory

9.8) Horace Epistles Bibliography

Time's Deathbed by Vernon Watkins, Poetry Magazine

Slide by Andrew Shields

The Last of Mirabel by Horace Gregory

Horace Poetry Foundation

PDF version - Poetry Foundation