Q. HORATII FLACCI EPISTOLARUM LIBER PRIMUS. EPISTOLA I. AD MÆCENATEM. 5 EP. I. 3. ludo. i. e. gladiatorio. Ars P.32. 4. armis .... fixis. See note on 1. Carm. 1. i. 1. Carm. III. xxvi. 3. 2. Spectatum. “verbum propr. de 3—8. rude, armis, equum. These gladiatoribus sæpe victoribus ..... metaphors are similarly combined in notâ SP expressum in tesseris (i. e. Ov. Trist. iv. viii. 19-24. prize-medals) quæ talibus honoris 7. purgatam. Pers. v. 63. 86. causâ dabantur."-Orelli. 8. Cp. Ennius, as quoted Cic. de rude. rudis was the foil or wooden Senect. 5.: sword of the gladiator, with which, Sicut fortis equus spatio qui sæpe on dismissal from service, he was supremo presented. (Hence (in Sueton. Tib. Vicit Olympia, nunc senio confectu' 7.) the word rudiarii = emeriti.) quiescit. 15 15 Nunc itaque et versus et cetera ludicra pono, 10 Quid verum atque decens curo et rogo et omnis in hoc sum; Condo et compono, quæ mox depromere possim. Ac ne forte roges, quo me duce, quo lare tuter; Nullius addictus jurare in verba magistri, Quo me cunque rapit tempestas, deferor hospes. Nunc agilis fio et mersor civilibus undis, Virtutis veræ custos rigidusque satelles ; Nunc in Aristippi furtim præcepta relabor, Et mihi res, non me rebus subjungere conor. Ut nox longa, quibus mentitur amica, diesque Longa videtur opus debentibus, ut piger annus Pupillis, quos dura premit custodia matrum : Sic mibi tarda fluunt ingrataque tempora, quæ spem Consiliumque morantur agendi naviter id, quod Æque pauperibus prodest, locupletibus æque, Æque neglectum pueris senibusque nocebit: Restat, ut his ego me ipse regam solerque elementis. Non possis oculo quantum contendere Lynceus, Non tamen idcirco contemnas lippus inungi; 20 25 xviii. 103. 10. Ep. 11. ii. 55–57. Epicurus. Cp. Eurip. Antiopa Fr., 12. Condo et .... i. e. I am | 35. collecting and storing principles for 18. Aristippi. Epist. 1. xvii. 23.; eventual use. 13. quo lare tuter, “under what 19. mihi res. Cp. (for a verbal roof I shelter myself; i. e. to what resemblance) Herod. vii. 49.: ai sect of philosophy I belong. Orelliouupopal tæv åv panw pxovoh, compares Carm. l. xxix. 14., Socrati. kal oủkl 6v@pwhol Tŵy ovu opéwv. cam domum; and Cic. Divin. II. i. 23. ingrata. 'Irksome. Cicero 3., Peripateticorum familia. complains (Ad Fam. iv. 13.).... 14. jurare in .... Cp. Epod.' mihi ipse displiceo. Natus enim ad agendum semper aliquid dignum 16–19. The sense is, “ Now, as a viro, nunc non modo agendi rationem Stoic, I plunge into the turmoil of nullam habeo, sed ne cogitandi quipublic life. Now, as an Epicurean, dem'.... I glide back into indifference, and 28. Lynceus. BAÉTELV útepov make myself independent of the Toll Anykéws (Arist. Plut. 210.) was world without.' Cp. Carm. 1. xxxiv. a proverb. So Sat. 1. ii. 90., 'Lyncei 1-5. .... oculis.' Adde Bisras was the maxim of| Nec, quia desperes invicti membra Glyconis, 31. cheragra. Sat. 11. vii. 15. | 41. prima. Adjective to virtus, 34. Eur. Hippol. 478.: as well as sapientia. cioly go Tydal kal abyou deakth-| 43. repulsam. Carm. III. ii. 17. piol, | 45. Sat. 1. i. 39.; Carm. III. xxiv. φανήσεται τι τήσδε φάρμακον νό- 40. 48. Epist. viii. 8. 39. ferus, mitescere, culturæ. 49. The sense is, “What village These words all correspond to one boxer would not wish to gain the metaphor, as Virg. Geor. ii, 36.: Olympic crown, if he could, more• Fructusque feros mollite colendo.' over, gain it without hardship?'Cp. mitiget agrum. Epist. 11. ii. i. e. Why do not men seek the 186. I prize of virtue, and relieve them. 40. commodet aurem. “Lendselves from this ceaseless and ignoble me your ears." Shaks. J. Cæs. act strife ? iii. sc. 2. | 51. sine pulvere. Gr. åkovití. O cives, cives, quærenda pecunia primum est ; 54. Janus. Sat. 11. iii. 18. | 63. Nenia. i. e. the old song or 55. dictata. See Epist. 1. xviii. saying. So cantilena, as in Ter. 13. Phorm. act iii. sc. 2. 10. (The phrase 56. That is, ' like school children.' answers perhaps, though not strictly, (The line occurs Sat. I. vi. 74. in a to naidwv kandovi, in Callim. Epigr. description of such.) Cp. Juv. xiv. i. 14.) 207-9. | 64. maribus. Ars. P. 402. 57. lingua, readiness of lan- Curiis et Camillis, Carm. I. xii. guage, a good address. Cp. Epist. 41. i.iv. 9.: 66. quocunque moao. “Sed cres. Sapere et fari quæ sentiat. cunt quocunque modo.” (scil. patri. 28. quadringentis. . 62. Roscia monia.) Juv. xiv, 117. lex. See on Epod. iv. 15. Cp. 68. responsare. Sat. 11. vii. 85. Juv. ii. 154–159. |