A Poetical Translation of the works of Horace With the Original Text, and Critical Notes collected from his best Latin and French Commentators. By the Revd Mr. Philip Francis...The third edition |
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A Poetical Translation of the works of Horace | ||
Ode XXXVIII. To his Slave.
I tell thee, Boy, that I detestThe Grandeur of a Persian Feast,
Nor for Me the Linden's Rind
Shall the flowery Chaplet bind;
Then search not where the curious Rose
Beyond his Season loitering grows,
But beneath the mantling Vine
While I quaff the flowing Wine,
The Myrtle's Wreath shall crown our Brows,
While You shall wait and I carouze.
A Poetical Translation of the works of Horace | ||