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Contents. Book IV.1:1-70 Rome and its history. Book IV.1A:71-150 Horos’ soliloquy: Propertius’ role. Book IV.2:1-64 The God Vertumnus. Book IV.3:1-72 A wife’s letter. Book IV.4:1-94 The Tarpeian Hill. Book IV.5:1-78 Elegy for the Procuress. Book IV.6:1-86 The Temple of Palatine Apollo.
- Book III
Book III.4:1-22 War and peace Caesar, our god, plots war...
- A New Translation
Sextus Propertius: The Elegies A complete English...
- Book III
book 1 book 2 book 3 book 4. poem: poem 1 poem 1 poem 2 poem 3 poem 4 poem 5 poem 6 poem 7 poem 8 poem 9 poem 10 poem 11. ... Propertius. Elegies. Lucian Mueller ...
book 1 book 2 book 3 book 4. poem: poem 1 poem 1 poem 2 poem 3 poem 4 poem 5 poem 6 poem 7 poem 8 poem 9 poem 10 poem 11. ... Propertius. Elegies. Lucian Mueller ...
On this view Book IV represents Propertius' compromise between. his Callimachean poetic and the pressing demand for patriotic poetry. on the grander scale of Virgil and Horace. So, we are to believe, Propertius began the first sketches of a Roman Aetia, represented by. elegies 2, 4, 9, and 10 of Book IV, but unfortunately foundered in.
Aug 31, 2006 · Propertius' fourth book is his most challenging and innovative. It disrupts genre; dislocates time and order; and meditates on gender, perception and history. A sort of postmodernism combines...
Aug 31, 2008 · This book is an edition of and commentary on Propertius’ Book 4, by the Oxonian scholar Gregory Hutchinson. It belongs to the so-called ‘green and yellow’ collection of the Cambridge University Press, which regularly includes very extensive and up-to-date works.