Bibliography

Selected Bibliography

Ronnie Ancona, Time and the erotic in Horace’s odes, Durham, NC: Duke University Press 1994.

N.E. Collinge, The structure of Horace’s odes, Oxford: Oxford University Press 1961.

Steele Commager, The odes of Horace: a critical study, New Haven: Yale University Press 1962 (rpt. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press 1995).

G. Davis, Polyhymnia: the rhetoric of Horatian lyric discourse, Berkeley: University of California Press 1991.

L. Edmund, From a Sabine jar: reading Horace, Odes 1.9, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 1992. [on Vides ut alta stet nive candidum/ Soracte]

E. Fraenkel, Horace, Oxford: Oxford University Press 1957 (rpt. 1959).

W.R. Hardie, Res metrica: an introduction to the study of Greek and Roman versification, Oxford: Clarendon Press 1920, 196-260, with a particularly long section on Horace’s lyric meters.

G. Highet, Poets in a landscape, London 1957.

Horace (C. Whitman, trans.), Fifteen odes of Horace, Lunenburg, VT: Stinehour Press 1980.

Horace, Christopher Smart’s verse translation of Horace’s odes: text and introduction, ed. Arthur Sherbo, Victoria, BC: English Literary Studies, University of Victoria 1979.

Horace, Ad Pyrrham; a polyglot collection of translations of Horace’s ode to Pyrrha (Book 1, Ode 5), assembled & intr. Ronald Storrs, Oxford: Oxford University Press 1959.

G.O. Hutchinson, Greek lyric poetry: a commentary on selected larger pieces: Alcman, Stesichorus, Sappho, Alceaus, Ibycus, Anacreon, Simonides, Bacchylides, Pindar, Sophocles, Euripides, Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001.

W.R. Johnson, The idea of lyric: lyric modes in ancient and modern poetry, Berkeley: Univ. of California Press 1982.

Rudyard Kipling, “Regulus,” in A Diversity of Creatures, Garden City, NY:  Doubleday Page 1917.

M. Owen Lee, Word, sound, and image in the odes of Horace, Ann Arbor, MI:  University of Michigan Press 1969.

J.H. Lupton, An introduction to Latin lyric verse composition, London: Macmillan & Co. 189*.

Carol Maddison, Apollo and the nine: a history of the ode, Baltimore, MD:  Johns Hopkins Press 1960.

R. Minadeo, The golden plectrum: sexual symbolism in Horace’s odes, Amsterdam: Rodopi 1982.

D.H. Porter, Horace’s poetic journey: a reading of Odes 1-3, Princeton: Princeton University Press 1987.

M. Putnam, Essays on Latin lyric, elegy and epic, Princeton: Princeton University Press 1982.

M. Putnam, Artifices of eternity: Horace’s fourth book of odes, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press 1986.

M. Putnam, Horace’s Carmen saeculare: ritual magic and the poet’s art, New Haven: Yale University Press 2000.

M. Santirocco, Unity and design in Horace’s odes, Chapel Hill, NC:  University of North Carolina Press 1986.

Helene Claire Waysek, Callidae iuncturae : skillful juxtapositions of words, structures, images, and voices in the odes of Horace, diss. Columbia University 1987.

C. Witke, Horace’s Roman odes: a critical examination, Leiden: Brill 1983.