Numa Pompilius. |
1. |
Fragments of the Saliar Hymns |
Arval Brothers. |
2. |
Against Plague upon the Harvest. Incertae Aetatis |
Anonymous. |
3. |
Charms. Against the Gout. Incertae Aetatis |
4. |
An Ancient Lullaby. Incertae Aetatis |
5. |
Epitaphs of the Scipios |
Livius Andronicus. |
6. |
Fragments of the Odyssey |
7. |
Dramatic Fragments |
Gnaeus Naevius. |
8. |
Fragments of the Bellum Poenicum |
9. |
Dramatic Fragments |
10. |
His Own Epitaph |
Plautus. |
11. |
His Own Epitaph |
Marcius Vates. |
12. |
Precepts |
13. |
Vaticinium |
Quintus Ennius. |
14. |
The Vision of Ilia |
15. |
Romulus and Remus |
16. |
The Speech of Pyrrhus |
17. |
Character of a Friend of Servilius |
18. |
M. Cornelius Cethegus |
19. |
Caelius resists the Onset of the Istri |
20. |
Toga Cedit Armis |
21. |
Lesser Fragments of the Annals |
22. |
Dramatic Fragments Alcmaeon |
23. |
Andromache |
24. |
Cassandra. i |
25. |
Cassandra. ii |
26. |
Telamon. i |
27. |
Telamon. ii |
28. |
Molestum Otium |
29. |
Medeae Nutrix |
30. |
From the Iphigenia |
31. |
Epitaph for Scipio Africanus |
32. |
The Same |
33. |
Scipio to Ennius |
34. |
His own Epitaph |
M. Pacuvius. |
35. |
Fortune |
36. |
The Greeks set sail from Troy |
37. |
Genitabile Caelum |
38. |
Speech |
39. |
Womanish Tears |
40. |
His Own Epitaph |
L. Accius. |
41. |
Tarquin’s Dream |
42. |
The Argo seen by a Shepherd who has never seen a Ship |
43. |
Shorter Fragments |
Anonymous. |
44. |
Epitaph of Claudia |
Pompilius. |
45. |
His Poetical Lineage |
Valerius Aedituus. |
46. |
The Lamp of Love |
Quintus Lutatius Catulus. |
47. |
Lost: A Heart |
48. |
The Rising sun of Roscius |
Porcius Licinus. |
49. |
Ignis Homo Est |
50. |
Terence corrupted by his Patrons |
Laevius. |
51. |
From the Erotopaegnia |
M. Furius Bibaculus. |
52. |
The Garden of Valerius Cato |
53. |
The Reward of the Scholar |
Marcius. |
54. |
‘Amnem, Troiugena, Cannam fuge, defuge Cannam’ |
Marcus Tullius Cicero. |
55. |
De Consulatu Suo |
56. |
Marius |
57. |
Translations from the Greek From the Odyssey |
58. |
From Sophocles |
59. |
From Euripides |
Caius Helvius Cinna. |
60. |
An Astronomical Poem written upon Mallow Leaves |
M. Tullius Laurea. |
61. |
Magic Waters in the Garden of Cicero’s Villa |
Quintus Tullius Cicero. |
62. |
Astronomical Fragment |
Julius Caesar. |
63. |
Terence |
Caius Licinius Macer Calvus. |
64. |
Fragments of Epithalamia |
65. |
The Death of Quintilia |
Lucretius. |
66. |
Exordium |
67. |
The Rule of Reason |
68. |
Magna Mater |
69. |
Epicurus and the Fear of Death |
70. |
The Powers of Hell |
71. |
The World’s Conquerors |
72. |
Primitive Man |
73. |
Origin of Belief in God |
Caius Valerius Catullus. |
74. |
A Hymn to Diana |
75. |
Hymen, O Hymenaee |
76. |
Attis |
77. |
Iunia weds with Manlius |
78. |
To Cornelius Nepos: A Dedication |
79. |
To Veranius: A Welcome Home |
80. |
A Letter to Caecilius |
81. |
Farewell to Bithynia |
82. |
Home-coming to Sirmio |
83. |
The tender Love of Acme and Septimius |
84. |
[Greek] |
85. |
Lesbia’s Sparrow |
86. |
To Lesbia, not to count Kisses |
87. |
Everlasting Love |
88. |
Woman’s Words |
89. |
Man’s Ingratitude |
90. |
To Quintius: A Supplication |
91. |
Loving and Liking |
92. |
Miser Catulle |
93. |
Odi et Amo |
94. |
Num te leaena…? |
95. |
Nuntium Remittit Cynthiae |
96. |
To Alfenus, who betrayed him |
97. |
Vitam puriter egi |
98. |
To Manlius: written in affliction |
99. |
The Friendship of Allius |
100. |
At the Tomb of his Brother |
101. |
To Calvus: on the Death of Quintilia |
102. |
Nothing to do |
103. |
He craves Cornificius’ Pity |
104. |
To any Readers be may have |
P. Terentius Varro Atacinus. |
105. |
The Tombs of the Great |
L. Varius. |
106. |
Fragments of the De Morte |
107. |
Epilogue to the Vergilian Catalepton |
Maecenas. |
108. |
To Horace |
Vergil. |
109. |
‘Is this the Man that made the Earth to tremble’ |
110. |
‘Hence, all ye vain Delights’ |
111. |
‘Unto you a child is born’ |
112. |
Pharmaceutria |
113. |
‘In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread’ |
114. |
Solem quis dicere falsum audeat? |
115. |
Italia, io te saluto |
116. |
‘God made the country but man made the town’ |
117. |
Exordium |
118. |
Orpheus and Eurydice |
119. |
The Aeneid |
Horace. |
120. |
Romanae fidicen lyrae |
121. |
Song Makes Immortal |
122. |
Spring: An Invitation to Vergil |
123. |
Winter |
124. |
To Venus |
125. |
‘What slender youth’ |
126. |
Amoris Integratio |
127. |
Si jeunesse savait, si vieillesse pouvait |
128. |
The Latter End of Lyce |
129. |
He Abandons the Lists of Love |
130. |
Rursus bella moues? |
131. |
A Bachelor Festival |
132. |
A Retreat for Old Age |
133. |
Welcome home to Pompeius |
134. |
Eheu fugaces |
135. |
An Invitation to Maecenas |
136. |
Pia Testa |
137. |
High and Low, Rich and Poor |
138. |
The Strenuous Life |
139. |
The Path of the Just |
140. |
Pollio |
141. |
Regulus |
142. |
Cleopatra |
143. |
Augustus returns in triumph |
144. |
Deliverance from Death |
145. |
Bandusia |
146. |
Mens Aequa |
147. |
Pindar |
148. |
The Daughters of Danaus |
149. |
To Vergil: on the Death of Duintilius |
150. |
Beatus unicis Sabinis |
151. |
A Hard Winter |
152. |
Tow Poems on the Return of Spring |
153. |
Horace’s Monument |
Tibullus. |
154. |
Love in the Valley |
155. |
Lines Written in Sickness at Corcyra |
156. |
A Shattered Dream of Love |
157. |
The Blessings of Peace |
158. |
A Rural Festival |
159. |
In Honour of Messalinus, elected Guardian of the Sibylline Oracles |
160. |
He appeals to Nemesis by the Memory of her dead Sister |
Domitius Marsus. |
161. |
On the Death, in the same year, of Vergil and Tibullus |
Sextus Propertius. |
162. |
His Birthplace |
163. |
His Place in Poetry |
164. |
The Power of Song |
165. |
The first Onset of Love |
166. |
A Portrait of the Love God |
167. |
To one who despised Love, and is now enslaved |
168. |
To the same: Poets of Epic and Poets of Love |
169. |
Cynthia’s Birthday |
170. |
Cynthia’s Sickness |
171. |
A Dream about Cynthia |
172. |
Warning to a Rival |
173. |
To Cynthia on her Kindness to his Rival |
174. |
Cynthia is stolen from him |
175. |
Athens shall cure him of his Love |
176. |
Cynthia will one day be but Dust and Ashes |
177. |
Cynthia Dead |
178. |
Hylas |
179. |
Cornelia’s Plea |
180. |
The Triumpbs of Augustus in the East |
181. |
Elegy on the Death of Marcellus |
182. |
The Lover alone knows in what Hour Death shall come to him |
183. |
‘When I die, Cynthia’ |
Lygdamus. |
184. |
He dreams that Neaera is false to him |
185. |
From a Sickbed |
Sulpicia. |
186. |
Cerintbus’ Birthday |
187. |
To Phoebus: A Prayer in Sickness |
188. |
In Sickness: to Cerintbus |
Anonymous. |
189. |
Foul Rumour |
Messallae Panegyristae. |
190. |
Mighty in Peace as Mighty in Arms |
Anonymous. |
191. |
Epitaph of Heluia Prima |
Cornelius Severus. |
192. |
The Death of Cicero |
Anonymous. |
193. |
Aetatis Augusteae. Post Mortem Nulla Voluptas |
194. |
Epicedion Drusi |
Marcus Manilius. |
195. |
The Science of Nature |
196. |
The Milky Way |
197. |
Comets |
198. |
The Theme of the Astrological Poet |
199. |
The Rarity of True Friendship |
200. |
Line upon Line |
201. |
A New Poetry |
202. |
The Rule of Fate |
203. |
Macrocosm and Microcosm |
204. |
Andromeda |
Albinovanus Pedo. |
205. |
‘Over the Seas our Galleys went’ |
Ovid. |
206. |
His Autobiography |
207. |
Epic and Love Elegy |
208. |
Tragedy and Love Elegy |
209. |
Love and War |
210. |
The Captive of Love |
211. |
Love and Song |
212. |
Cruel Dawn |
213. |
The Loves of Rivers |
214. |
Farewell to Love-poetry |
215. |
The Dead Parrot |
216. |
Phyllis to Demophoon |
217. |
Elegy on the Death of Tibullus |
218. |
A Friend in Need |
219. |
To Maximus: on the Death of Celsus |
220. |
Lines Written in Sickness |
221. |
The Immortality of Poetry |
Anonymous. |
222. |
Exordium to a Poem on the Sea |
Germanicus Caesar. |
223. |
From the Golden to the Iron Age |
224. |
At the Tomb of Hector |
Phaedrus. |
225. |
Socrates |
226. |
Opportunity |
227. |
Epilogue |
Anonymous. |
228. |
Poetry and Science |
229. |
Precatio Terrae |
230. |
Epitaph of Homonoea and Atimetus |
231. |
The Complaint of the Garden God |
Seneca, the younger. |
232. |
Time |
233. |
Corsica |
234. |
Athens |
235. |
Britain |
236. |
On the Death of Crispus |
237. |
The Only Immortality |
238. |
The Last Pilgrimage |
239. |
Fatal Beauty |
240. |
Death has no Terror |
241. |
Hymeneal |
242. |
The Lot of Kings |
243. |
Mutability |
244. |
The Saying of Orphens |
Columella. |
245. |
The Flowery Spring |
Anonymous. |
246. |
Redeunt Saturnia Regna |
Calpurnius. |
247. |
A Singing Match |
Lucan (?). |
248. |
His Own Epitaph |
Anonymous. |
249. |
Laus Pisonis |
Petronius. |
250. |
Thorns and Roses |
251. |
‘Come to me in my dreams’ |
252. |
True Nobility |
253. |
Contrasts |
254. |
Fire and Ice |
L. Verginius Rufus. |
255. |
His Own Epitaph |
Publius Papinius Statius. |
256. |
Lucan’s Birthday |
257. |
On the Death of a Favourite Parrot |
258. |
The Marriage of Stella and Violentilla |
259. |
A Villa at Tibur |
260. |
To Claudius Etruscus on the Death of his Father |
261. |
‘He bath outsoared the shadow of our night’ |
262. |
To Sleep |
Martial. |
263. |
Bilbilis |
264. |
He sends his Book to Caesius |
265. |
To Silius-Italicus |
266. |
Life not Legends |
267. |
To Valerius Flaccus |
268. |
Character of a Happy Life |
269. |
Quintus Ovidius’ Birthday |
270. |
The Marriage of Pudens and Claudia |
271. |
In Memoriam |
272. |
‘The Ledean stars so famed for love Wondered at us from above’ |
273. |
The Villa of Fulius Martialis |
274. |
Diadumenos |
275. |
Earinos |
276. |
To a Schoolmaster |
277. |
Long Life and Strong Life |
278. |
The Conditions of Friendship |
279. |
‘Domestic Life’ |
280. |
Saturnalia |
281. |
To the Rhine to send Trajan safe home |
282. |
A purer Sappho |
283. |
Posthumous Fame |
284. |
Contemporary Fame |
285. |
Valedictory |
Anonymous. |
286. |
Epitaphs |
Hadrian. |
287. |
To his Soul |
Anonymous. |
288. |
Epitaph of M. Pomponius Bassulus |
289. |
Epitaph of Serenus |
290. |
Epitaph of Ursus |
Annius Florus. |
291. |
‘Tongues I’ll bang on every tree’ |
292. |
Apollo and Bacchus |
293. |
Bacchus |
294. |
Women |
295. |
Evil Communications |
296. |
A Study in Antithesis |
297. |
French and English |
298. |
The Rarity of Poets and their Patrons |
C. Sulpicius Apollinaris. |
299. |
Vergil’s Aeneid |
300. |
Epitaph of Seneca |
Anonymous. |
301. |
Vine |
Gallienus. |
302. |
Ludite |
M. Aurelius Olumpius Nemesianus. |
303. |
Exordium to a Poem on Hunting |
304. |
Pan |
Anonymous. |
305. |
Epitaph on M. P. Flavius Postumius Varus |
306. |
To the Sea |
307. |
Boating Song |
308. |
‘Margaret’: A Dog’s Epitaph |
Claudius. |
309. |
To the Moon |
Lucius Caelius Firmianus Lactantius. |
310. |
The Phoenix |
Cato. |
311. |
Moral Distichs |
Reposianus. |
312. |
The Bridal Bower of Mars and Venus |
Pentadius. |
313. |
Narcissus |
314. |
Woman |
Anonymous. |
315. |
Epitaph on the Actor Vitalis |
Tiberianus. |
316. |
A Woodland Scene |
317. |
Gold |
318. |
‘Too Adventurous Wings’ |
319. |
God |
320. |
Peruigilium Veneris |
Anonymous. |
321. |
Epitaph of a Charioteer |
Alcimius. |
322. |
Vergil and Homer |
323. |
A Present from Lesbia |
324. |
Eloquent Eyes |
Ausonius. |
325. |
Dedication |
326. |
To Tetradius: A Remonstrance |
327. |
A Letter to Paulinus |
328. |
To his Wife |
329. |
Nemesis (From the Greek) |
330. |
One-sided Love (From the Greek) |
331. |
The Spartan’s Shield |
332. |
In Commendation of his Book |
333. |
To his Book |
334. |
Myro’s Heifer |
335. |
A Picture of Echo |
336. |
The Ideal Mistress |
337. |
Narcissus |
338. |
Dedication of a Mirror |
339. |
The Graves of a Household |
340. |
An Epitaph for his Father |
341. |
In Memory of his Teacher, Nepotianus |
342. |
Epitaphs of Heroes |
343. |
In Tumulo Hominis Felicis |
344. |
To his Villa |
345. |
The Martyrdom of Cupid |
346. |
Valedictory |
Modestinus. |
347. |
Another Martyrdom of Cupid |
pseudo-Ausonius. |
348. |
‘Gather ye Rosebuds’ |
349. |
For a Statue of Dido |
350. |
A Pretty Boy |
351. |
Galla |
Avienus. |
352. |
Prologue to the Aratea |
Anonymous. |
353. |
Epitaph of M. Vettius Agorius Praetextatus and Paulina his Wife |
Asmenius. |
354. |
Thoughts in a Garden |
The Asmenidae. |
355. |
Fortune |
356. |
Orpheus |
357. |
Vergil Distichs |
358. |
Vergil Quatrains |
Anonymous. |
359. |
Carpe Diem |
360. |
Epithalamium |
361. |
The Grave of Nymphius |
362. |
Roses and Thorns |
Sulpicius Lupercus Servasius Iunior. |
363. |
The Work of Time |
364. |
On Avarice |
Claudian. |
365. |
An Eagle of Roman Song |
366. |
A Council of War—and War |
367. |
The Marriage of Honorius and Maria |
368. |
The Recluse |
369. |
Epistle to Serena |
370. |
Love in a Cottage |
Avianus. |
371. |
The Ass in the Lion’s Skin |
372. |
The Peacock and the Crane |
Rutilius Claudius Namatianus. |
373. |
Rome |
Apollinaris Sidonius. |
374. |
For the Marriage of Polemius and Araneola |
375. |
A Gallic Baiae |
376. |
An Invitation |
377. |
Epitaph of Filimatia |
Flavius Felix. |
378. |
To his Patron |
Luxorius. |
379. |
To his Readers |
380. |
The Garden of Eugetus |
381. |
A Rose with a hundred Petals |
382. |
A Water Urn with a Figure of Cupid |
383. |
His Book’s proper Place |
Phocas. |
384. |
Poetry and Time (Prefixed to his Life of Vergil) |