Heathcote William Garrod, ed. (1878–1960). The Oxford Book of Latin Verse. 1912.
Index to Titles
- A Bachelor Festival
- A Council of War—and War
- A Dream about Cynthia
- Aetatis Augusteae. Post Mortem Nulla Voluptas
- A Friend in Need
- Against Plague upon the Harvest. Incertae Aetatis
- A Gallic Baiae
- A Hard Winter
- A Hymn to Diana
- A Letter to Caecilius
- A Letter to Paulinus
- ‘Amnem, Troiugena, Cannam fuge, defuge Cannam’
- Amoris Integratio
- An Ancient Lullaby. Incertae Aetatis
- An Astronomical Poem written upon Mallow Leaves
- Andromache
- Andromeda
- An Eagle of Roman Song
- An Epitaph for his Father
- A New Poetry
- An Invitation
- An Invitation to Maecenas
- Another Martyrdom of Cupid
- A Picture of Echo
- Apollo and Bacchus
- A Portrait of the Love God
- A Present from Lesbia
- A Pretty Boy
- A purer Sappho
- A Retreat for Old Age
- A Rose with a hundred Petals
- A Rural Festival
- A Shattered Dream of Love
- A Singing Match
- Astronomical Fragment
- A Study in Antithesis
- Athens
- Athens shall cure him of his Love
- At the Tomb of Hector
- At the Tomb of his Brother
- Attis
- Augustus returns in triumph
- A Villa at Tibur
- A Water Urn with a Figure of Cupid
- A Woodland Scene
- Bacchus
- Bandusia
- Beatus unicis Sabinis
- Bilbilis
- Boating Song
- Britain
- Caelius resists the Onset of the Istri
- Carpe Diem
- Cassandra. i
- Cassandra. ii
- Cerintbus’ Birthday
- Character of a Friend of Servilius
- Character of a Happy Life
- Charms. Against the Gout. Incertae Aetatis
- Cleopatra
- ‘Come to me in my dreams’
- Comets
- Contemporary Fame
- Contrasts
- Cornelia’s Plea
- Corsica
- Cruel Dawn
- Cynthia Dead
- Cynthia is stolen from him
- Cynthia’s Birthday
- Cynthia’s Sickness
- Cynthia will one day be but Dust and Ashes
- Death has no Terror
- De Consulatu Suo
- Dedication
- Dedication of a Mirror
- Deliverance from Death
- Diadumenos
- ‘Domestic Life’
- Dramatic Fragments
- Dramatic Fragments
- Dramatic Fragments Alcmaeon
- Earinos
- Eheu fugaces
- Elegy on the Death of Marcellus
- Elegy on the Death of Tibullus
- Eloquent Eyes
- Epic and Love Elegy
- Epicedion Drusi
- Epicurus and the Fear of Death
- Epilogue
- Epilogue to the Vergilian Catalepton
- Epistle to Serena
- Epitaph for Scipio Africanus
- Epitaph of a Charioteer
- Epitaph of Claudia
- Epitaph of Filimatia
- Epitaph of Heluia Prima
- Epitaph of Homonoea and Atimetus
- Epitaph of M. Pomponius Bassulus
- Epitaph of M. Vettius Agorius Praetextatus and Paulina his Wife
- Epitaph of Seneca
- Epitaph of Serenus
- Epitaph of Ursus
- Epitaph on M. P. Flavius Postumius Varus
- Epitaph on the Actor Vitalis
- Epitaphs
- Epitaphs of Heroes
- Epitaphs of the Scipios
- Epithalamium
- Everlasting Love
- Evil Communications
- Exordium
- Exordium
- Exordium to a Poem on Hunting
- Exordium to a Poem on the Sea
- Farewell to Bithynia
- Farewell to Love-poetry
- Fatal Beauty
- Fire and Ice
- For a Statue of Dido
- For the Marriage of Polemius and Araneola
- Fortune
- Fortune
- Foul Rumour
- Fragments of Epithalamia
- Fragments of the Bellum Poenicum
- Fragments of the De Morte
- Fragments of the Odyssey
- Fragments of the Saliar Hymns
- French and English
- From a Sickbed
- From Euripides
- From Sophocles
- From the Erotopaegnia
- From the Golden to the Iron Age
- From the Iphigenia
- Galla
- ‘Gather ye Rosebuds’
- Genitabile Caelum
- God
- ‘God made the country but man made the town’
- Gold
- [Greek]
- He Abandons the Lists of Love
- He appeals to Nemesis by the Memory of her dead Sister
- ‘He bath outsoared the shadow of our night’
- He craves Cornificius’ Pity
- He dreams that Neaera is false to him
- ‘Hence, all ye vain Delights’
- He sends his Book to Caesius
- High and Low, Rich and Poor
- His Autobiography
- His Birthplace
- His Book’s proper Place
- His Own Epitaph
- His Own Epitaph
- His own Epitaph
- His Own Epitaph
- His Own Epitaph
- His Own Epitaph
- His Place in Poetry
- His Poetical Lineage
- Home-coming to Sirmio
- Horace’s Monument
- Hylas
- Hymeneal
- Hymen, O Hymenaee
- Ignis Homo Est
- In Commendation of his Book
- In Honour of Messalinus, elected Guardian of the Sibylline Oracles
- In Memoriam
- In Memory of his Teacher, Nepotianus
- In Sickness: to Cerintbus
- ‘In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread’
- In Tumulo Hominis Felicis
- ‘Is this the Man that made the Earth to tremble’
- Italia, io te saluto
- Iunia weds with Manlius
- Laus Pisonis
- Lesbia’s Sparrow
- Lesser Fragments of the Annals
- Life not Legends
- Lines Written in Sickness
- Lines Written in Sickness at Corcyra
- Line upon Line
- Long Life and Strong Life
- Lost: A Heart
- Love and Song
- Love and War
- Love in a Cottage
- Love in the Valley
- Loving and Liking
- Lucan’s Birthday
- Ludite
- Macrocosm and Microcosm
- Magic Waters in the Garden of Cicero’s Villa
- Magna Mater
- Man’s Ingratitude
- ‘Margaret’: A Dog’s Epitaph
- Marius
- M. Cornelius Cethegus
- Medeae Nutrix
- Mens Aequa
- Mighty in Peace as Mighty in Arms
- Miser Catulle
- Molestum Otium
- Moral Distichs
- Mutability
- Myro’s Heifer
- Narcissus
- Narcissus
- Nemesis (From the Greek)
- Nothing to do
- Num te leaena…?
- Nuntium Remittit Cynthiae
- Odi et Amo
- On Avarice
- One-sided Love (From the Greek)
- On the Death, in the same year, of Vergil and Tibullus
- On the Death of a Favourite Parrot
- On the Death of Crispus
- Opportunity
- Origin of Belief in God
- Orpheus
- Orpheus and Eurydice
- ‘Over the Seas our Galleys went’
- Pan
- Peruigilium Veneris
- Pharmaceutria
- Phyllis to Demophoon
- Pia Testa
- Pindar
- Poetry and Science
- Poetry and Time (Prefixed to his Life of Vergil)
- Pollio
- Posthumous Fame
- Precatio Terrae
- Precepts
- Primitive Man
- Prologue to the Aratea
- Quintus Ovidius’ Birthday
- Redeunt Saturnia Regna
- Regulus
- Romanae fidicen lyrae
- Rome
- Romulus and Remus
- Roses and Thorns
- Rursus bella moues?
- Saturnalia
- Scipio to Ennius
- Shorter Fragments
- Si jeunesse savait, si vieillesse pouvait
- Socrates
- Solem quis dicere falsum audeat?
- Song Makes Immortal
- Speech
- Spring: An Invitation to Vergil
- Tarquin’s Dream
- Telamon. i
- Telamon. ii
- Terence
- Terence corrupted by his Patrons
- The Aeneid
- The Argo seen by a Shepherd who has never seen a Ship
- The Ass in the Lion’s Skin
- The Blessings of Peace
- The Bridal Bower of Mars and Venus
- The Captive of Love
- The Complaint of the Garden God
- The Conditions of Friendship
- The Daughters of Danaus
- The Dead Parrot
- The Death of Cicero
- The Death of Quintilia
- The first Onset of Love
- The Flowery Spring
- The Friendship of Allius
- The Garden of Eugetus
- The Garden of Valerius Cato
- The Grave of Nymphius
- The Graves of a Household
- The Greeks set sail from Troy
- The Ideal Mistress
- The Immortality of Poetry
- The Lamp of Love
- The Last Pilgrimage
- The Latter End of Lyce
- ‘The Ledean stars so famed for love Wondered at us from above’
- The Lot of Kings
- The Lover alone knows in what Hour Death shall come to him
- The Loves of Rivers
- The Marriage of Honorius and Maria
- The Marriage of Pudens and Claudia
- The Marriage of Stella and Violentilla
- The Martyrdom of Cupid
- The Milky Way
- The Only Immortality
- The Path of the Just
- The Peacock and the Crane
- The Phoenix
- The Power of Song
- The Powers of Hell
- The Rarity of Poets and their Patrons
- The Rarity of True Friendship
- The Recluse
- The Reward of the Scholar
- The Rising sun of Roscius
- The Rule of Fate
- The Rule of Reason
- The Same
- The Saying of Orphens
- The Science of Nature
- The Spartan’s Shield
- The Speech of Pyrrhus
- The Strenuous Life
- The tender Love of Acme and Septimius
- The Theme of the Astrological Poet
- The Tombs of the Great
- The Triumpbs of Augustus in the East
- The Villa of Fulius Martialis
- The Vision of Ilia
- The Work of Time
- The World’s Conquerors
- Thorns and Roses
- Thoughts in a Garden
- Time
- To Alfenus, who betrayed him
- To any Readers be may have
- To a Schoolmaster
- To Calvus: on the Death of Quintilia
- To Claudius Etruscus on the Death of his Father
- To Cornelius Nepos: A Dedication
- To Cynthia on her Kindness to his Rival
- Toga Cedit Armis
- To his Book
- To his Patron
- To his Readers
- To his Soul
- To his Villa
- To his Wife
- To Horace
- To Lesbia, not to count Kisses
- To Manlius: written in affliction
- To Maximus: on the Death of Celsus
- ‘Tongues I’ll bang on every tree’
- ‘Too Adventurous Wings’
- To one who despised Love, and is now enslaved
- To Phoebus: A Prayer in Sickness
- To Quintius: A Supplication
- To Silius-Italicus
- To Sleep
- To Tetradius: A Remonstrance
- To the Moon
- To the Rhine to send Trajan safe home
- To the same: Poets of Epic and Poets of Love
- To the Sea
- To Valerius Flaccus
- To Venus
- To Veranius: A Welcome Home
- To Vergil: on the Death of Duintilius
- Tow Poems on the Return of Spring
- Tragedy and Love Elegy
- Translations from the Greek From the Odyssey
- True Nobility
- ‘Unto you a child is born’
- Valedictory
- Valedictory
- Vaticinium
- Vergil and Homer
- Vergil Distichs
- Vergil Quatrains
- Vergil’s Aeneid
- Vine
- Vitam puriter egi
- Warning to a Rival
- Welcome home to Pompeius
- ‘What slender youth’
- ‘When I die, Cynthia’
- Winter
- Woman
- Womanish Tears
- Woman’s Words
- Women