swan_tower: The Long Room library at Trinity College, Dublin (Long Room)
swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2017-08-23 03:53 pm
Entry tags:

calling all Latinists

I seem to remember, back in high school, translating a poem by Horace where the first word (?) of the poem was a verb . . . but the subject of that verb was buried down in the second stanza. I don’t recall anything about its subject matter; it only stuck with me because it was the most egregious example I had personally encountered of how Latin can make an utter jigsaw of its word order.

But that poem doesn’t appear to be in our little booklet of Catullus and Horace, which means it was one of the ones the teacher gave us in a handout. And although I thought I still had those handouts, I can’t find them. So I turn to you, o Latinists of the internet: does this ring a bell? Can anybody point me at the poem in question?

Originally published at Swan Tower. You can comment here or there.

twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)

[personal profile] twistedchick 2017-08-23 11:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I wish I could help you, but I don't own the book of Horace's poems that we translated when I was studying Latin. I don't suppose it was the one in which he coins the idea of the 'ship of state' that later poets reused?