NOTICE

All files on this site have been moved to http://www.wikilivres.ca. All future contributions to Wikilivres should be made there.

This site will be closed on June 6th, 2012.

The Odes/Book III/30

Free texts and images.

Jump to: navigation, search

Book III, 29: Fortune The Odes ~ Book III, 30: Aere Perennius
written by Horace
Book IV, 1: Venus, be Merciful
Translated by A. S. Kline Latin original text - French Ulysse de Séguier's translation




Aere Perennius



 
 
 


 
I’ve raised a monument, more durable than bronze,
one higher than the Pyramids’ royal towers,
that no devouring rain, or fierce northerly gale,
has power to destroy: nor the immeasurable
succession of years, and the swift passage of time.
I’ll not utterly die, but a rich part of me,
will escape Persephone: and fresh with the praise
of posterity, I’ll rise, beyond. While the High
Priest, and the silent Virgin, climb the Capitol,
I’ll be famous, I, born of humble origin,
(from where wild Aufidus roars, and where Daunus once,
lacking in streams, ruled over a rural people)
as the first to re-create Aeolian song
in Italian verse. Melpomene, take pride,
in what has been earned by your merit, and, Muse,
willingly, crown my hair, with the Delphic laurel.



 


...


I-white.on.blue.png This work is published here under the Creative Commons CC BY.svg CC NC.svg license and can be reproduced if non-commercial. cs | de | en | es | fr | ru | zh
Personal tools
In other languages