The Portable Roman Reader (Portable Library)

by Basil Davenport

Paperback, 1977

Status

Available

Call number

870.8

Publication

Penguin Books (1977), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 672 pages

Description

The Romans conquered most of the known world and detailed their conquests in calm, unapologetic histories. They were a supremely urbane people who longed poetically for the farming life. Valuing toughness and practicality in all things, they turned the love poem into a cynical rebuke and wrote tragedies in which the unfathomable actions of gods gave way to the staggering cruelties of man. As the empire slid into decay, Tacitus pulled back the curtain on the perverse intrigues of the emperors, and a Roman-educated Christian named Augustine recounted his spiritual awakening in what may be the world's first psychological novel. This collection presents the essential writings of the Romans in their finest English translations: the comedies of Terence and Plautus; the histories of Julius Caesar, Livy and Tacitus; the oratory of Cicero; poems by Catullus, Virgil, Horace, and Martial; the philosophy of Lucretius and Boëthius, along with the stylishly narrated and often ribald myths of Ovid and Apuleius.… (more)

Language

Original publication date

1951-11

Physical description

672 p.; 5.24 x 1.22 inches

ISBN

0140150560 / 9780140150568
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