A Handbook for Latin Clubs by Susan Paxson (english books to improve english .txt) ๐
THE LAPIS NIGER.Roma Beata. Maud Howe. Pp. 163, 260.
POMPEY'S THEATER._Rome: The Eternal City_. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. i, P. 374.Ancient Rome in the Light of Recent Discoveries. RodolfoLanciani. P. 190.
THE ROMAN FORUM AS IT APPEARS TO-DAY.Roman Holidays and Others. W.D. Howells. P. 96.
POEM.--In the Roman ForumAmelia Josephine Burr. Literary Digest. Vol. xlviii, p. 1130.
THE ROMAN HOUSE
"Here is my religion, here is my race, here are the traces of myforefathers. I cannot express the charm which I find here, and whichpenetrates my heart and my senses."--Cicero: Pro Domo.
THE PLAN OF THE ROMAN HOUSE.Callus. W.A. Becker. P. 237.The Life of the Greeks and Romans. Guhl and Koner. P. 357.The Private Life of the Romans. H.W. Johnston. Chap. vi.Society in Rome under the Caesars. William R. Inge. Chap. x.
THE HEATING AND LIGHTING OF THE HOUSE.The Life
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Of love and pleasure I took my fill;
Nor guessed I, when life went at my will,
That the fates behind me went softlier still.
AN ETRUSCAN RING
Day after day an ancient goldsmith's skill
By some lost secret, while he shaped the sard
Edged with corundum, ground its way until
With mystic imagery carven thus,
And dark Egyptian symbols fabulous,
He drew through it the delicate golden wire,
And bent the fastening; and the Etrurian sun
Sank behind Ilva, and the work was done.
This the first gift her Tyrrhene lover gave,
What shadowy dreams might haunt it, lying low
Above the rock-tomb's buried architrave
Unharmed by conquering Time's supremacy,
Still should be fair, though scarce less old than Rome.
Now once again at rest from wandering
Across the high Alps and the dreadful sea,
In utmost England let it find a home.
ORPHEUS WITH HIS LUTE
And the mountain tops that freeze,
Ever sprung: as sun and showers
Even the billows of the sea,
Killing care and grief of heart
At whose command the waves obey;
To whom the rivers tribute pay,
To whom the scaly nation yields
Homage for the crystal fields
Wherein they dwell:
Yearly out of his wat'ry cell
Before his palace gates do make
The waters with their echoes quake,
The sea-nymphs chant their accents shrill,
And the sirens, taught to kill
With their sweet voice,
Unto their gentle murmuring noise
(In part, only)
On whose plain board the bright
Salt-cellar shines, which was his sire's delight,
Disturb his slumbers light.
We creatures of an hour?
Why fly from clime to clime, new regions scour?
To fly from self had power?
Nor troops of horse can fly
Her foot, which than the stag's is swifter, ay,
The clouds along the sky.
And turning to the best,
The present, meet life's bitters with a jest,
Is altogether blest.
Tithonus by the slow
Decay of age was wasted to a show,
On me perchance bestow.
And slender vein of song,
Such as in Greece flowed vigorous and strong,
The base, malignant throng.
A cask shall elicit, of potency rare
And wash from our hearts every cobweb of care.
But remember the feeโfor it suits not my ends,
As though I were one of your heavy-pursed friends.
In the flames of the pyre these, alas! will be vain,
'Tis delightful at times to be somewhat insane.
THE GOLDEN MEAN Horace. Book II, Ode 10
So shalt thou live beyond the reach
Nor always timorously creep
And lives contentedly between
Nor plagues that haunt the rich man's door,
Of wintry blasts; the loftiest tower
His cloud-capt eminence divide,
Rejoices with a wholesome fear,
Soon the sweet spring comes dancing forth,
The dark appearance will not last;
Awakes sometimes the Muses too,
Thy magnanimity display,
With more than a propitious gale,
O reader, is the well-known Martial,
The Epigrammatist: while living,
Give him the fame thou wouldst be giving
So shall he hear, and feel, and know it:
Post-obits rarely reach a poet.
And slaves refused the weapon Portia sought;
"Know ye not yet," she said, with towering pride,
"Death is a boon that cannot be denied?
I thought my father amply had imprest
This simple truth upon each Roman breast."
Dauntless she gulph'd the embers as they flamed
And, while their heat within her raged, exclaim'd
"Now, troublous guardians of a life abhorr'd,
Still urge your caution, and refuse the sword."
TO POTITUS Martial. Book X, lxx
Idle perhaps to you I may appear.
But rather, that I write at all, admire,
When I am often robbed of days entire.
Now with my friends the evening I must spend:
To those preferred my compliments must send.
Now at the witnessing a will make one:
Hurried from this to that, my morning's gone.
Some office must attend; or else some ball;
Or else my lawyer's summons to the hall.
Now a rehearsal, now a concert hear;
And now a Latin play at Westminster.
Home after ten return, quite tir'd and dos'd.
When is the piece, you want, to be compos'd?
The fire your home lay low,
Your farm no crops bestow;
Your freighted ship the storms will beat;
Which to your friends is given;
Is that you've lent to heaven.
TO COTILUS Martial
What this is, Cotilus, I wish to know.
"A beau is one who, with the nicest care,
In parted locks divides his curling hair;
One who with balm and cinnamon smells sweet,
Whose humming lips some Spanish air repeat;
Whose naked arms are smoothed with pumice-stone,
And tossed about with graces all his own:
A beau is one who takes his constant seat
From morn till evening, where the ladies meet;
And ever, on some sofa hovering near,
Whispers some nothing in some fair one's ear;
Who scribbles thousand billets-doux a day;
Still reads and scribbles, reads, and sends away;
A beau is one who shrinks, if nearly pressed
By the coarse garment of a neighbor guest;
Who knows who flirts with whom, and still is found
At each good table in successive round:
A beau is oneโnone better knows than he
A race-horse, and his noble pedigree"โ
Indeed? Why Cotilus, if this be so,
What teasing trifling thing is called a beau!
(Sweetest Martial), they are these:
Estate inherited, not got:
A thankful field, hearth always hot:
City seldom, law-suits never:
Equal friends, agreeing forever:
Health of body, peace of mind:
Sleeps that till the morning bind:
Wise simplicity, plain fare:
Not drunken nights, yet loos'd from care:
A sober, not a sullen spouse:
Clean strength, not such as his that plows;
Wish only what thou art, to be;
Death neither wish, nor fear to see.
Who sweep'st with birch a youngster's breech,
Oh! now awhile withhold your hand!
So may the trembling crop-hair'd band
Around your desk attentive hear,
And pay you love instead of fear;
So may yours ever be as full,
As writing or as dancing school.
The scorching dog-day is begun;
The harvest roasting in the sun;
Each Bridewell keeper, though requir'd
To use the lash, is too much tir'd.
Let ferula and rod together
Lie dormant, till the frosty weather.
Boys do improve enough in reason,
Who miss a fever in this season.
EPITAPH ON EROTION Martial. Book X, lxi
Lies little sweet Erotion;4
Whom the Fates, with hearts as cold,
Nipp'd away at six years old.
Thou, whoever thou mayst be,
That hast this small field after me,
Let the yearly rites be paid
To her little slender shade;
So shall no disease or jar
Hurt thy house, or chill thy Lar;
But this tomb be here alone
The only melancholy stone.
Hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te.5
GRATITUDE
And some wad eat that want it;
But we hae meat and we can eat
And sae the Lord be thanket.
nec amor tamen ullus edendi:
deest tamen ipse cibus.
et amor quoque panis edendi
gratia habenda Deo.
To worship ye, the Lares,
With crowns of greenest parsley,
And garlick chives not scarcely;
For favors here to warme me,
And not by fire to harme me;
For gladding so my hearth here,
With inoffensive mirth here;
That while the wassaile bowle here
With North-down ale doth troule here,
No sillable doth fall here,
To marre the mirth at all here.
For which, O chimney-keepers!
(I dare not call ye sweepers)
So long as I am able
To keep a country-table
Great be my fare, or small cheere,
I'll eat and drink up all here.
And the bright banquets of the Elysian Vale
Melt every care away!
Delight, that breathes and moves forever,
Glides through sweet fields like some sweet river!
Elysian life survey!
There, fresh with youth, o'er jocund meads,
His merry west-winds blithely leads
The ever-blooming May!
Through gold-woven dreams goes the dance of the Hours,
In space without bounds swell the soul and its powers,
And Truth, with no veil, gives
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