Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Eugene Field > Text of Horace (Epode XIV)

A poem by Eugene Field

Horace (Epode XIV)

________________________________________________
Title:     Horace (Epode XIV)
Author: Eugene Field [More Titles by Field]

You ask me, friend,
Why I don't send
The long since due-and-paid-for numbers--
Why, songless, I
As drunken lie
Abandoned to Lethæan slumbers.

Long time ago
(As well you know)
I started in upon that carmen;
My work was vain--
But why complain?
When gods forbid, how helpless are men!

Some ages back,
The sage Anack
Courted a frisky Samian body,
Singing her praise
In metered phrase
As flowing as his bowls of toddy.

'Till I was hoarse
Might I discourse
Upon the cruelties of Venus--
'Twere waste of time
As well of rhyme,
For you've been there yourself, Maecenas!

Perfect your bliss,
If some fair miss
Love you yourself and not your minæ;
I, fortune's sport,
All vainly court
The beauteous, polyandrous Phryne!


[The end]
Eugene Field's poem: Horace (Epode XIV)

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN