DO THE FOLLOWING: 1.Pick up a warm up sheet on your way into class 2.Get out summary of Odes III.1...
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Transcript of DO THE FOLLOWING: 1.Pick up a warm up sheet on your way into class 2.Get out summary of Odes III.1...
DO THE FOLLOWING:
1. Pick up a warm up sheet on your way into class
2. Get out summary of Odes III.1 and response to question about first stanza of the poem
WARM UP 10/12/12
1. Exchange your written comments with another person sitting nearby who completed the assignment
2. Based on what you read in Odes III.1 What characteristics would Horace bring up if he were to respond to the question "what is a Roman?"
I have no use for secular outsiders,I bar the gross crowd. Give me reverent silence. I am the Muses’ priest:I sing for maidens and for boys grave verse Unheard before. Earth’s kings may awe their own flocks, 5But kings themselves are under Jove, the glorious Conqueror of the Giants,Who with an eyebrow moves the universe.
VOCAB QUIZ NEXT FRIDAY10/19/12
wds 1-15
USE THE NOTESHEET TO KEEP TRACK OF WHAT MAGISTER IS ABOUT TO TELL YOU
UNDERSTANDING THE CONTEXT OF ODES III.2A LITTLE HISTORY FIRST…
133 – 123 BC: Gracchi brothers
87 – 83 BC: Marius vs.
Sulla106: Cicero
born
43: Cicero assassinated
100: J. Caesar born
44: J. Caesar assassinated
48: Pompey assassinated
91 – 88 BC: Social wars: Italy
vs. Rome
73 – 71 BC: Spartacus
revolt
63 – 62 BC: Catilinarian conspiracy
49 – 48 BC: Caesar vs. Pompey
38 – 31 BC: Octavian vs.
Antony42: Horace
fights for Brutus at Philippi
43 – 42 BC: Octavian vs.
Brutus
REVERSE SIDE OF NOTESHEET AND QUESTION # 1 SHOULD BE
COMPLETED
Meanwhile: political and moral corruption in Rome
Corrupt governors : e.g. Verres, Sicily, 80 BC
Corrupt and broken politics: e.g. Milo vs. Clodius, 60 – 53 BC
Corrupt judicial system : throughout this time period
Corrupt morals : evidenced in love poetry from 1st century BC
QUESTION # 2 SHOULD BE COMPLETED
What Octavian accomplished…
1.)
2.)
3.)
4.)
5.) Much more….
UNDERSTANDING THE CONTEXT OF ODES III.2A LITTLE HISTORY FIRST…
133 – 123 BC: Gracchi brothers
87 – 83 BC: Marius vs.
Sulla106: Cicero
born
43: Cicero assassinated
100: J. Caesar born
44: J. Caesar assassinated
48: Pompey assassinated
91 – 88 BC: Social wars: Italy
vs. Rome
73 – 71 BC: Spartacus
revolt
63 – 62 BC: Catilinarian conspiracy
49 – 48 BC: Caesar vs. Pompey
38 – 31 BC: Octavian vs.
Antony42: Horace
fights for Brutus at Philippi
43 – 42 BC: Octavian vs.
Brutus
HE BROUGHT AN END TO
THIS
What Octavian accomplished…
1.) Brought an end 120 years of civil carnage
2.)
3.)
4.)
5.) Much more….
Improved Roman roads throughout Mediterranean at his own expense when the Senate ran out of money to complete the projects (20 BC)Expanded Roman territory dramatically
What Octavian accomplished…
1.) Brought an end 120 years of civil carnage
2.)
3.)
4.)
5.) Much more….
Improved Roman roads throughout Mediterranean at his own expense when the Senate ran out of money to complete the projects (20 BC)Expanded Roman territory dramaticallyLeft the original structures of power in place, while in reality holding on to powerAny surprise that he got the name Augustus in 27 BC?
QUESTIONS # 3 - 4 SHOULD BE COMPLETED
What Octavian accomplished…But at what cost?When Octavian was taking care of cities still loyal to Pompey in 41 BC:14. At this point Lucius Antonius felt strong enough, as Consul and brother of the powerful Mark Antony, to raise a revolt. Augustus forced him to take refuge in the city of Perugia, which he starved into surrender, but only after being twice exposed to great danger. On the first occasion, before the revolt broke out, he had found a private soldier watching the Games from one of the seats reserved for knights, and ordered his removal by an attendant; when Augustus's enemies then circulated a rumour that the offender had been tortured and executed, an angry crowd of soldiers began to demonstrate at once and Augustus would have lost his life had not the missing soldier suddenly reappeared, safe and unhurt. On the second occasion Augustus was sacrificing close to the walls of Perugia, during the siege, when a party of gladiators made a sortie and nearly cut off his retreat.
15. After the fall of the city Augustus took vengeance on crowds of prisoners and returned the same answer to all who sued for pardon or tried to explain their presence among the rebels. It was simply: `You must die!' According to some historians, he chose 300 prisoners of equestrian or senatorial rank, and offered them on the ides of March at the altar of the God Julius, as human sacrifices. Augustus fought, it is said, because he wished to offer his secret enemies, and those whom fear rather than affection kept with his party, a chance to declare themselves by joining Lucius Antonius; he would then crush them, confiscate their estates, and thus manage to pay off his veterans.
Augustus did consider the name Romulus as his honorific title before settling on Augustus…
QUESTION # 5 SHOULD BE COMPLETED
So, what does this all mean for Horace?1. After so much conflict, Horace as a poet is left
wondering: “what is Roman?”“What traits and characteristics are Roman?”
2. The first 6 Odes of book III spell out his response to what this question is (loosely)
3. In Odes III.2, he takes on Virtus amidst other core Roman values
4. Our essential question(s) for this poem:a. How Does Odes III.2 stand in contrast to
Odes III.1?
b. What is the significance of this contrast?
QUESTION # 6 - 8 SHOULD BE COMPLETED
REVIEW:
What is a jussive?
HOMEWORK:
Prepare Odes III.2.1-6 (…in rebus)