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TO ASINIUS POLLIO.

Horace

You are treating of the civil commotion, which began from the consulship

of Metelius, and the causes, and the errors, and the operations of the

war, and the game that fortune played, and the pernicious confederacy of

the chiefs, and arms stained with blood not yet expiated--a work full of

danger and hazard: and you are treading upon fires, hidden under

deceitful ashes: let therefore the muse that presides over severe

tragedy, be for a while absent from the theaters; shortly, when thou

hast completed the narrative of the public affairs, you shall resume

your great work in the tragic style of Athens, O Pollio, thou excellent

succor to sorrowing defendants and a consulting senate; [Pollio,] to

whom the laurel produced immortal honors in the Dalmatian triumph. Even

now you stun our ears with the threatening murmur of horns: now the

clarions sound; now the glitter of arms affrights the flying steeds, and

dazzles the sight of the riders. Now I seem to hear of great commanders

besmeared with, glorious dust, and the whole earth subdued, except the

stubborn soul of Cato. Juno, and every other god propitious to the

Africans, impotently went off, leaving that land unrevenged; but soon

offered the descendants of the conquerors, as sacrifices to the manes of

Jugurtha. What plain, enriched by Latin blood, bears not record, by its

numerous sepulchres, of our impious battles, and of the sound of the

downfall of Italy, heard even by the Medes? What pool, what rivers, are

unconscious of our deplorable war? What sea have not the Daunian

slaughters discolored? What shore is unstained by our blood? Do not,

however, rash muse, neglecting your jocose strains, resume the task of

Caean plaintive song, but rather with me seek measures of a lighter

style beneath some love-sequestered grotto.

 

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