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TO NEAERA.

Horace

It was night, and the moon shone in a serene sky among the lesser stars;

when you, about to violate the divinity of the great gods, swore [to be

true] to my requests, embracing me with your pliant arms more closely

than the lofty oak is clasped by the ivy; that while the wolf should

remain an enemy to the flock, and Orion, unpropitious to the sailors,

should trouble the wintery sea, and while the air should fan the

unshorn locks of Apollo, [so long you vowed] that this love should be

mutual. O Neaera, who shall one day greatly grieve on account of my

merit: for, if there is any thing of manhood in Horace, he will not

endure that you should dedicate your nights continually to another, whom

you prefer; and exasperated, he will look out for one who will return

his love; and though an unfeigned sorrow should take possession of you,

yet my firmness shall not give way to that beauty which has once given

me disgust. But as for you, whoever you be who are more successful [than

me], and now strut proud of my misfortune; though you be rich in flocks

and abundance of land, and Pactolus flow for you, nor the mysteries of

Pythagoras, born again, escape you, and you excel Nireus in beauty;

alas! you shall [hereafter] bewail her love transferred elsewhere; but I

shall laugh in my turn.

 

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