Description
Embrace your Roman muse
As a learner of Latin, you want to experience the Roman world by reading its writers in their original language. But you may be unsure where to begin in the classical canon or you may worry that your Latin skills are insufficient to tackle authentic texts.
Requiring only a grounding in the basics, Beginning Latin Poetry Reader lets you explore the rich and diverse range of Latin verse, including epics, comedies, satires, lyric poetry, and even graffiti Inside you'll find seventy selections from authors of the early Republic such as Plautus and Terrance as well as those of the Golden and Silver Ages such as Vergil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal--all supported by helpful footnotes and English translations. This book also includes a clear overview of Latin syntax and the metrics of its verse, a glossary of all Latin words found in the readings, and a time line showing the historical and literary context of each author.
Lose yourself in:
- the sparkling comedies of Plautus
- the intimate love poetry of Catullus
- the majestic hexameters of Vergil
- the elegant lyricism of Horace
- the refined sensuality of Ovid
- the compelling satires of Juvenal
- the bristly epigrams of Martial
 Author: Gavin Betts, Daniel Franklin
 Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies
 Published: 08/01/2006
 Pages: 320
 Binding Type: Paperback
 Weight: 0.97lbs
 Size: 9.02h x 6.08w x 0.56d
 ISBN13: 9780071458856
 ISBN10: 0071458859
 BISAC Categories:
 - Foreign Language Study | LatinAbout the Author Gavin Betts, M.A., is an educator, author, and world-renowned Latin scholar. Daniel Franklin holds a degree in Latin and has done graduate work in linguistics at Harvard University. Betts and Franklin are the authors of The Big Gold Book of Latin Verbs. This title is not returnable 

