Horace and Me: Life Lessons from an Ancient Poet

Horace and Me: Life Lessons from an Ancient Poet

by HarryEyres (Author)

Synopsis

Horace lived at a pivotal moment. Rome was facing a profound crisis: though it ruled the world, the values which had made it great were disintegrating. As efficiency and pragmatism became watchwords, Horace championed the `supremely useless' endeavour of poetry, and glorified friendship and wine. Horace and Me charts Harry Eyres' evolving relationship with the Latin poet to show how, in an era of affluence and excess which seems to be hurtling out of control, Horace can help us navigate our way in uncertain times.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 04 Jul 2013

ISBN 10: 1408814587
ISBN 13: 9781408814581
Book Overview: A deeply personal story of one man's life-long obsession with an ancient poet, and exploration of what Horace's thoughts on life, leisure and love can teach us today

Media Reviews
A moving memoir that shakes the dust off Horace - and restores him to his rightful berth among the immortals * Harry Mount, author of Amo, Amas, Amat... *
One of the very best kinds of How to books ... Anyone holidaying this year in the old classical Mediterranean should take Horace and Me with them, along with a good copy of Horace's own poetry * Christopher Hart, Literary Review, Summer Reads *
An appealing guide to life, ancient and modern ... Eyres has a taste for Horace's wine as well as an ear for the vigorous Latin with which it is evoked. In Horace and Me, he blends these with memoir to create a paean to Horace and a polemic for the wise life, and for classical literature in general ... He makes Horace very appealing: a paunchy, sociable man ... Eyres's take on Horace is enlightening, and best of all he provides his own witty, exuberantly updated translations of the verses ... Keeps Horace surprising and fresh. It sends the reader to the original - not for a more conventional translation but for a long sip of the Latin, which Eyres makes clear we cannot do without whether we can spout it magnificently on a Cretan mountain or not * Sarah Bakewell, Financial Times *
Delightful ... Its seductive interweaving of a modern life and an ancient one will encourage a wider readership of this most appealing of Latin writers, even if only in translation * Economist *
As a man of letters, learning and light-heartedness, Harry Eyres is rather a rarity these days * The Times *
Rich ... Eyres the fogey and Eyres the rebel combine to find in the greatest lyric poet of the ancient world someone who tells us afresh about the way we live - about what is enough and what is too much, about friendship and power, about how to deal with the march of time and the ironies of love * Daily Telegraph *
Harry Eyres, with the help of the poetry of Horace, has written a book about some of the essential questions. He has squeezed from the life of the poet and from poems two thousand years old lessons that are fresh and relevant today. Horace and Me is a book about the love of poetry and its practical value in these troubling times. A delightful, thought-provoking book into which a lifetime of reading and musing has casually strolled * Ben Okri, Booker Prize-winning author of The Famished Road *
Mr. Eyres writes with insight about why Horace first left him cold, then with intense feeling about all he has gained from the odes in recent years ... Such gem-like appreciations of the intimate, the local and the natural show Mr. Eyres the path toward his goal of being a human being, in the fullest sense .... They will no doubt enjoy the cool drinks that Mr. Eyres scoops up from that rustic Bandusian spring * Wall Street Journal Europe *
Why has no one done this before? - explored themselves through their reading of a great voice from the past? What Horace wrote (about love, about wine, about happiness) can have revelatory relevance. Harry Eyres puts his lyrics in a contemporary and personal context, where he sounds fresher and more to the point than ever * Hugh Johnson *
Horace and Me is a little like Withnail & I for toffs, not thesps ... Dotty hymn of praise ... Emotive * Observer *
Charming, moving * Harry Mount, Spectator *
Eyres, in this amiable memoir-cum-treatise, aims to rehabilitate Horace's image ... Eyres displays a beautiful, serene understanding of the nuances of Horace and of life ... This is an empathetic treatment of both a poet and a life and it makes the reader want to pluck down a copy of Horace from the shelves, and savours its delights * Phillip Womack, Sunday Telegraph *
Big claims are made for this poetry - and poetry more generally - as a useful guide through life ... The book is at its strongest when discussing the poetry and Eyres brings it vividly to life, clearly coaxing out its themes of friendship, wine, living the good life, seizing the day (carpe diem) and freedom of thought and expression * Yorkshire Post *
The pains and pleasures of life don't change much, as Harry Eyres discovers when he rallies the life and work of the celebrity Roman poet Horace to explain the prosperity and discontent of the modern world from the perspective of the affluence and excess of 2,000 years ago. He is witty, erudite, conversational and charming. Happiness is about living. Seize the day , wrote Horace. Seize this book and be happy * Saga *
This book is more than a tribute to the ancient lyric poet Horace ... In a joyous, ironic and wistful cornucopia of experiences, supported by Eyre's own contemporary translations of the Latin poems, Horace's ideas are redefined and sampled once again: his knowledge of wine; his love of beautiful landscapes; his lusts and ambitions and simultaneous contentment with the simple life, and most of all, his live-for-the-moment maxim, which fills this excellent book ***** * The Lady *
Author Bio
Harry Eyres has been a theatre critic, wine writer, poetry editor and is currently the author of the `Slow Lane' column in the Financial Times. He is a poet and gives regular poetry readings at venues such as the Poetry Cafe in London and has contributed to the Today programme on BBC Radio 4. He is the author of a collection of poetry, Hotel Eliseo, and of the Beginner's Guide to Plato's The Republic, Wine Dynasties of Europe, The Viking Guide to Cabernet Sauvignon Wines and the Which? Wine Guide 1995/6. He lives in London.