Arte poética Quotes

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Arte poética Arte poética by Horatius
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Arte poética Quotes Showing 1-15 of 15
“The aim of the poet is to inform or delight, or to combine together, in what he says, both pleasure and applicability to life. In instructing, be brief in what you say in order that your readers may grasp it quickly and retain it faithfully. Superfluous words simply spill out when the mind is already full. Fiction invented in order to please should remain close to reality.”
Horace, Epistolas Ad Pisones De Ars Poetica
“It is not enough for poems to be beautiful; they must be affecting, and must lead the heart of the hearer as they will.”
Horace, Epistolas Ad Pisones De Ars Poetica
“He who combines the useful and the pleasing wins out by both instructing and delighting the reader. That is the sort of book that will make money for the publisher, cross the seas, and extend the fame of the author.”
Horace, Epistolas Ad Pisones De Ars Poetica
“Lectio, quae placuit, decies repetita placebit.

(What we read with pleasure we can read many times with pleasure.)”
Horace, Arte poética
“Quidquid praecipies, esto brevis.

(Whatever advice you give, be brief.)”
Horace, Arte poética
“Nor must you make such an exordium, as the Cyclic writer of old: "I will sing the fate of Priam, and the noble war." What will this boaster produce worthy of all this gaping? The mountains are in labor, a ridiculous mouse will be brought forth.”
Horatius, Ars Poetica
“As leaves in the woods are changed with the fleeting years; the earliest fall off first: in this manner words perish with old age, and those lately invented nourish and thrive, like men in the time of youth. We, and our works, are doomed to death.”
Horatius, Ars Poetica
“Perhaps you know how to draw a cypress tree: so what, if you've been given money to paint a sailor plunging from a shipwreck
in despair?”
Horatius, Ars Poetica
“The man who mingles the useful with the sweet carries the day by charming his reader and at the same time instructing him.”
Horatius, Art of Poetry
“If you can realistically render
a cypress tree, would you include one when commissioned to paint
a sailor in the midst of a shipwreck?”
Horace, Arte poética
“nocturna versate manu, versate diurna.”
Horatius, Ars Poetica
“All superfluous instructions flow from the too full memory.”
Horatius, Ars Poetica
“Gustavo Solivellas dice: "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori" (Dulce y hermoso es morir por la patria) (Quinto Horacio Flaco)”
Quinto Horacio Flaco, Arte poética: Epístola a los Pisones
“Haec placuit semel, haec decies repetita placebit.”
Horaz, Arte poética
“„Quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus”

„Понякога дори и Омир кима”
Horace, Arte poética