The Odes and Carmen Saeculare/Book 1/Part 8

3216309The Odes and Carmen Saeculare of Horace — Book 1, Ode VIII: Lydia, dic per omnesJohn ConingtonQuintus Horatius Flaccus


VIII.

Lydia, dic per omnes.

LYDIA, by all above,
Why bear so hard on Sybaris, to ruin him with love?
What change has made him shun
The playing-ground, who once so well could bear the dust and sun?
Why does he never sit
On horseback in his company, nor with uneven bit
His Gallic courser tame?
Why dreads he yellow Tiber, as 'twould sully that fair frame?
Like poison loathes the oil,
His arms no longer black and blue with honourable toil,
He who erewhile was known
For quoit or javelin oft and oft beyond the limit thrown?

Why skulks he, as they say
Did Thetis' son before the dawn of Ilion's fatal day,
For fear the manly dress
Should fling him into danger's arms, amid the
Lycian press?