Odes 1.25

Lydia’s tragedy

by Horace

This poem about the decline of a woman’s love life comes in Horace’s Odes shortly after a poem about a young woman on the brink of hers, with a poem about bereavement in between. It is on a theme that was a standard in the ancient world: beautiful but unaccommodating women getting their comeuppance as they age and lose their looks. The subtleties are hard for a modern reader to be sure about. Is the speaker in the poem just sneering, or is he the detached observer of a tragic turn of events? The answer turns on the flavour that a few words would have had for a native speaker of the first century BCE, notably “iecur ulcerosum” – “infected liver” or “wounded heart”? I have chosen the gentler option for the translation, but I may be wrong. Modern editors, and still more their Victorian predecessors, find much to criticise in the poem’s ethics. I find it extremely moving, not just for the beauty of its images from nature, but also because it can be read as the sort of unflinching and objective look at the impersonal cruelty of life that Thomas Hardy might have written had he worn the toga, rather than tweeds.

See the illustrated blog post here.

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Parcius iunctas quatiunt fenestras
iactibus crebris iuvenes protervi
nec tibi somnos adimunt amatque
ianua limen,

quae prius multum facilis movebat
cardines. audis minus et minus iam:
“me tuo longas pereunte noctes,
Lydia, dormis?”

invicem moechos anus arrogantis
flebis in solo levis angiportu
Thracio bacchante magis sub inter-
lunia vento,

cum tibi flagrans amor et libido,
quae solet matres furiare equorum,
saeviet circa iecur ulcerosum
non sine questu,

laeta quod pubes hedera virenti
gaudeat pulla magis atque myrto,
aridas frondes hiemis sodali
dedicet Euro.

The rowdy youngsters throw things to rattle your closed shutters less often and less persistently now than they used to.

They leave you to sleep undisturbed, and your door, which used to be so obliging about moving on its hinges, hugs the frame. Less and less now, you hear, “I’m yours and I’m dying, Lydia, how can you sleep the long nights through?”

Soon it will be your turn to weep, old and ignored in an empty alleyway, at the arrogance of lovers, while longing, and the kind of blazing desire that drives mares to madness, rages around your ravaged heart with more fury than a Thracian wind in the dark of the moon.

Prompting you to complain that the gay young fellows prefer their ivy green and their myrtle fresh and dark, and that they consign dried-up leaves to the east wind, winter’s messmate.

`

More Poems by Horace

  1. Pindar and Augustus
  2. Fortuna
  3. Wealth should be used, not hoarded
  4. Horace the peacemaker
  5. A prayer to Mercury
  6. Horace rests from his labours
  7. Roman values for the new age
  8. The Golden Mean
  9. Horace returns to lyric poetry
  10. Pollio’s histories of civil war
  11. Lalage is too young
  12. Diffugere nives
  13. An invitation to Maecenas
  14. Don’t worry, be happy
  15. Gathering rosebuds: carpe diem
  16. Tibur or Tarentum: a poet’s dilemma?
  17. Diana and Apollo: a hymn
  18. Love a slave-girl? Oh, Xanthias!
  19. Horace’s limitations
  20. Carpe diem, Sestius
  21. Augustus, master of the world
  22. Horace’s reverence to Bacchus
  23. Postumus, the years slip by
  24. Celebrating Neptune’s feast day
  25. Awe for the Gods
  26. Last love
  27. Rome: disaster and salvation
  28. A change of mind
  29. Horace’s Chloe
  30. Horace’s wine
  31. Unrequited love
  32. Poscimur
  33. Lovely mother, lovelier daughter
  34. Don’t trust Barine
  35. Mourning for a good man
  36. Here’s to Murena!
  37. A Farewell to arms
  38. The tug-of-war for Nearchus
  39. Glycera
  40. The fleeting years slip by
  41. The consolations of wine
  42. The country is best
  43. Horace’s first Ode
  44. Jealousy
  45. What Roman youth should be
  46. Give me comfort, not riches
  47. Relief from care
  48. Horace’s prayer to a wine-jar
  49. Luxury versus the simple life
  50. Curse you, tree!
  51. Horace’s Cleopatra ode
  52. The final ode
  53. Valgius and Mystes
  54. A prayer to Venus
  55. Iccius goes soldiering
  56. A Prayer to the poetry-God
  57. An oath to Maecenas
  58. Licymnia
  59. Horace the swan
  60. Horace’s monument
  61. The pleasures and dangers of wine
  62. Horace welcomes his army comrade
  63. Numida’s back
  64. Pyrrha
  65. Housman and Horace
  66. Soracte
  67. O Fons Bandusiae
  68. Horace, the wolf and the upright life
  69. Stormy seas
  70. Some advice for Dellius
  71. Nereus prophesies the Trojan War
  72. Courage and decadence: the Regulus ode
  73. A garland from the Muses
  74. A plea for burial