This ode bears the hallmarks of an age in which life was shorter, and people were apt to get on with things early, sex included. That makes some aspects of the poem feel alien to modern sensibilities, as does likening an attractive girl to a heifer (earlier Greek writers had used the metaphor of a frisky filly). The description of Gyges at the end looks like a reference to the legend that Thetis, the mother of Achilles, hid him disguised as a girl in the household of King Lycomedes of Skyros to prevent him from going to Troy, and that Odysseus and Diomedes tricked him into revealing himself by making him think the palace was under attack (he grabbed a weapon).
Metre: Alcaics.
See the illustrated blog post here.
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