Odes 2.5

Lalage is too young

by Horace

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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Nondum subacta ferre iugum valet
cervice, nondum munia conparis
aequare nec tauri ruentis
in venerem tolerare pondus;

circa virentis est animus tuae
campos iuvencae nunc fluviis gravem
solantis aestum, nunc in udo
ludere cum vitulis salicto

praegestientis. tolle cupidinem
inmitis uvae: iam tibi lividos
distinguet autumnus racemos
purpureo varius colore.

iam te sequetur (currit enim ferox
aetas et illi quos tibi dempserit
adponet annos), iam proterva
fronte petet Lalage maritum

dilecta, quantum non Pholoe fugax,
non Chloris albo sic umero nitens
ut pura nocturno renidet
luna mari, Cnidiusve Gyges,

quem si puellarum insereres choro,
mire sagacis falleret hospites
discrimen obscurum solutis
crinibus ambiguoque voltu.

She is not yet strong enough to bend her neck and carry the yoke, match a partner in the act or bear the weight of a bull, bound head-on for sex. The thoughts of your little heifer are off on the flourishing fields, passing the heat of the day by the stream and caring for nothing but play with the bull-calves among the willows in the water-meadow. Give up, for now, your appetite for unripe grapes: soon enough, the diversity of autumn will streak the bunches with blue. Soon enough, she will be following you, because savage time is running on, and will add to her each year that it has subtracted from you. Soon enough your Lalage will be after you to be her mate, brows boldly set, dearer to you than coy Pholoe, than Chloris, with her white shoulders shining like the moon on the sea from a cloudless sky, than your Cnidian Gyges – who, hair down and his epicene expression on, would make it very hard for keen-nosed visitors to sniff out his gender if you put him in a chorus-line of girls.

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More Poems by Horace

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