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  1.  5
    Horace in Love, Horace on Love.Giacomo Fedeli - 2023 - Classical Quarterly 73 (1):213-230.
    The anti-Catullan and anti-elegiac perspective characterizing Horace's erotic Odes builds on elements of the biography of his persona found in his juvenile collections, the Satires and the Epodes, where the construction of Horace's poetic autobiography as a lover brings together matters of didactics, ethics and literary criticism.
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    The text of Horace, satires 1.4.4: Greek old comedy and lucilius.Giacomo Fedeli - 2017 - Classical Quarterly 67 (1):182-192.
    In the famous and widely cited opening of hisSatires 1.4, Horace states :Eupolis atque Cratinus Aristophanesque poetaeatque alii quorum comoedia prisca uirorum est,si quis erat dignus describi, quod malus ac fur,quod moechus foret aut sicarius aut alioquifamosus, multa cum libertate notabant. 5.
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    The text of Horace, satires 1.4.4: Greek old comedy and lucilius – corrigendum.Giacomo Fedeli - 2017 - Classical Quarterly 67 (1):284-284.
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