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Horace’s Poetics of Conspiracy: History and Lyric in the Odes to a Licinius (Ode 2.10) and a Virgil (Ode 4.12)

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Abstract

This article takes the cue from Horace’s ‘Ode to Licinius’ (Ode 2.10) to theorise a mode of reading Horatian lyric that both concedes to historicism and embraces hermeneutic aporia while keeping attuned to the affective dimensions of poetry. It reads both the ‘Ode to Licinius’ and the second ‘Ode to Virgil’ (Ode 4.12) as teasing ‘suspicious’ historicist readers into the delusion that historical accounts offer a privileged key to poetic interpretation. Ode 2.10, which invokes historical context only to refuse us the key to access it, becomes a programmatic declaration of poetics and hermeneutics, a poignant meditation on the remits of poetry and history in the Augustan period and beyond.

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Journal of Roman Studies

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0075-4358
1753-528X

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Cambridge University Press

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International