C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
To Thaliarchus
By Horace (658 B.C.)
A
His shrouded pines beneath their burden bending;
Not now, his rifts descending,
Leap the wild streams, in icy fetters bound.
O Thaliarchus, draughts of long-stored wine,
Blood of the Sabine vine!
To-day be ours: the rest the gods command.
Shall the old ash her shattered foliage shed,
The cypress bow her head,
The bursting billow whiten on the shore.
That Fortune gives thee; and despise not, boy,
Or love, or dance, or joy
Of martial games, ere yet thy locks be gray.
The joyous laugh that self-betraying guides
To where the maiden hides;
The ring from finger half resisting wrung.