Home > Poetry > To Pyrrhus
profile/horace.md
Translated from the Latin by David Ferry
Published: Sun Oct 15 1995
Eva Lundsager, Were now like (detail), 2021, oil on canvas
AGNI 42 Print Only

Horace (65–8 BCE) is, along with Virgil, the most celebrated of the Augustan poets. The son of a freed slave, he was a staff officer in Brutus’ army, which was defeated by Augustus at the Battle of Philippi. Horace, pardoned, returned to Rome and later wrote his Satires, Epodes, Odes, and Epistles.

David Ferry (1924–2023) was a profoundly influential poet and translator whose channeling of the ancient world reanimated some of the greatest classics of Western and Middle Eastern poetry. His final book, Some Things I Said, coedited by his close friend George Kalogeris and his children, Elizabeth and Stephen Ferry, reached his hands just days before he died at ninety-nine on November 5, 2023. Late work in Ferry’s case was great work. He completed his “vigorous, intimate” (New York Times) translation of Virgil’s Aeneid in his nineties (University of Chicago Press, 2017), and published Bewilderment: New Poems and Translations (Chicago, 2012) in his eighties; it won the National Book Award in Poetry. Other volumes that feature his own poems include On This Side of the River: Selected Poems (The Waywiser Press [U.K], 2012), Of No Country I Know: New and Selected Poems and Translations (Chicago, 1999), and Dwelling Places: Poems and Translations (Chicago, 1993). Other volumes of translation include The Georgics of Virgil (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2005), The Eclogues of Virgil (FSG, 2000), The Odes of Horace (FSG, 1998), and Gilgamesh (FSG, 1992). In 2011 he received the Poetry Foundation’s Ruth B. Lilly Prize “for lifetime achievement.” A beloved member of our Boston community, he published in AGNI across three decades.

Ferry’s translation The Odes of Horace was reviewed in AGNI 48 by Christopher Davis.

Back to top