Ilia, or Rhea Silvia, the mother of Romulus and Remus by Mars (Livy, 1. 3-4), and, according to the legend followed by Horace, daughter of Aeneas, might be called the bride of the Tiber, into which she was thrown (on one tradition) by order of King Amulius. The Julian gens claimed to be descended from her, and so, by a far-fetched conceit, the wife-doting stream is said to avenge the wrong done her by the assassination of her great descendant Julius Caesar.
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poem:
Ode I
Ode II
Ode III
Ode IV
Ode V
Ode VI
Ode VII
Ode VIII
Ode IX
Ode X
Ode XI
Ode XII
Ode XIII.
Ode XIV
Ode XV
Ode XVI
Ode XVII.
Ode XVIII.
Ode XIX
Ode XX.
Ode XXI
Ode XXII.
Ode XXIII.
Ode XXIV
Ode XXV.
Ode XXVI.
Ode XXVII
Ode XXVIII
Ode XXIX
Ode XXX
Ode XXXI
Ode XXXII.
Ode XXXIII.
Ode XXXIV
Ode XXXV
Ode XXXVI
Ode XXXVII
Ode XXXVIII
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Horace. Odes and Epodes. Edited with commentary by. Paul Shorey. revised by. Paul Shorey and Gordon J. Laing. New York. Benj. H. Sanborn and Co. 1910.
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