
Si carpe diem,
sapis et patis quicquid
Jovis tribuet
If you seize the day,
you are wise and you endure whatever
Jupiter assigns
I LOVE LATIN <3
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie
Horace's poem is a lot like what Epicurus believed. The poem was all about pleasure; the pleasure of being warm, of drinking, and of childhood fun. Horace told his friend not to think about the future because this would make him unhappy, he should live his life to the fullest. The pleasures in this poem were simple pleasures, which the person Horace was talking to should not take too much a part in. If he did it would lead to dissatisfaction later. Horace told this man to take part in all these pleasures and according to Epicurus it would make him happy.
Sinon's story was particularly effective in the way he portrayed Ulysses to the Trojans. The Trojans knew of Ulysses' tricks and Sinon's story played on that. He told the Trojans how Ulysses snuck into the tent of Calchas and bribed him to say that Sinon was to be the one sacrificed to the gods. He did this because it was a way of getting rid of Sinon that no one would question, just like no one questioned the death of Palamedes because he had spoken out about the war. According to Sinon's story Ulysses had all kinds of tricks up his sleeve, and the Trojans knew that first hand. His tears also made his story believable. He cried about his family and what the cruel Greeks would do to them. This made the Trojans feel bad for Sinon, especially because he seemed to hate the Greeks just as much as they did.