{
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  "subtitle": null,
  "title": "Horatius at the Bridge",
  "type": "PDF",
  "url": "https://www.loc.gov/item/ca24000232/",
  "year": "1922",
  "publisherId": null,
  "notes": null,
  "volume": null,
  "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:44:39.594Z",
  "updatedAt": "2024-02-22T18:46:16.704Z",
  "texts": [
    {
      "id": "horatius-at-the-bridge",
      "subtitle": null,
      "title": "Horatius at the Bridge",
      "type": "SPEECH",
      "year": "1842",
      "notes": "TODO change type to Poem",
      "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:44:31.101Z",
      "updatedAt": "2024-02-22T18:44:31.101Z"
    }
  ],
  "authors": [
    {
      "id": "thomas-macaulay",
      "name": "Thomas Macaulay",
      "shortName": null,
      "yearBorn": null,
      "yearDied": null,
      "fictional": false,
      "notes": null,
      "bio": null,
      "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:43:04.799Z",
      "updatedAt": "2024-02-22T18:43:17.623Z",
      "linkWikipedia": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Babington_Macaulay",
      "linkTwitter": null
    }
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  "editors": [],
  "translators": [],
  "publisher": null,
  "citations": [
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      "start": "13",
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        "textId": "horatius-at-the-bridge",
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        "quote": {
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          "content": "But the Consul's brow was sad, / And the Consul's speech was low, / And darkly looked he at the wall, / And darkly at the foe. / \"Their van will be upon us / Before the bridge goes down; / And if they once may win the bridge, / What hope to save the town?\"\n\nThen out spake brave Horatius, / The Captain of the Gate; / \"To every man upon this earth / Death cometh soon or late / And how can man die better / Than facing fearful odds, / For the ashes of his fathers, / And the temples of his gods.\n\nAnd for the tender mother / Who dandled him to rest, / And for the wife who nurses / His baby at her breast, / And for the holy maidens / Who feed the eternal flame, / To save them from false Sextus / That wrought the deed of shame?\n\n\"Hew down the bridge, Sir Consul, / With all the speed ye may; / I, with two more to help me, / Will hold the foe in play. / In yon strait path a thousand / May well be stopped by three. / Now who will stand on either hand, / And keep the bridge with me?\"",
          "notes": "lines 209 of the poem onwards",
          "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:51:42.490Z",
          "updatedAt": "2024-02-22T18:51:42.490Z"
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "id": "17973ba4-9974-470a-a7b4-6168e50a26c1",
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      "start": "15",
      "end": "16",
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      "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:54:58.668Z",
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      "subtextId": null,
      "source": {
        "id": "a270b583-018d-49f0-bffa-7b88282c9c56",
        "primary": true,
        "quoteId": "2a932fe1-316d-4993-bfc2-c7f204ec031b",
        "textId": "horatius-at-the-bridge",
        "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:54:58.668Z",
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        "quote": {
          "id": "2a932fe1-316d-4993-bfc2-c7f204ec031b",
          "key": null,
          "content": "For Romans in Rome's quarrel / Spared neither land nor gold, / Nor son nor wife, nor limb nor life, / In the brave days of old.\n\nThen none was for a party; / Then all were for the state; / Then the great man helped the poor, / And the poor man loved the great; / Then lands were fairly portioned; / Then spoils were fairly sold; / The Romans were like brothers / In the brave days of old.\n\nNow Roman is to Roman / More hateful than a foe, / And the Tribunes beard the high, / And the Fathers grind the low. / As we wax hot in faction, / In battle we wax cold: / Wherefore men fight not as they fought / In the brave days of old.",
          "notes": null,
          "createdAt": "2024-02-22T18:54:58.668Z",
          "updatedAt": "2024-02-22T18:54:58.668Z"
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