The news of Ozymandias' Carpe Diem saw the clock on the wall. It seems I can not wait until the course is over. Perhaps you should slow down and enjoy the present. Ozymandias learned a hard lesson about enjoying time. "Ozymandias" is a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley, King Ozymandias now learns to live and there is no way to get it back when it disappears. At the beginning of the poem, Sherry wrote a talker about the story that he met a man on ancient lands.
Carpe diem is part of Horace 's ban "carpe diem quam minimum credula postero" which appeared in his work (I.11) and was published at 23 bce. It can be translated as simply "Choose one day and trust the next day as little as possible". The phrase carpet dime stands for the ban on Horace, and it is widely known as "catching a day". It is expressed in many subsequent literatures. It appeared in the poetry of ancient Greek literature, especially lyrics, which taught Greek philosopher Epyclus and later crossed what is called Epicurean doctrine. In British literature, this is a particular concern for the poets of the 16th and 17th centuries. Among the Order, Robert Herrick expressed a sharp meaning in the first section of "Many hours to make a virgin" (including Hesperides, which was published in 1648).
The word "Calpe diem" by Roman poet Horace means literally "many days of people choose" to pick a day "or" catch a day. " For some people, Carpe diem is closest to their philosophy of life and is not surprising. The world we know is almost in the loop but it is like a clock. Carpe Diem enjoys it 's every moment of moment. Some people manufacture electric vehicles, manufacture rockets that can land on Earth, use them again, and try to dig tunnels instead of complaining about it. . The only thing without time is small excuses and complaints. how is it? Timely fun! They grabbed that day, and they did it, they built and created. This is what Carpediem means to me.