Who were the outstanding poets at the peak of Roman literature?

The peak of Roman literature was in Octavian period, and the poems of Virgil, Horace and Ovid were the most outstanding, which constituted the "golden age" of Roman literature. Virgil was born in a peasant family, and engaged in the creation of pastoral poems in his early days, which showed his deep affection for the scenery of Tian She. He wrote four volumes of agricultural poems in seven years. The most famous is Eniade, which imitates Homer's epic and tells how Eniade, a Trojan mythical hero, drifted from Troy in Asia Minor to Italy and became the ancestor of Julia. Virgil tried to prove that Octavian is a descendant of God through this epic. Horace, another famous poet, was born in a house of freed slaves. He is both a satirical and lyrical poet and a literary critic. His main works are long and short sentences (1) and 17, chats (2) and 18, songs (4) and poems (2) and 23. His famous poem Ode mainly praised the beauty and tranquility of the countryside and Octavian's rule. The third famous poet in this period was Ovid. Born into a knight family in other provinces, he began to write poetry at the age of 20. His main works include Love, Letter from the Heroine, Art of Love, Medical Care of Love, Chronicle of Roman Times and Transformation, Elegy, Letter from Bendu, etc. Metamorphosis is his masterpiece, which tells the bizarre experience of a young man magically turning into a donkey, interspersed with many love stories, exposes the hypocrisy, debauchery, stupidity and vulgarity of the upper class at that time, expresses his great hatred for these ugly phenomena, and mercilessly curses them. His works have a great influence on later generations. Dante, Shakespeare and Goethe are all influenced by Ovid's works to varying degrees.