Great events happened after the Silver Age in Russia.
The Silver Age (17-13 years) During the one hundred years after Octavian's death, history called it the "Silver Age" of Roman literature. During this period, Rome became increasingly weak politically and its internal contradictions became increasingly fierce. The development of its literature was characterized by increasingly strong court interest, advocating fancy style of writing and abusing rhetoric, which made the style seem crowded and bloated. This feature reached its climax in the first half of the 2nd century. It is fashionable for aristocratic youth to recite empty poems in public, and literature has become a pastime for a few people. The literary styles with the highest achievements in the Silver Age are satirical literature reflecting the thoughts of the lower classes of slave owners and works reflecting the dissatisfaction of the old faction. Luken (39-65) was one of the best poets in the Silver Age, and he wrote the best epic Fa Saglia after Aeneas. Matthiali (4-14) is the best poet in this era, and his main poems are Poems in Inscription Style (a translation of Poems in epigraph Style) with 12 volumes and more than 1,5 poems. Its style is short and pithy, subtle and abrupt, full of wit and humor. Zhu Wenner (6-127) is famous for his satirical poems. He is good at using the past to describe the present, and his poetic style is severe and sharp. His poem "Even if there is no genius, anger produces poetry" has become a famous saying. In the 19th century, when the European bourgeois revolution was in full swing, people paid great attention to Zhu Wenner's works, and Schiller, Hugo and belinsky all gave him high praise. In lyric poetry, Stetius (45-95) is almost the only poet who has achieved success and is good at describing the life interest of the leisure class. Seneca (4-65) is the most important tragic writer in ancient Rome. Influenced by Stoic philosophy, he is good at rhetoric and philosophy, and once served as the teacher of Nero, a famous tyrant. He advocated that people use inner peace to overcome the pain in life and publicize sympathy and kindness. He wrote nine tragedies and one satire in his life, mostly based on Greek tragedies. The style of his works is lofty and serious, mixed with a lot of moral preaching, which makes the dialogues and characters in his works lack realism. His masterpiece is the tragic Trojan Women. In his later years, seneca was given death by Nero because he participated in the Senate nobles' opposition to Nero's tyranny. Prose "Prose" here is not a narrow sense of prose in modern literature, but refers to "prose style" in Latin literature, as opposed to poetic style, including prose, novels, biographical literature and chronicles.