She ages quietly and offers herself to you, Or larboard, or whether Jupiter struck at the sheetsĪnd no prayers to the gods of the shore were offeredįor her, when she came from a foreign sea In your water, and carried her owner from there She says from the very beginning she stood The boat says these things were well known to you,Īnd are, Amastris and box-wood clad Cytorus: She often hissed to the whispering leaves. Leafy wood: for on the heights of Cytorus The threatening Adriatic coast won’t deny it, This boat you see, friends, will tell you Now let evil be yours, evil shadows of Orcus, It might be a small relief from her pain: Whom, greedy, she gives her little finger to, Whom she plays with, holds to her breast, It is, and is worth: virgin Muse, patroness, Then take this little book for your own: whatever Works, by Jupiter, and with the greatest labour. To you, Cornelius: since you were accustomedĭared to explain all the ages, in three learned Of wit, just polished off with dry pumice? His is a perennial voice, and his humour and his humanity are both obvious and enjoyable two thousand years later. He was a significant influence on the ‘love’ poets of the golden age of Latin, such as Horace, Ovid, Propertius and Tibullus, though his alertness to the defects of character of many of his contemporaries, and his often mocking style, make him seem close also to the satirists, Juvenal, Persius and Martial. Probably bisexual himself, Catullus deals overtly with sexuality, love and manners, in a period of apparent social freedom before the more puritanical mood of the early Empire held sway. His is a poetry valuing individual charm, friendship and the intimate, far from the grandeur of epic or the concerns of politics. Many are caustic, satirical, and erotic, often lampooning well-known characters of the day including Julius Caesar and his friends. Ave Atque Vale: An Offering to the DeadĬatullus wrote his poems and epigrams of personal life during the late Roman Republic, and they survive in an anthology of more than a hundred items. Beyond The Grave: to Gaius Licinius Calvus Of the Argonauts and an Epithalamium for Peleus and Thetis Lament for Lesbia: to Marcus Caelius Rufus Laughter in Court: to Gaius Licinius Calvus The Writing Tablets: to the Hendecasyllables Free for All: to the Regulars and Egnatius People Who Live in Glass Houses: to Varus Stop Stealing the Napkins! : to Asinius Marrucinus Words against Lesbia: to Furius and Aurelius This work may be freely reproduced, stored and transmitted, electronically or otherwise, for any non-commercial purpose. Kline © Copyright 2001 All Rights Reserved as many as the stars, when night is still,
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