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Catullus

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created by rax

(person) by rax (3.3 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Wed Jun 07 2000 at 14:09:15

Latin poet of the First Century BC, a contemporary of Julius Caesar. Work include satires, elegies and love poems.

Born at Verona in northern Italy, he owned an estate at Sirmio on Lake Garda but preferred to live at Rome. According to Ovid, Catullus died at the age of 30 (c. 54 BC).

The poems of Catullus refer to two emotional crises in the poet's life: the death of his brother, and an unhappy love affair with a married woman whom he calls Lesbia.

It is clear that Catullus's poetry was influential in its time, and in the Aeneid Virgil not only imitates but even borrows whole lines from Catullus. Catullus's poems (some only fragments) survived antiquity thanks to a single manuscript that was discovered in the early 14th Century. This manuscript was lost, but fortunately not before two copies had been made, and thanks to this Catullus has proved greatly influential to generations of poets from the Renaissance era to the present day.

Catullus's better known lines include:

difficile est longum subito deponere amorem,
difficile est, uerum hoc qua lubet efficias

(It is hard to break with long love suddenly. It is hard, but this you must somehow do.)


(person) by brainwave (5.2 mon) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 2 C!s Mon Jun 26 2000 at 22:21:38

A Roman lyric poet of the first century BC. He was the son of a fairly well to do merchant. His poetry is known for it's urbane and polished nature. His poems deal primarily with love and hate. Early in his career he writes love poems to the married woman with whom he is having an affair (he calls her Lesbia). However after she rejects him his poems become rather mean spirited for instance:

Come here, nasty words, so many I can hardly
tell where you all came from.
That ugly slut thinks I'm a joke
and refuses to give us back
the poems, can you believe this shit?
Lets hunt her down , and demand them back!
Who is she, you ask? That one, who you see
strutting around, with ugly clown lips,
laughing like a pesky French poodle.
Surround her, ask for them again!
"Rotten slut, give my poems back!
Give 'em back, rotten slut, the poems!"
Doesn't give a shit? Oh, crap. Whorehouse.
or if anything's worse, you're it.
But I've not had enough thinking about this.
If nothing else, lets make that
pinched bitch turn red-faced.
All together shout, once more, louder:
"Rotten slut, give my poems back!
Give 'em back, rotten slut, the poems!"
But nothing helps, nothing moves her.
A change in your methods is cool,
if you can get anything more done.
"Sweet thing, give my poems back!"

The translation is Copyright 1995, by Richard Bullington-McGuire who is a nice guy and has allowed me to reproduce it here under a Creative Commons Attribution + Noncommercial licence. CST Approved See:
http://www.obscure.org/obscene-latin/catullus-42.html

The vulgarity of some of his work is rather striking. In addition to lambasting Lesbia for rejecting him he writes entire poems threatening to sodomise certain people who have cheated him or who have critisized his work.
However he can also be quite introspective at times:

I hate and I love. How can this be, you ask in vain.
I know not. But I feel it to be so, and am wracked with pain.

He was one of the first poets to make really explore the use of the latin language for poetry (as opposed to greek).
We are told that Catullus "died of love" whatever that means.


printable version
chaos

Pedicabo ego vos et irrumabo Catullus 1 Catullus 13 You can tell a lot about a person from their e-mail address
Catullus 42 Lesbia Catullus 70 classical studies
Catullus 101 Catullus 5 Catullus 85 Catullus 99
Catullus 9 If you're going to speak archaic English, use it correctly! Odi et amo Catullus 73
Roman Sense of Humor Christmas carols in Latin Catullus 75 I will eat you slowly with kisses
ave atque vale Catullus 3 Catullus 53 tu versus vous
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