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         Catullus:     more books (100)
  1. The Poems of Catullus, Bilingual edition (California Library Reprint Series) by Catullus, 1983-09-15
  2. Poems by Gaius Valerius Catullus, 1969-05
  3. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus, improved 7/4/2009 by Caius Valerius Catullus, Richard Burton, 2009-04-07
  4. Aspects Of Catullus' Social Fiction (Studien Zur Klassischen Philologie, Bd. 125) by Christopher Nappa, 2001-07
  5. CATULLUS by Aubrey Burl, 2010-03
  6. A Little Book of Latin Love Poetry: A Transitional Reader for Catullus, Horace, And Ovid by John Breuker, Mardah B. C. Weinfield, 2006-12-01
  7. The Poems of Catullus by Phyllis Young Forsyth, 2002-03-28
  8. Springing from Catullus by Christopher Pilling, 2009-10-15
  9. Catullus: The Poems by Catullus, 1996-01-01
  10. Catullus: the complete poetry by Catullus, 1964
  11. Catullus
  12. Embers of the Ancient Flame: Latin Love Poetry Selections from Catullus, Horace, And Ovid by Carol A. Murphy, 2005-07-01
  13. Catullus' Poem On Attis: Text And Contexts
  14. The Poems of Caius Valerius Catullus, Volume 2 by Gaius Valerius Catullus, 2010-01-10

41. Catullus Poetry Of The Latin Poet Catullus - CATULLUS
Search. Ancient / Classical History, Latin Poetry catullus Guidepicks. catullus. Poetry of the Latin poet catullus. Non-Standard
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Latin Poetry - Catullus
Catullus. Poetry of the Latin poet Catullus.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Non-Standard Male Roman Sexuality Malacus and cinaedos were Greek borrowings to describe men Romans viewed as unmanly. Odi et Amo - Catullus Carmen 85 A look at the chiastic structure and corresponding passions of Catullus Carmen 85 Odi et Amo. Review: The Venus Throw Steven Saylor's mystery about the murder of an Alexandrian philosopher, featuring the infamous widow Lesbia, her brother Clodius, Catullus, the poet who wrote about them, Crassus, Cicero, Caelius, and Gordianus the Finder. Topic Index email to a friend back to top Our Story ...
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42. Catullus
catullus wrote elegant lyric poetry and scurrilous invective. Among his targetswas Julius Caesar. Search. Ancient / Classical History, catullus.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/catullus/
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Catullus
Catullus wrote elegant lyric poetry and scurrilous invective. Among his targets was Julius Caesar. Catullus was in love with a woman he called Lesbia who is believed to have been Clodia, the sister of Clodius Pulcher.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Non-Standard Male Roman Sexuality Malacus and cinaedos were Greek borrowings to describe men Romans viewed as unmanly. Odi et Amo - Catullus Carmen 85 A look at the chiastic structure and corresponding passions of Catullus Carmen 85 Odi et Amo. Review: The Venus Throw Steven Saylor's mystery about the murder of an Alexandrian philosopher, featuring the infamous widow Lesbia, her brother Clodius, Catullus, the poet who wrote about them, Crassus, Cicero, Caelius, and Gordianus the Finder. Catulli Carmina William Harris' article analyzing the love poems by Catullus. Latin text included.

43. Catullus
postrema renovatio 30.3.2004 catullus. 281282. DFS Thomson, Recent Scholarship oncatullus (1960-1969), in The Classical World 65 (1971-1972), pp.116-126.
http://www.let.kun.nl/~m.v.d.poel/bibliografie/catullus.htm
postrema renovatio 30.3.2004 CATULLUS #Bibliographia #Editiones #Indices #Studia docta ... #Bibliographia
H.J. Leon, A Quarter Century of Catullan Scholarship (1934-1959), in : The Classical World 53 (1959-1960), pp. 104-113; 141-148; 173-180; Supplement, pp. 281-282.
D.F.S. Thomson, Recent Scholarship on Catullus (1960-1969), in : The Classical World 65 (1971-1972), pp.116-126.
H. Harrauer, A Bibliography to Catullus, Hildesheim 1979.
J.P. Holoka, Gaius Valerius Catullus. A Systematic Bibliography, New York-Londen 1985.
J. Granorolo, Catulle 1960-1985, in : Lustrum 28-29 (1986-1987), pp. 65-106. #Editiones
R. Ellis, c. comm., Oxford 1889-2 (New York 1979).
E.T. Merrill, c. comm., Cambridge, Mass., 1893 (1965) (New Rochelle, NY, 1983).
G. Friedrich, c. comm., Leipzig-Berlijn 1908.
A. Rutgers van der Loeff, transl., Den Haag 1937.
M. Schuster, transl., c. annott., Wenen 19505. M. Lenchantin de Gubernatis, c. comm., Turijn 1958-3. M. Schuster - W. Eisenhut, Teubner, Stuttgart 1958. W. Eisenhut, Tusculum B. 1960 (1993). W. Kroll, c. comm., ed. 6. recogn., Stuttgart 1980.

44. CSL: Gaius Valerius Catullus
Gaius Valerius catullus (ca. 84 ca. 54 BCE), Also known as Cato theCensor; Cato the Elder Works Carmina ed. Michael von Albrecht
http://www.forumromanum.org/literature/catullusx.html
a digital library of Latin literature
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(single page) Help Secondary Texts What's New Credits ... Contact Us Gaius Valerius Catullus (ca. 84 - ca. 54 BCE) Also known as: Cato the Censor Cato the Elder Works Carmina ed. Michael von Albrecht (Stuttgart 1995) [Bibliotheca Augustana] Alternate Latin texts ed. E. T. Merrill [Perseus] Translations English by Leonard C. Smithers [Perseus] English by Sir Richard Francis Burton [Perseus] English by A.S. Kline, 2001 [Dante and Others] English by various [Catullus Translations] French (PDF) by Maurice Rat, 1931 [Ugo Bratelli] Partial translations Chinese by various [Catullus Translations] Danish by various [Catullus Translations] Dutch by various [Catullus Translations] Estonian by various [Catullus Translations] French by various [Catullus Translations] German by various [Catullus Translations] Hungarian by various [Catullus Translations] Italian by various [Catullus Translations] Norwegian by various [Catullus Translations] Polish by various [Catullus Translations] Serbian by various [Catullus Translations] Spanish by various [Catullus Translations] Swedish by various [Catullus Translations] FORUM ROMANUM

45. Catullus Bibliography
catullus, Hellenistic Poetry, Hellenistic Bibliography, Greek, Latin, Poetry,Neoterics, Bibliographies, Classics, Arts, Leiden University. catullus.
http://www.gltc.leidenuniv.nl/index.php3?c=127

46. On Catullus, By Walter Savage Landor
Walter Savage Landor. On catullus. TELL me not what too well I know About the bardof Sirmio. Ianthe s Question. On catullus. Dirce. Alciphron and Leucippe. Years.
http://www.englishverse.com/poems/on_catullus
Walter Savage Landor
On Catullus
TELL me not what too well I know
About the bard of Sirmio.
Yes, in Thalia's son
Sprinkles another's laughing face
With nectar, and runs on. About the poet Walter Savage Landor By the same poet The Maid's Lament Rose Aylmer Ianthe Twenty Years hence ... Finis Related books Walter Savage Landor at amazon.com Advertisement To advertise here, please contact us
Home
Poets Poems ... Contact English .

47. Bloodaxe Books: Title Page > Josephine Balmer: Chasing Catullus
A book must be the axe which smashes the frozen sea within us . Brian Hinton,Tears in the Fence. Chasing catullus By Josephine Balmer, Chasing catullus.
http://www.bloodaxebooks.com/titlepage.asp?isbn=1852244644

48. Catullus
This website is about the customs of ancient weddings, both Greek and Latin, as describedin the poetry of Sappho and catullus. catullus and His Wedding Songs.
http://www.pogodesigns.com/JP/weddings/catullus.html

Catullus and His Wedding Songs
Si tamen e nobis aliquid nisi nomen et umbra
restat, in Elysia valle Tibullus erit.
obvius huic venias hedera iuvenalia cinctus
tempora cum Calvo, docte Catulle, tuo ...

Yet if human survival means more than a ghostly reputation,
Tibullus must surely dwell in Elysium,
Welcomed by young Calvus, ivy-garlanded,
by Catullus poet and scholar ...
Gaius Valerius Catullus fell in love with a married woman in the first century B.C. and then chronicled the affair in his poetry. Many of Catullus' poems are dedicated to the woman called Lesbia whom he loved with his whole life. Out of this relationship and influenced by Greek poets, a new Latin genre was created. Catullus and his fellow Roman poets, however, added a dimension of devoted love to their poems that was rare in Hellenistic poetry. Influenced by the changing morality in Rome and his subsequent love affair, Catullus' poems disclose not only his own emotions (as one of the first poets to write this in depth about his love affair), but also this new Roman attitudes towards marriage and women.
Marriage at the Time of the Elegiac Poets
Towards the end of the Republic, Rome enjoyed an unprecedented, even luxurious, prosperity. Sympomatic of the social stresses that accompanied prosperity, Roman women began to pursue a more independent lifestyle. At the same time, elegiac poetry was developing and these poets no longer saw marriage as an end. One classicist observed that:

49. Catullus' Carmen 62
This website is about the customs of ancient weddings, both Greek and Latin, asdescribed in the poetry of Sappho and catullus. catullus carmen 62 Text.
http://www.pogodesigns.com/JP/weddings/cat62.html

Catullus' carmen 62
Text
Vesper adest, iuuenes, consurgite: Vesper Olympo
exspectata diu uix tandem lumina tollit.
surgere iam tempus, iam pinguis linquesre mensas,
iam ueniet uirgo, iam dicetur hymenaeus.
Hymen o Hymenaee, Hymen ades o Hymenaee! Cernitis, innuptae, iuuenes? consurgite contra;
nimirum Oetaeos ostendit Noctifer ignes.
sic certest; uiden ut perniciter exsiluere?
non temere exsiluere, canent quod uincere par est. Hymen o Hymenaee, Hymen ades o Hymenaee! Non facilis nobis, aequales, palma parata est; aspicite, innuptae secum ut meditata requirunt. non frustra meditantur: habent memorabile quod sit; nec mirum, penitus quae tota mente laborant. nos alio mentes, alio diuisimus aures; iure igitur uincemur: amat uictoria curam. quare nunc animos saltem conuertite uestros; dicere iam incipient, iam respondere decebit. Hymen o Hymenaee, Hymen ades o Hymenaee! Hespere, quis caelo fertur crudelior ignis? qui natam possis complexu auellere matris complexu matris retinentem auellere natam

50. Catullus
catullus. Gaius Valerius catullus (ca 85 f Krca 55 f Kr), romersk diktare. I ettantal dikter skildrar catullus de olika stadierna i sin kärlekshistorien.
http://www.lu.se/klass/aks/smrg/catullus.html
Catullus
Giv mig tusende kyssar, sedan hundra,
och att ingen oss avundsjuk kan skada,
suger hon musten.
Odi et amo. Quare id faciam, fortasse requiris.
Nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
Afrodite
Cicero

Kleopatra
Platon ... Vin Catullus Gladiator Peloponnesiska kriget
en virtuell resa
Lunds universitet ... Bengt.Pettersson@klass.lu.se

51. Cruising With Catullus
Preface. Cruising with catullus is a sailing memoir, but it s alsothe record of a literary career and several unusual friendships.
http://www.seablogger.com/library/cruising/intro.htm
MAIN LIBRARY CRUISING
Preface
"Cruising with Catullus" is a sailing memoir, but it's also the record of a literary career and several unusual friendships. It was written as a prosimetrum , with a related poem heading each chapter of narrative. Some of the poems have appeared in literary periodicals, which are acknowledged where appropriate. All pages interlink through the table of contents at right. Photos are interspersed with the text. Like any lost love, Catullus has left the pleasure of memory. I wrote this account in the void of a prairie winter, when nothing moved but snowdrifts that crawled like slow-motion waves over the landscape. To escape so cheaply seemed reward enough; I never expected to publish. If you wish to share these cruises with my improbable crewmates, proceed here to the first chapter Alan Sullivan
Fargo, North Dakota
June, 2002
MAIN
LIBRARY CRUISING
Cruising
with Catullus
01 Sunset...

52. Shocked Catullus Poems
. A Supplement to the AP catullus The AP catullus course covers thefollowing poems (as numbered in Mynor s Oxford Classical Text)
http://www.personal.kent.edu/~rlarson/catullus/
Home Verba Scienda Grammar tba Links
A Supplement to the AP Catullus:
The AP Catullus course covers the following poems (as numbered in Mynor's Oxford Classical Text): These poems are Shockwave documents. You will need to install the Shockwave plug-in to use them. (If you do not have the plug-in, your browser will let you know.) My goal in putting this material on the web is to encourage students to read Catullus. I hope that the site will:
  • help reduce the "chore" part of reading Latin literature, provide an way for students to review for the AP exam, and encourage more teachers to add Catullus to their curriculum.
  • NB: This website has a similar set of Shocked Horace poems I included the text of the poems for students to print out and make notes on, do scansion, etc. I am very much interested in the use of hypertext glossing in foreign language learning, and would love to get feedback from students or teachers using these materials. I am interested in your answers to questions such as:
    • Are they helpful?

    53. VivaVoce -- Roman Poetry Recited  ~  Catullus, Horace, Vergil And More
    Downloadable audio files of Latin poetry catullus, Horace, Vergil alii. Romanorum online. catullus 3 Lugete, o Veneres MP3 file 236 KB.
    http://dekart.f.bg.ac.yu/~vnedeljk/VV/
    VIVA VOCE ROMAN POETRY RECITED by Vojin Nedeljkovic This selection of readings from classical Latin poetry is intended to be a reconstruction of what the language of the Romans may have sounded like. I have tried to put together what we positively know about phonetic and prosodic features of classical Latin, then work it out in practice as accurately as I could. But the way from knowledge to practice is a long one, and my reconstruction remains conjectural at more than one point. I also wanted this selection to be a sample of major classical metres. A short description of relevant structures will be found lower on this page. Use links next to yellow quads
    to either download MP3 audio files or play them online. Catullus 3 Lugete, o Veneres... MP3 file 236 KB metre: phalaecian hendecasyllable view text Catul. 3 Catullus 8 Miser Catulle... MP3 file 311 KB metre: choliamb view text Catul. 8 Catullus 29 Quis hoc potest videre... MP3 file 264 KB metre: iambic trimeter view text Catul. 29 Catullus 63, vv. 12-26 Agite ite... MP3 file 216 KB metre: galliambic view text Catul. 63.12-26

    54. The Poems Of Catullus By Derek Adams
    THE POEMS OF catullus by Derek Adams. The book itself is believed to have beenedited and put together around 50 years after the death of catullus.
    http://www.solpubs.freeserve.co.uk/catullus.htm
    THE POEMS OF CATULLUS
    by Derek Adams Historical facts about this first century B.C. poet are scarce. Gaius Valerius Catullus has been described by some as Rome's greatest lyric poet, sensitive and elegant, by others as crude and obscene. I believe he wrote some of the best love poems the world has ever seen. Now, where to start the story of this Roman poet. Thirteenth century Verona seems an unlikely place, but that is where we begin, in the wine cellar of a rich merchant. A rolled-up manuscript was found in an old measuring jug, where it had lain forgotten and unread for over a thousand years. Almost 120 poems, from 2-line epigrams to 400 line mini-epics survived this journey through time, which is quite remarkable when you realise that of the work of his contemporaries, Biblicus, Cinna, Calvus and others, put together, barely three pages have remained intact. Unfortunately the original manuscript disappeared a few years after it was found, but not before at least three copies had been made. The book itself is believed to have been edited and put together around 50 years after the death of Catullus. It has been suggested that the first 60 poems were originally published as one book - each of the long poems would have been published separately - and that the rest are a miscellaneous collection.

    55. Classical Mythology Online - Classical Works
    The myth of Cybele and Attis has inspired one of the greatest of all Roman poems,the Attis of catullus, his 63rd poem, remarkable for the interaction of its
    http://www.classicalmythology.org/archive/classical/catullus_attis.html
    Classical Archive About Chapter Topics Glossaries Maps ... Home Cybele and Attis The myth of Cybele and Attis has inspired one of the greatest of all Roman poems, the Attis of Catullus, his 63rd poem, remarkable for the interaction of its meter, language, and subject-matter. Cybele's eunuch priests are called Galli (feminine, Gallae). In the poem Attis castrates himself and becomes, we may say, unmanned; the poet plays with the ambiguity of his sex with the subtlety only a highly inflected language can achieve. The English must plod to make the same point. Dindymus is a mountain in Mysia sacred to Cybele. Attis was whisked over the deep sea in a swift ship. As soon as he set foot in the Phrygian woods, eagerly and quickly he entered the shadowy forest-crowned haunts of the goddess. Then and there, driven by a frenzied delirium, Attis, out of his mind, hacked off the burden of his genitals with a sharp piece of flint. And so when she (no longer he) sensed that her manhood was gone, while still staining the soil of the earth with fresh drops of blood, she impetuously took up in her snowy-white hands your light tambourine, Cybele, took up your mysteries, O Mother. Shaking the hollow ox-hide of the tambourine with delicate fingers, tremuloulsy she began to sing this exhortation to her companions.

    56. CARMINA CATULLI (1-60)
    Translate this page vale, puella. iam catullus obdurat, nec te requiret nec rogabit invitam. attu dolebis, cum rogaberis nulla. scelesta, vae te, quae tibi manet vita?
    http://www.ipa.net/~magreyn/cat1.htm
    [Home]
    Carmina Catulli (1-60)
    Cui dono lepidum novum libellum
    arida modo pumice expolitum?
    Corneli, tibi: namque tu solebas
    meas esse aliquid putare nugas
    iam tum, cum ausus es unus Italorum
    omne aevum tribus explicare chartis
    doctis, Iuppiter, et laboriosis.
    quare habe tibi quidquid hoc libelli
    qualecumque; quod, o patrona virgo,
    plus uno maneat perenne saeclo.
    Passer, deliciae meae puellae,
    quicum ludere, quem in sinu tenere, cui primum digitum dare appetenti et acris solet incitare morsus, cum desiderio meo nitenti carum nescio quid lubet iocari, et solaciolum sui doloris, credo, ut tum gravis acquiescat ardor: tecum ludere sicut ipsa possem et tristis animi levare curas! tam gratum est mihi quam ferunt puellae pernici aureolum fuisse malum, quod zonam soluit diu ligatam.
    Lugete, o Veneres Cupidinesque, et quantum est hominum venustiorum: passer mortuus est meae puellae, passer, deliciae meae puellae, quem plus illa oculis suis amabat. nam mellitus erat suamque norat ipsam tam bene quam puella matrem

    57. Catullus LVIII—The Movie
    catullus LVIII—The Movie. catullus LVIII—The Poem In Latin Caeli,Lesbia nostra, Lesbia illa. illa Lesbia, quam catullus unam
    http://www.presenceofmind.net/Lesbia/
    In Latin:
    Caeli, Lesbia nostra, Lesbia illa.
    illa Lesbia, quam Catullus unam
    plus quam se atque suos amavit omnes,
    nunc in quadriviis et angiportis
    glubit magnanimi Remi nepotes.
    In English:
    Caelius, our Lesbia, that Lesbia,
    that same Lesbia, whom Catullus loved
    more than himself and more than all his own,
    now loiters at the cross-roads and in the backstreets ready to toss-off the grandsons of the brave Remus.
    Romeo and Juliet by Mark Knopfler A lovestruck Romeo sings a streetsuss serenade laying everybody low with a lovesong that he made finds a convenient streetlight steps out of the shade says something like you and me babe how about it? anyway what you gonna do about it? Juliet the dice were loaded from the start and I bet and you exploded in my heart and I forget I forget the movie song when you gonna realize it was just that the time was wrong Juliet? Come up on different streets they both were streets of shame both dirty both mean yes and the dream was just the same and I dreamed your dream for you and now your dream is real how can you look at me as if I was just another one of your deals?

    58. Catullus
    Catallus Cartoon. catullus Poem 63. Catulli Carmina LXIII. A marvelous translationby CH Sisson, The Poetry of catullus, (New York Orion, 1967).
    http://www.aztriad.com/catullus.html
    Catallus Cartoon
    Catullus - Poem 63
    Laura Darlene Lansberry and Julia Cybele Lansberry Unlike many translators who attempt to interpret the poem of Catullus from their own agenda, creating a piece mocking the Gallae, Sisson is more faithful to the literal Latin text. Thus permitting the reader to decide for (he)rself how to view the message of Catullus. The poet was born in Verona in 84 B.C.E., served in the Roman Administration of Bithynia, (Asia Minor) homeland of the Gallae, and died in 54 B.C.E., at the young age of 33. Some consider him the Roman equivalent of Shakespeare.
    Catulli Carmina LXIII
    A marvelous translation by C.H. Sisson, The Poetry of Catullus , (New York: Orion, 1967)
    In an age when other poets wrote of manly duty and military prowess Catullus wrote sonnets of love. In our opinion, if you want to step back in time, Sisson will transport you to the feet of Catullus as he recites his works.
    Carried in a fast ship over profound seas
    Attis, eager and hurried, reached the Phrygian grove,
    The goddess's dark places, crowned with woodland.

    59. Catullus In English Verse
    Translations of the Roman poet catullus into English verse byJAB Harrisson MBE, DSC. (19091983). No Frames click here.
    http://members.lycos.co.uk/geoff_harrisson/cat.htm
    No Frames click here

    60. Catullus Text And Poems
    GAIUS VALERIUS catullus. uale puella, iam catullus obdurat, nec te requiretnec rogabit inuitam. at tu dolebis, cum rogaberis nulla.
    http://members.lycos.co.uk/geoff_harrisson/catfor.htm
    Best viewed at
    GAIUS VALERIUS CATULLUS
    A Brief Memoir together with
    THE DEDICATORY POEM
    to
    CORNELIUS NEPOS
    and
    TWENTY-ONE POEMS
    to
    LESBIA
    in English verse by J.A.B. HARRISSON MBE DSC (1909-1983) GAIUS VALERIUS CATULLUS On a date somewhere between 87 and 84 B.C. Gaius Valerius Catullus was born. He was of good family, and his father was friendly with, and frequently host to Julius Caesar, though Catullus himself did not care particularly for that distinguished personage. As soon as he was able to do so he got away from home and made for Rome, where he became very much a "young man about town", living a life devoted to pleasure and meeting a number of people who were in, or on the fringes, of Roman Society. Among his close friends were Cicero, for whom he conceived an intense admiration; Cornelius Nepos, who encouraged him to be a writer and to whom he dedicated his first book of poetry, and the poet Calvus, who was indeed Catullus' "alter ego", and who enjoyed as great a reputation as did Catullus himself. It is indeed unfortunate that all Calvus' work has perished. Like all who have a great capacity for friendship, Catullus was a good hater, and his hatreds, which were always of a personal and never of a political nature, are reflected in much of his work.

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