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Catullus. Tibullus.
Pervigilium Veneris (Loeb Classical Library 6): WITH
Works AND Pervigilium Veneris |
PRODUCT
DETAILS: Author: Gaius
Valerius Catullus, Albius Tibullus, Tiberianus, George P
Goold, Francis Warre Cornish, John Percival Postgate,
John William Mackail Language: English Publisher: Loeb Publication Date: 1 July 1989 Dimensions: 12.1 x 2.2 x 17.1 cm Format:
Hardcover Pages: 394 Condition: NEW Product_ID: A67499A072
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Catullus (Gaius Valerius, 84-54 BCE), of Verona, went
early to Rome, where he associated not only with other
literary men from Cisalpine Gaul but also with Cicero
and Hortensius. His surviving poems consist of nearly
sixty short lyrics, eight longer poems in various
metres, and almost fifty epigrams. All exemplify a
strict technique of studied composition inherited from
early Greek lyric and the poets of Alexandria. In his
work we can trace his unhappy love for a woman he calls
Lesbia; the death of his brother; his visits to
Bithynia; and his emotional friendships and enmities at
Rome. For consummate poetic artistry coupled with
intensity of feeling Catullus's poems have no rival in
Latin literature. Tibullus (Albius, ca. 54-19 BCE), of
equestrian rank and a friend of Horace, enjoyed the
patronage of Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus, whom he
several times apostrophizes. Three books of elegies have
come down to us under his name, of which only the first
two are authentic. Book 1 mostly proclaims his love for
'Delia', Book 2 his passion for 'Nemesis'. The third
book consists of a miscellany of poems from the archives
of Messalla; it is very doubtful whether any come from
the pen of Tibullus himself. But a special interest
attaches to a group of them which concern a girl called
Sulpicia: some of the poems are written by her lover
Cerinthus, while others purport to be her own
composition. The ''Pervigilium Veneris,'' a poem of not
quite a hundred lines celebrating a spring festival in
honour of the goddess of love, is remarkable both for
its beauty and as the first clear note of romanticism
which transformed classical into medieval literature.
The manuscripts give no clue to its author, but recent
scholarship has made a strong case for attributing it to
the early fourth-century poet Tiberianus. |
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