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         Catullus:     more books (100)
  1. Catullus: The Poems by Gaius Valerius Catullus, Kenneth Quinn, 01 June, 1985
  2. "When the Lamp Is Shattered": Desire and Narrative in Catullus by Micaela Janan, 01 January, 1994
  3. The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry by Ellen Greene, 01 December, 1998
  4. Catullus (Hermes Books) by Charles Martin, 01 May, 1992
  5. Catullus' indictment of Rome: The meaning of Catullus 64 by David Konstan, 1977
  6. Catullus and His Influence by Karl P. Harrington, June, 1930
  7. Ritual and Desire: Catullus 61 & 62 & Other Ancient Documents on Wedding & Marriage by Ole Thomsen, 01 November, 1992
  8. Selections from Horace, Martial, Ovid and Catullus Teacher's handbook (Cambridge Latin Texts) by Libellus, M. Tennick, 02 November, 1978
  9. Classical Love Poetry: An Anthology of Greek and Latin Amorous Verse by Homer, Sappho, et all 01 February, 1998
  10. The Complete Poetry (Ann Arbor paperbacks) by Gaius Catullus, 01 January, 1981
    More books from Canada, United Kingdom, Germany and France sites

81. Bolchazy.com: Latin — Catullus: Expanded Edition
This new volume, catullus Expanded Edition, merges the Latin poems from both Containing all the poems on the 200506 AP* catullus Examination syllabus.
http://www.bolchazy.com/prod.php?cat=latin&id=603X

82. Catullus & Cicero Links
Some links of interest for Latin 201 catullus and Cicero. The Perseus Project text of catullus poems, where you can click words to get the dictionary entry
http://johara.web.wesleyan.edu/LAT201links.html
Some links of interest for Latin 201 Catullus and Cicero The Perseus Project text of Catullus' poems , where you can click words to get the dictionary entry and analysis of morphology; also has links to Merrill's commentary; only accessible from Wes or if you are a subscriber, I think. An online version of Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar from the Perseus site. Latin text of Catullus' poems, in case you want to print out clean versions for any reason. Texts also available at http://www.tlg.uci.edu/~tlg/index/resources.html Little Active Verb Review Sheet (printable) How are active verbs formed? Print this and review. Many of the texts can also be found in A Catullus Reader , an annotated and thematically-arranged selection of the poems put together by Bill Harris. You may also be interested in The Intelligent Person's Guide to the Latin Language , also produced by Bill Harris. For classics-related discussion lists et al., see Electronic Resources for Classicists New Summer Classics website, incl. Intensive Intro Greek/Latin CICERO LINKS: The Perseus Project text of Cicero's Pro Caelio , with morphological analysis; only accessible from Wes or if you are a subscriber, I think.

83. Catullus
catullus 64. PELIACO quondam prognatae vertice pinus dicuntur liquidas Neptuni nasse per undas Phasidos ad fluctus et fines Aeetaeos,
http://www.wfu.edu/~ulery/catullus/catullus_with_java.html
I. Vocabulary not included in the Basic Latin Vocabulary (R. O. Fink) is highlighted in the text; position the mouse over any such word to see a definition or explanation
II. After each section of text, there is a series of Latin comprehension questions to be answered in Latin. Click on Answer to see a correct response
III. At the end of each set of questions there is a Latin summary restatement of the passage, indicated by ERGO (therefore) CATULLUS 64 PELIACO quondam prognatae vertice pinus
dicuntur liquidas Neptuni nasse per undas
Phasidos
ad fluctus et fines Aeetaeos
cum lecti iuvenes, Argivae robora pubis
auratam
optantes Colchis avertere pellem
ausi sunt vada salsa cita decurrere ... quibus retinens in summis urbibus arces
ipsa levi fecit volitantem flamine currum
pinea
... inflexae texta carinae
illa rudem cursu prima imbuit Amphitriten quae simul ac rostro ventosum proscidit aequor torta que remigio spumis incanuit unda, emersere freti candenti e gurgite vultus aequoreae monstrum Nereides admirantes illa, atque alia, viderunt luce marinas mortales oculis nudato corpore Nymphas nutricum tenus exstantes e gurgite cano tum Thetidis Peleus incensus fertur amore

84. UW Press - : The Complete Poetry Of Catullus
catullus life was akin to pulp fiction. In Julius Caesar s Rome, he engages in a catullus is drawn into politics and becomes a cocky critic of Caesar,
http://www.wisc.edu/wisconsinpress/books/2069.htm
Poetry / Ancient History / Classical Studies
The Complete Poetry of Catullus
Catullus
Translated and with commentary by David Mulroy
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
A wild young poet in Julius Caesar's Rome
Catullus' life was akin to pulp fiction. In Julius Caesar's Rome, he engages in a stormy affair with a consul's wife. He writes her passionate poems of love, hate, and jealousy. The consul, a vehement opponent of Caesar, dies under suspicious circumstances. The merry widow romances numerous young men. Catullus is drawn into politics and becomes a cocky critic of Caesar, writing poems that dub Julius a low-life pig and a pervert. Not surprisingly, soon after, no more is heard of Catullus. David Mulroy brings to life the witty, poignant, and brutally direct voice of a flesh-and-blood man, a young provincial in the Eternal City, reacting to real people and events in a Rome full of violent conflict among individuals marked by genius and megalomaniacal passions. Mulroy's lively, rhythmic translations of the poems are enhanced by an introduction and commentary that provide biographical and bibliographical information about Catullus, a history of his times, a discussion of the translations, and definitions and notes that ease the way for anyone who is not a Latin scholar. "Mulroy's is a marvelous contribution to Catullus translations and studies. Catullus' angry or comic (sometimes both) poems directed at the movers and shakers of his era are rendered here with wit and Roman realism, and the famous love poems to Lesbia are charming and immediate."—Kelly Cherry, author of

85. Sappho 31 Introduction - LiteraryTranslation.com
How does catullus read Sappho s Poem? Sappho and catullus Sexual Politics. by Josephine Balmer. My words may only be of air
http://www.literarytranslation.com/workshops/sapandcat/
Read more Sappho and Catullus: Sexual Politics by Josephine Balmer My words may only be of air But they will always give pleasure These two short lines, inscribed on an ancient Greek vase alongside a figure identified as the poet Sappho seem neatly to encapsulate her life and work. For today, more than ever, her words are still of air - lost gaps in tattered fragments which in themselves constitute only a fraction of her poetic output. But the fascination remains. Over the ages she has been hailed as the tenth Muse, satirised in plays, branded a whore, and forever associated with (perceived) sexual perversion . Medieval popes burnt her work, Victorian translators bowdlerised it, hip sixties scholars picked over her 'clinically commonplace castration complex'. Yet the more we try to pin her down, the faster she disappears, slips through the fingers, vanishes into thin air. Scholars can date her life to around 600BC, her home to Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, just off the coast of modern Turkey in the eastern Mediterranean. All else is supposition. Perhaps the fragmentary names of political factions in her poetry implicate her in political activities, perhaps not. Perhaps Cleis, the daughter mentioned in two of Sappho's poems is the poet's own, perhaps not. What is clear, however, is that her poetry, however incomplete, however fragmented, still gives pleasure today, nearly two and a half thousand years after her death. And nothing illustrates this pleasure better - as well as some of the adjacent frustrations for those attempting to translate it - than perhaps her best-known and most influential poem, fragment 31:
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86. Harvard University Press/Catullus, Tibullus, Catullus. Tibullus. Pervigilium Ven
catullus. Tibullus. Pervigilium Veneris by catullus, Tibullus Translated by FW Cornish, JP Postgate, JW Mackail Revised by GP Goold, published by Harvard
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/L006.html
FROM THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY
CATULLUS, TIBULLUS
Catullus. Tibullus. Pervigilium Veneris
Translated by F. W. Cornish, J. P. Postgate, J. W. Mackail
Revised by G. P. Goold 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. OTHER HARVARD BOOKS BY CATULLUS
Catullus, Reprint Edition

Indexes
400 pages
Hardcover edition
January 1913
ISBN 0-674-99007-2 At the time of his death G. P. Goold was William Lampson Professor Emeritus of Latin Language and Literature, Yale University , and Editor Emeritus of the Loeb Classical Library

87. Harvard University Press/Catullus
catullus Reprint Edition by catullus Edited by Elmer Truesdell Merrill, published by Harvard University Press.
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/CATCAT.html
Catullus
Reprint Edition
Catullus
Edited by Elmer Truesdell Merrill OTHER HARVARD BOOKS BY CATULLUS
Catullus. Tibullus. Pervigilium Veneris

273 pages
Hardcover edition
January 1965
ISBN 0-674-10350-5

88. Catullus.: Free Web Books, Online
catullus (c.84 BC c.54 BC). Biographical note. from Wikipedia. Works. Attis and Other Poems. Other links. Project Gutenberg Other etext editions (via
http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/c/catullus/
The University of Adelaide Library eBooks Help ... Search
Catullus (c.84 B.C. - c.54 B.C.)
Biographical note
Works
  • Attis and Other Poems
Other links
Other E-text Resources See Also: Library Home ... The University of Adelaide Library
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89. Catullus
A Test of Poetry catullus. Canto 27, original version. Minister uetuli puer Falerni catullus 112. Multos home es, Naso neque tecum multus homost qui
http://epc.buffalo.edu/authors/bernstein/syllabi/readings/catullus.html
A Test of Poetry: Catullus Canto 27, original version: Minister uetuli puer Falerni
inger mi calices amariores,
ut lex Postumiae iubet magistrae
ebrioso acino ebriosioris.
at uos quo lubet hinc abite, lymphae,
uini pernicles, et ad seueros
migrate. hic merus est Thyonianus. As translated by Horace Gregory: Come, my boy, bring me the best
of good old Falernian:
we must drink down stronger wine
to drink with this mad lady.
Postumia's our host tonight; drunker than the grape is, is she- and no more water; water is the death of wine. Serve the stuff to solemn fools who enjoy their sorrow, respectable, no doubt - but wine! Here's wine! The very blood of Bacchus. By Peter Whigham: Falernian, old Falernian! cup-boy drown the cups as custom of Postumia tighter than the bursting grape ordains but keep the water-jug boon of the straight-faced far hence no friend to wine - the Bacchus here is neat. By James Michie: Boy serving out our good old friend Falernian, give me a stronger blend.

90. Gaius Valerius Catullus - Catullus Forum
catullus, Forum, Get in touch with other people interested in catullus, finding help in your catullus readings, while sharing your knowledge with others,
http://rudy.negenborn.net/catullus/forum/index.php?l=l

91. English Catullus 63 Translation - Carmen 63 - Gaius Valerius Catullus (English)
English catullus 63 translation on the catullus site with Latin poems of Gaius Valerius catullus plus translations of the Carmina Catulli in Latin, English,
http://rudy.negenborn.net/catullus/text2/e63.htm
Welcome Who is Catullus? Links Catullus Forum ... Search Translations Available English translations: Available languages: Latin Brazilian Port. Catalan Chinese ... Welsh Gaius Valerius Catullus About Me Send a Reaction Read Reactions Carmen 63 (in English by Brendan Rau Available in Latin English French Hungarian ... Italian , and Scanned . Compare two languages here Attis, having been conveyed over the high sees on a
swift-moving boat, when he eagerly touched the Phrygian
forest with his rapid foot and visited the dark places
encircled by the goddess' forests, having there been goaded
on by a raving frenzy, and restless in mind and body, he
plucked out the weights of his own loin with sharp flint,
and when he perceived his remaining limbs without his
manhood, as he was still spattering the soil of the land
with fresh blood, having been summoned, he took a light tom-
tom with his snow-white hands, your tom-tom, mother Cybele,
your sacred rites, and shaking the hollow tom-tom, covered with bullhide, he began to sing of this things to his comrades as he trembled. ""Come, you priests, go to Cybele's

92. Catullus --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
catullus (84?–54? BC;). Gaius Valerius catullus is today considered to be the greatest lyric poet of ancient Rome, but very little is known about his life.
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273567
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in This Article's Table of Contents Catullus Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Catullus
 Student Encyclopedia Article Page 1 of 1 BC ). Gaius Valerius Catullus is today considered to be the greatest lyric poet of ancient Rome, but very little is known about his life. He was born to a well-to-do family in Verona and may have known the statesmen Julius Caesar, Pompey the Great, and Cicero. They and others are addressed by him in poetry that shows an intense capacity for love, hate, and insult.
Catullus...

93. RPO -- Robert Bridges : To Catullus
To catullus. 1Would that you were alive today, catullus! 1 catullus Gaius Valerius catullus (ca. 84ca. 54 BC), Roman poet.
http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/rpo/display/poem2932.html
Poet Index Poem Index Random Search ... Concordance document.writeln(divStyle)
Robert Bridges (1844-1930)
To Catullus
Would that you were alive today, Catullus! Truth 'tis, there is a filthy skunk amongst us, A rank musk-idiot, the filthiest skunk, Of no least sorry use on earth, but only Fit in fancy to justify the outlay Of your most horrible vocabulary.
My Muse, all innocent as Eve in Eden, Would yet wear any skins of old pollution Rather than celebrate the name detested. Ev'n now might he rejoice at our attention, Guess'd he this little ode were aiming at him.
O! were you but alive again, Catullus!
For see, not one among the bards of our time With their flimsy tackle was out to strike him; Not those two pretty Laureates of England, Not Alfred Tennyson nor Alfred Austin. Notes ] Catullus: Gaius Valerius Catullus (ca. 84-ca. 54 B.C.), Roman poet.
] Alfred Tennyson: English poet laureate , 1850-92. Alfred Austin: poet laureate, 1896-1913.
Published by the Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Libraries. Original text Poetical Works of Robert Bridges with The Testament of Beauty but excluding the eight drama , 2nd edn. (London: Geoffrey Cumberlege, Oxford University Press, 1953): 550.

94. Catullus
Oxford University Press USA publishes scholarly works in all academic disciplines, bibles, music, children s books, business books, dictionaries,
http://www.us.oup.com/us/companion.websites/0195153448/studentresources/archives

95. Diotima
catullus, Poem 64 The Wedding of Peleus and Thetis. Translation copyright 1997 by Thomas Banks. All rights reserved. (At the bottom of this file you will
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/anthology/cat64.shtml

96. Catullus - Poem 63
catullus departs from this form of the Attis myth, and makes Attis a beautiful catullus Poem 63. Carried in a fast ship over profound seas; Attis,
http://www.piney.com/CatullusMu.html
Catullus - Poem 63
Catullus Music and Sodomy: "The self-mutilation and subsequent lament of Attis, a priest of Cybele . The centre of the worship of the Phrygian kube/lh or kubh/bh, was in very ancient times the town of Pessinus in Galatian Phrygia , at the foot of Mt. Dindymus , from which the goddess received the name Dindymene. Cybele had early become identified with the Cretan divinity Rhea , the Mother of the Gods , and to some extent with Demeter, the search of Cybele for Attis being compared with that of Demeter for Persephone. The especial worship of Cybele was conducted by emasculated priests called Galli (Deut 23:1 No one who has been emasculated by crushing or cutting may enter the assembly of the LORD). Their name was derived by the ancients from that of the river Gallus , a tributary of the Sangarius by drinking from which men became inspired with frenzy (cf. Ov. Fast. 4.361ff.). The worship was orgiastic in the extreme, and was accompanied by the sound of such frenzy-producing instruments as the tympana cymbala , and cornu and culminated in scourging, self-mutilation, syncope from excitement. and even death from hemorrhage or heart-failure

97. Auckland University Press :: Catullus For Children :: Anna Jackson
Auckland University Press, catullus for Children, Anna Jackson, AUP, New Zealand poetry.
http://www2.auckland.ac.nz/aup/books/jackson-catullus.html
Catullus for Children ANNA JACKSON In this new collection, caught between the two cities of Hamilton and Wellington, a popular poet returns to her favourite themes of domestic life, her children, and the Russian poets she loves. In the first part of Catullus for Children Anna Jackson, with great wit and originality, adapts some of Catullus's famous verses to the playground, sharply noting the obsessions and the preoccupations of her children in poems with titles like "War" and "Party"; "The Treehouse" is a further selection of poems on family life, affectionate, amused, wistful; in "The happiness of poets" the Russians talk and sing and play games with words; and finally in "Stow stay" the family moves south, packs up, gets ready for a new life, "every step an arrival". These poems are full of tenderness and of delight in the child's world but they also suggest fear and anxiety at its fragility and a knowledge that children soon grow up and take on the burdens of adulthood. Anna explains, "In this collection I try to bring texts and emotions across generations and across time. The sequence 'Catullus for children' that gives the collection its title is perhaps rather an unlikely project to have embarked on, given that Catullus is a poet of such adult themes. But love and enmity are themes of high importance for children as well, and the excessive statements typical of Catullus, as well as the overwrought style of imagery I have borrowed from Renaissance translations of Catullus, seem to express very well the heightened emotions of a schoolchild."

98. Accessibility: A Catullus For Now?, By Simon Smith
catullus Poems of Love and Hate, translated by Josephine Balmer, Neither catullus (8454 BC) nor the later Roman elegists had much time for the pursuit
http://www.poetrysociety.org.uk/review/pr95-1/smith.htm
Accessibility: a Catullus for now?
Simon Smith
Catullus: Poems of Love and Hate, translated by Josephine Balmer,
Bloodaxe, £7.95, ISBN 1852246456
ISSUE 95-1 BACK TO TABLE OF CONTENTS "One of the main purposes of education is to encourage people to think. But education for its own sake is a bit dodgy" (see http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/2712833.stm ). These reported comments of former Education Minister Charles Clarke are from January 2003, and were followed up by the observation that, while he did in fact advocate the study of philosophy, he was "less occupied by the Classics". The timing of these remarks, in the run up to the second Gulf War, seems either proof of synchronicity or provides further evidence of myopia as this government peers across its long-range cultural origins and present circumstances without an understanding of either. On the face of it, there might not be much the Blair government and the world of the late Roman Republic, or the first years of Augustus, have in common, but all the poets of that period seemed to be against war except Virgil (and possibly Horace). Their engagement with the subject now sounds urgent and relevant. Neither Catullus (84-54 BC) nor the later Roman elegists had much time for the pursuit of war or the manipulations of politicians, except as metaphor for love and illicit bedroom activity. Catullus is famous for his excoriations of Caesar, Propertius for his avoidance strategies around dedicating books of poetry to Augustus and his military exploits. Much is made of his use of the rhetorical device the "recusatio", or refusal, to write of wider political and public themes. Tibullus and Ovid are even more overt in their rejections of the soldier's life. Consider Propertius's

99. GreenCine | View Profile - Catullus
catullus s Reviews • Another amazing Denzel performance of Man on Fire • Warning this is a really bad movie of Secret Window
http://www.greencine.com/viewProfile?a=Catullus

100. 2005 Classics-M: Catullus Survey
WebBased information from the Department of Greek and Latin at The Ohio State University.
http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/mailing_lists/CLA-M/2005/0014.php
The Department of Greek and Latin at The Ohio State University Home Who we are People Graduate Studies ... Site Map Catullus Survey
Date view
Thread view Subject view Author view ... Attachment view From: Diana Wright ( DianaGWright_at_comcast.net
Date:
RESPOND TO: rancona@HUNTER.CUNY.EDU Catullus Survey For a chapter they are co-authoring on "Catullus in the Secondary Schools " for the forthcoming Blackwell Companion to Catullus (editor, Marilyn Skinner), Ronnie Ancona and Judith Hallett are informally surveying classicists about their experience with Catullus (as student and/or teacher). If you would like to share any of your own experiences, please e-mail your responses off-list to: rancona@hunter.cuny.edu (An earlier version of this survey was sent to LatinTeach and the AP Latin lists. Apologies if you get this from more than one list.) Thanks much! Name e-mail address
  • Do you currently teach? yes_no_ 2. Did you study Catullus in secondary school? If so, what school and state/province/country?
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