An Interpretation of the Poems of CatullusEdwin Mellen Press, 1999 - 133 páginas This is an introduction to the poetry of Catullus, establishing a number of contexts within which Catullus functioned. It sets out four ways in which Catullus can be seen as a modern poet: emphasis on art, on sexual themes on the individual voice, and on a brief clear style. |
Contenido
Chapter | 1 |
Chapter Three | 42 |
Chapter Four | 89 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Aegeus Allius Ameana amor Apollonius Rhodius Ariadne Arkins asserts attack Attis Aurelius beautiful Berenice boys brother Caesar Callimachean Callimachus Calvus Catullan Catullus Catullus and Lesbia Cicero Clodia corruption crucial Cybele death deluded Egnatius elegiac couplet enemies epigrams Fabullus father friends Furius Gellius girl goddess gods Greek group Poems happy Hellenistic Heroic Age homosexual human husband Hymenaeus incest intercourse Iuventius Junia kisses Laodamia Latin literature Latin love Latomus Lesbia cycle Lesbia poems lines long poems love for Lesbia love poetry love-sick lover of Lesbia Lucretius lyric male Mamurra Manlius marriage marriage of Peleus married metre miniature epic mistress Muses myth Ovid passion Peleus and Thetis Phrygia Poem 64 Poem 68b poems of Catullus poet Propertius Protesilaus Ptolemy Quinn regarded relationship with Lesbia Rome Rufus sexual love Sexuality in Catullus short poems stress theme Theseus Veranius Verona verses virgin Volusius wife woman women write Yeats