fbpx
Wikipedia

Catullus

Gaius Valerius Catullus (Classical Latin: [ˈɡaːiʊs waˈɫɛriʊs kaˈtʊllʊs]; c. 84 – c. 54 BC), known as Catullus (kə-TUL-əs), was a Latin neoteric poet of the late Roman Republic. His surviving works remain widely read due to their popularity as teaching tools and because of their personal or sexually explicit themes.[2]

Catullus
20th-century bust of Catullus on the Piazza Carducci in Sirmione.[1]
BornGaius Valerius Catullus
c. 84 BC
Verona, Italy, Roman Republic
Diedc. 54 BC (age 29–30)
Rome
OccupationPoet
LanguageLatin
GenreLyric poetry

Life edit

Gāius Valerius Catullus was born to a leading equestrian family of Verona, in Cisalpine Gaul. The social prominence of the Catullus family allowed the father of Gaius Valerius to entertain Julius Caesar when he was the Promagistrate (proconsul) of both Gallic provinces.[3] In a poem, Catullus describes his happy homecoming to the family villa at Sirmio, on Lake Garda, near Verona; he also owned a villa near the resort of Tibur (modern Tivoli).[3]

Catullus appears to have spent most of his young adult years in Rome. His friends there included the poets Licinius Calvus, and Helvius Cinna, Quintus Hortensius (son of the orator and rival of Cicero) and the biographer Cornelius Nepos, to whom Catullus dedicated a libellus of poems,[3] the relation of which to the extant collection remains a matter of debate.[4] He appears to have been acquainted with the poet Marcus Furius Bibaculus. A number of prominent contemporaries appear in his poetry, including Cicero, Caesar and Pompey. According to an anecdote preserved by Suetonius, Caesar did not deny that Catullus's lampoons left an indelible stain on his reputation, but when Catullus apologized, he invited the poet for dinner the very same day.[5]

 
Catullus at Lesbia's by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema

The "Lesbia" of his poems is usually identified with Clodia Metelli, a sophisticated woman from the aristocratic house of patrician family Claudii Pulchri, sister of the infamous Publius Clodius Pulcher, and wife to Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer (consul of 60 BC). In his poems Catullus describes several stages of their relationship: initial euphoria, doubts, separation, and his wrenching feelings of loss. Clodia had several other partners; "From the poems one can adduce no fewer than five lovers in addition to Catullus: Egnatius (poem 37), Gellius (poem 91), Quintius (poem 82), Rufus (poem 77), and Lesbius (poem 79)." There is also some question surrounding her husband's mysterious death in 59 BC: in his speech Pro Caelio Cicero hints that he may have been poisoned. However, a sensitive and passionate Catullus could not relinquish his flame for Clodia, regardless of her obvious indifference to his desire for a deep and permanent relationship. In his poems, Catullus wavers between devout, sweltering love and bitter, scornful insults that he directs at her blatant infidelity (as demonstrated in poems 11 and 58). His passion for her is unrelenting—yet it is unclear when exactly the couple split up for good. Catullus's poems about the relationship display striking depth and psychological insight.[6]

 
Bithynia within the Roman Empire

He spent the year from summer 57 to summer 56 BC in Bithynia on the staff of the commander Gaius Memmius. While in the East, he traveled to the Troad to perform rites at his brother's tomb, an event recorded in a moving poem (101).[3]

No ancient biography of Catullus has survived. His life has to be pieced together from scattered references to him in other ancient authors and from his poems. Thus it is uncertain when he was born and when he died. Jerome stated that he was born in 87 BC and died in Rome on his 30th year.[7] However, Catullus’ poems include references to events of 55 BC. Since the Roman consular fasti make it somewhat easy to confuse 87–57 BC with 84–54 BC, many scholars accept the dates 84 BC–54 BC,[3] supposing that his latest poems and the publication of his libellus coincided with the year of his death. Other authors suggest 52 or 51 BC as the year of the poet's death.[8] Though upon his elder brother's death Catullus lamented that their "whole house was buried along" with the deceased, the existence (and prominence) of Valerii Catulli is attested in the following centuries. T.P. Wiseman argues that after the brother's death Catullus could have married, and that, in this case, the later Valerii Catulli may have been his descendants.[9]

Poetry edit

 
Catullus et in eum commentarius (1554)

Sources and organization edit

Catullus's poems have been preserved in an anthology of 116 carmina (the actual number of poems may slightly vary in various editions), which can be divided into three parts according to their form: approximately sixty short poems in varying meters, called polymetra, nine longer poems, and forty-eight epigrams in elegiac couplets. Each of these three parts – approximately 860 (or more), 1136, and 330 lines respectively – would fit onto a single scroll.[10]

There is no scholarly consensus on whether Catullus himself arranged the order of the poems. The longer poems differ from the polymetra and the epigrams not only in length but also in their subjects: several of them are based on the theme of marriage. The longest (64) of 408 lines, contains two myths (the abandonment of Ariadne and the marriage of Peleus and Thetis), one story included inside the other.

The polymetra and the epigrams can be divided into four major thematic groups (ignoring a rather large number of poems that elude such categorization):

  • poems to and about his friends (e.g., an invitation like poem 13).
  • erotic poems: some of them about his attraction for a boy named Juventius, but others about women, especially about one he calls "Lesbia" (which served as a false name for his married girlfriend, Clodia, source and inspiration of many of his poems).
  • invectives: often rude and sometimes downright obscene poems targeted at friends-turned-traitors (e.g., poem 16), other lovers of Lesbia, well-known poets, and politicians (e.g., Julius Caesar and Cicero).
  • condolences: some poems of Catullus are solemn in nature. 96 comforts a friend in the death of a loved one; several others, most famously 101, lament the death of his brother.

Above all other qualities, Catullus seems to have valued venustas, or charm, in his acquaintances, a theme which he explores in a number of his poems.

Intellectual influences edit

 
Lesbia, 1878 painting by John Reinhard Weguelin inspired by the poems of Catullus

Catullus's poetry was influenced by the innovative poetry of the Hellenistic Age, and especially by Callimachus and the Alexandrian school, which had propagated a new style of poetry that deliberately turned away from the classical epic poetry in the tradition of Homer. Cicero called these local innovators neoteroi (νεώτεροι) or "moderns" (in Latin poetae novi or 'new poets'), in that they cast off the heroic model handed down from Ennius in order to strike new ground and ring a contemporary note. Catullus and Callimachus did not describe the feats of ancient heroes and gods (except perhaps in re-evaluating and predominantly artistic circumstances, e.g. poem 64, focusing instead on small-scale personal themes. Although these poems sometimes seem quite superficial and their subjects often are mere everyday concerns, they are accomplished works of art. Catullus described his work as expolitum, or polished, to show that the language he used was very carefully and artistically composed.

Catullus was also an admirer of Sappho, a female poet of the seventh century BC. Catullus 51 partly translates, partly imitates, and transforms Sappho 31. Some hypothesize that 61 and 62 were perhaps inspired by lost works of Sappho but this is purely speculative. Both of the latter are epithalamia, a form of laudatory or erotic wedding-poetry that Sappho was famous for. Catullus twice used a meter that Sappho was known for, called the Sapphic stanza, in poems 11 and 51, perhaps prompting his successor Horace's interest in the form.

Catullus, as was common to his era, was greatly influenced by stories from Greek and Roman myth. His longer poems—such as 63, 64, 65, 66, and 68—allude to mythology in various ways. Some stories he refers to are the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, the departure of the Argonauts, Theseus and the Minotaur, Ariadne's abandonment, Tereus and Procne, as well as Protesilaus and Laodamia.

Style edit

Catullus wrote in many different meters including hendecasyllabic verse and elegiac couplets (common in love poetry). A great part of his poetry shows strong and occasionally wild emotions, especially in regard to Lesbia (e.g., poems 5 and 7). His love poems are very emotional and ardent, and are relatable to this day. Catullus describes his Lesbia as having multiple suitors and often showing little affection towards him. He also demonstrates a great sense of humour such as in Catullus 13.

Musical settings edit

The Hungarian born British composer Matyas Seiber set poem 31 for unaccompanied mixed chorus Sirmio in 1957.[citation needed] The American composer Ned Rorem set Catullus 101 to music for voice and piano; the song, "Catullus: On the Burial of His Brother", was originally published in 1969.[citation needed]

Catullus Dreams (2011) is a song cycle by David Glaser set to texts of Catullus, scored for soprano and eight instruments; it premiered at Symphony Space in New York by soprano Linda Larson and Sequitur Ensemble.[11] Carmina Catulli is a song cycle arranged from 17 of Catullus's poems by American composer Michael Linton. The cycle was recorded in December 2013 and premiered at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall in March 2014 by French baritone Edwin Crossley-Mercer and pianist Jason Paul Peterson.[12][13][14]

Thomas Campion also wrote a lute-song entitled "My Sweetest Lesbia" dating from 1601[15] using his own translation of the first six lines of Catullus 5 followed by two verses of his own;[16] the translation by Richard Crashaw was set to music[17] in a four-part glee by Samuel Webbe Jr.[citation needed] It was also set to music,[when?][18] in a three-part glee by John Stafford Smith.[citation needed]

Catullus 5, the love poem Vivamus mea Lesbia atque amemus, in the translation by Ben Jonson, was set to music in 1606, (lute accompanied song) by Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger.[19][20] Dutch composer Bertha Tideman-Wijers used Catullus's text for her composition Variations on Valerius "Where that one already turns or turns."[when?][21] The Icelandic composer Jóhann Jóhannsson set Catullus 85 to music; entitled Odi Et Amo, the song is found on Jóhannsson's album Englabörn, and is sung through a vocoder, and the music is played by a string quartet and piano.[when?][citation needed] Catulli Carmina is a cantata by Carl Orff dating from 1943 that sets texts from Catullus to music.[22] Finnish jazz singer Reine Rimón has recorded poems of Catullus set to standard jazz tunes.[when?][citation needed]

Cultural depictions edit

  • The 1888 play Lesbia by Richard Davey depicts the relationship between Catullus and Lesbia, based on incidents from his poems.[23][24]
  • Catullus was the main protagonist of the historical novel Farewell, Catullus (1953) by Pierson Dixon. The novel shows the corruption of Roman society.[25][26]
  • Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita makes multiple explicit and implicit allusions to Catullus' work.[27]
  • W. G. Hardy's novel The City of Libertines (1957) tells the fictionalized story of Catullus and a love affair during the time of Julius Caesar. The Financial Post described the book as "an authentic story of an absorbing era".[28]
  • A poem by Catullus is being recited to Cleopatra in the eponymous 1963 film when Julius Caesar comes to visit her; they talk about him (Cleopatra: 'Catullus doesn't approve of you. Why haven't you had him killed?' Caesar: 'Because I approve of him.') and Caesar then recites other poems by him.
  • The American poet Louis Zukofsky in 1969 wrote a set of homophonic translations of Catullus that attempted in English to replicate the sound as primary emphasis, rather than the more common emphasis on sense of the originals (although the relationship between sound and sense there is often misrepresented and has been clarified by careful study); his Catullus versions have had extensive influence on contemporary innovative poetry and homophonic translation, including the work of poets Robert Duncan, Robert Kelly, and Charles Bernstein.
  • Catullus is the protagonist of Tom Holland's 1995 novel Attis.
  • Catullus appears in Steven Saylor's novel The Venus Throw as the embittered ex-lover of Clodia, sister of Publius Clodius Pulcher, whom he calls Lesbia.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The bust was commissioned in 1935 by Sirmione's mayor, Luigi Trojani, and produced by the Milanese foundry Clodoveo Barzaghi with the assistance of the sculptor Villarubbia Norri (N. Criniti & M. Arduino (eds.), Catullo e Sirmione. Società e cultura della Cisalpina alle soglie dell'impero (Brescia: Grafo, 1994), p. 4).
  2. ^ Skinner, Marilyn B. (2010). A Companion to Catullus. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 481. ISBN 9781444339253. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Gaius Valerius Catullus". Encyclopedia of World Biography. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  4. ^ M. Skinner, "Authorial Arrangement of the Collection", pp. 46–48, in: A Companion to Catullus, Wiley-Blackwell, 2007.
  5. ^ Suetonius Divus Iulius 73".
  6. ^ Howe, Quincy Jr. (1970). Introduction to Catullus, The Complete Poems for American Readers. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc. pp. vii to xvii.
  7. ^ Catullus (2005). The Poems of Catullus: A Bilingual Edition. Translated by Green, Peter. University of California Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780520242647.
  8. ^ M. Skinner, "Introduction", p.3, in: A Companion to Catullus, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.
  9. ^ T.P. Wiseman, "The Valerii Catulli of Verona", in: M. Skinner, ed., A Companion to Catullus, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.
  10. ^ Dettmer (1997), p. 2. A single scroll usually contained between 800 and 1100 verses.
  11. ^ "Glaser's Song Cycle To Receive World Premiere At Symphony Space". Yeshiva University. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  12. ^ McMurtry, Chris (19 August 2014). . RefinersFire. Archived from the original on 8 October 2014. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  13. ^ "LINTON: Carmina Catulli". www.operanews.com.
  14. ^ "Priape, Lesbie, Diane et caetera - Forum Opéra". www.forumopera.com.
  15. ^ "My Sweetest Lesbia | For Better For Verse". Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  16. ^ Rumens, Carol (22 March 2010). "Poem of the week: My Sweetest Lesbia by Thomas Campion". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  17. ^ "Come and let us live : Samuel Webbe Jr. (c. 1770–1843) : Music score" (PDF). Cpdl.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2022. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  18. ^ "Let us, my Lesbia, live and love : John Stafford Smith (1750-1836) : Music score" (PDF). Cpdl.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2022. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  19. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. ^ Cunningham, J. (ed.) (2015) The Cambridge edition of the Works of Ben Jonson: Music Edition, P.4.1.
  21. ^ "ccm :: Tideman Wijers, Bertha Tideman Wijers". composers-classical-music.com. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  22. ^ Ball, Timothy (3 July 2003). "Orff's Trionfi - Jochum (DG)". The Classical Source. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  23. ^ "Our Play-Box: Lesbia". The Theatre. 1 November 1888. pp. 256–257.
  24. ^ "Amusements: Lesbia". The New York Times. 9 October 1890. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com.
  25. ^ Dixon, Pierson (1954). Farewell, Catullus – via Biblio.com.
  26. ^ Reine Rimón and her Hot Papas jazz band; Gregg Stafford; Tuomo Pekkanen; Gaius Valerius Catullus, Variationes iazzicae Catullianae (in Latin), retrieved 7 October 2013
  27. ^ Dyer, Gary R. (13 August 1988). "Humbert Humbert's Use of Catullus 58 in Lolita". Twentieth Century Literature. 34 (1): 1–15. doi:10.2307/441433. JSTOR 441433.
  28. ^ "The City of Libertines by W. G. Hardy". Winnipeg Free Press. Winnipeg, Manitoba. 7 December 1957. p. 38. 

Further reading edit

  • Balme, M.; Morwood, J (1997). Oxford Latin Reader. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Balmer, J. (2004). Catullus: Poems of Love and Hate. Hexham: Bloodaxe.
  • Barrett, A. A. (1972). "Catullus 52 and the Consulship of Vatinius". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 103: 23–38. doi:10.2307/2935964. JSTOR 2935964.
  • Barwick, K. (1958). "Zyklen bei Martial und in den kleinen Gedichten des Catull". Philologus. 102 (1–2): 284–318. doi:10.1524/phil.1958.102.12.284. S2CID 164713202.
  • Calinski, T. (2021). Catull in Bild und Ton - Untersuchungen zur Catull-Rezeption in Malerei und Komposition. Darmstadt: WBG Academic
  • Claes, P. (2002). Concatenatio Catulliana, A New Reading of the Carmina. Amsterdam: J.C. Gieben
  • Clarke, Jacqueline (2006). "Bridal Songs: Catullan Epithalamia and Prudentius Peristephanon 3". Antichthon. 40: 89–103. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001672. S2CID 142365904.
  • Coleman, K.M. (1981). "The persona of Catullus' Phaselus". Greece & Rome. N.S. 28: 68–72. doi:10.1017/s0017383500033507. S2CID 162206320.
  • Dettmer, Helena (1997). Love by the Numbers: Form and the Meaning in the poetry of Catullus. Peter Lang Publishing.
  • Deuling, Judy (2006). "Catullus 17 and 67, and the Catullan Construct". Antichthon. 40: 1–9. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001611. S2CID 145585439.
  • Dorey, T.A. (1959). "The Aurelii and the Furii". Proceedings of the African Classical Associations. 2: 9–10.
  • Duhigg, J. (1971). "The Elegiac Metre of Catullus". Antichthon. 5: 57–67. doi:10.1017/S0066477400004111. S2CID 148299423.
  • Ellis, R. (1889). A Commentary on Catullus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Ferguson, J. (1963). "Catullus and Martial". Proceedings of the African Classical Associations. 6: 3–15.
  • Ferguson, J. (1988). Catullus. Greece & Rome: New Surveys in the Classics. Vol. 20. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Ferrero, L. (1955). Interpretazione di Catullo (in Italian). Torino: Torino, Rosenberg & Sellier.
  • Fitzgerald, W. (1995). Catullan Provocations; Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Fletcher, G.B.A. (1967). "Catulliana". Latomus. 26: 104–106.
  • Fletcher, G.B.A. (1991). "Further Catulliana". Latomus. 50: 92–93.
  • Fordyce, C.J. (1961). Catullus, A Commentary. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gaisser, Julia Haig (1993). Catullus And His Renaissance Readers. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Greene, Ellen (2006). "Catullus, Caesar and the Roman Masculine Identity". Antichthon. 40: 49–64. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001659. S2CID 140827803.
  • Hallett, Judith (2006). "Catullus and Horace on Roman Women Poets". Antichthon. 40: 65–88. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001660. S2CID 140917675.
  • Harrington, Karl Pomeroy (1963). Catullus and His Influence. New York: Cooper Square Publishers.
  • Havelock, E.A. (1939). The Lyric Genius of Catullus. Oxford: B. Blackwell.
  • Hild, Christian (2013). Liebesgedichte als Wagnis. Emotionen und generationelle Prozesse in Catulls Lesbiagedichten. St. Ingbert: Röhrig. ISBN 978-3-86110-517-6.
  • Jackson, Anna (2006). "Catullus in the Playground". Antichthon. 40: 104–116. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001684. S2CID 142720674.
  • Kaggelaris, N. (2015), "Wedding Cry: Sappho (Fr. 109 LP, Fr. 104(a) LP)- Catullus (c. 62. 20-5)- modern greek folk songs" [in Greek] in Avdikos, E.- Koziou-Kolofotia, B. (ed.) Modern Greek folk songs and history, Karditsa, pp. 260–70 [1]
  • Kidd, D.A. (1970). "Some Problems in Catullus LXVI". Antichthon. 4: 38–49. doi:10.1017/S0066477400004007. S2CID 147666304.
  • Kokoszkiewicz, Konrad W. (2004). "Et futura panda sive de Catulli carmine sexto corrigendo". Hermes. 32: 125–128.
  • Kroll, Wilhelm (1929). C. Valerius Catullus (in German). Leipzig: B.G. Teubner.
  • Maas, Paul (1942). "The Chronology of the Poems of Catullus". Classical Quarterly. 36 (1–2): 79–82. doi:10.1017/s0009838800024605. S2CID 170577777.
  • Martin, Charles (1992). Catullus. New Haven: Yale Univ. Press. ISBN 0-300-05199-9.
  • Munro, H.A.J. (1878). Criticisms and Elucidations of Catullus. Cambridge: Deighton, Bell and co.
  • Newman, John Kevin (1990). Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility. Hildesheim: Weidmann.
  • Quinn, Kenneth (1959). The Catullan Revolution. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
  • Quinn, Kenneth (1973). Catullus: The Poems (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan.
  • Radici Colace, P., Il poeta si diverte. Orazio, Catullo e due esempi di poesia non seria, Giornale Italiano di Filologia XVI [XXXVII] 1, 1985, pp. 53–71.
  • Radici Colace, P., Parodie catulliane, ovvero "quando il poeta si diverte", Giornale Italiano di Filologia, XXXIX - 1, 1987, 39-57.
  • Radici Colace, P., Tra ripetizione, struttura e ri-uso: il C. 30 di Catullo, in Atti 175° anniversario Liceo Ginnasio Statale "T. Campanella", Reggio Calabria 1989, 137-142.
  • Radici Colace, P., Mittente-messaggio-destinatario in Catullo tra autobiografia e problematica dell'interpretazione, in AA.VV., Atti del Convegno—La componente autobiografica nella poesia greca e latina fra realtà e artificio letterario - Pisa 16-17 maggio 1991, Pisa 1992, 1-13.
  • Radici Colace, P., La "parola" e il "segno". Il rapporto mittente-destinatario e il problema dell'interpretazione in Catullo, Messana n.s.15, 1993, 23-44.
  • Radici Colace, P., Riuso e parodia in Catullo, Atti del Convegno su Forme della parodia, parodia delle forme nel mondo greco e latino, (Napoli 9 maggio 1995)—A.I.O.N.‖ XVIII, 1996, 155-167.
  • Radici Colace, P., Innografia e parodia innografica in Catullo, in Paideia‖ LXIV, 2009, 553-561
  • Rothstein, Max (1923). "Catull und Lesbia". Philologus. 78 (1–2): 1–34. doi:10.1515/phil-1922-1-203. S2CID 164356664.
  • Small, Stuart G.P. (1983). Catullus. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-2905-4.
  • Swann, Bruce W. (1994). Martial's Catullus. The Reception of an Epigrammatic Rival. Hildesheim: Georg Olms.
  • Thomson, Douglas Ferguson Scott (1997). Catullus: Edited with a Textual and Interpretative Commentary. Phoenix. Vol. 34: suppl. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-0676-0.
  • Townend, G.B. (1980). "A Further Point in Catullus' attack on Volusius". Greece & Rome. n.s. 27 (2): 134–136. doi:10.1017/s0017383500025791. S2CID 163057658.
  • Townend, G.B. (1983). "The Unstated Climax of Catullus 64". Greece & Rome. n.s. 30: 21–30. doi:10.1017/s0017383500026437. S2CID 161731074.
  • Tesoriero, Charles (2006). "Hidden Kisses in Catullus: Poems 5, 6, 7 and 8". Antichthon. 40: 10–18. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001623. S2CID 145676407.
  • Tuplin, C.J. (1981). "Catullus 68". Classical Quarterly. n.s. 31: 113–139. doi:10.1017/s000983880002111x. S2CID 187104503.
  • Uden, James (2006). "Embracing the Young Man in Love: Catullus 75 and the Comic Adulescens". Antichthon. 40: 19–34. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001635. S2CID 142740848.
  • Watson, Lindsay C. (2003). "Bassa's Borborysms: on Martial and Catullus". Antichthon. 37: 1–12. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001386. S2CID 140932135.
  • Watson, Lindsay C. (2006). "Catullus and the Poetics of Incest". Antichthon. 40: 35–48. doi:10.1017/S0066477400001647. S2CID 141549179.
  • Wheeler, A. L. (1934). Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry. Sather Classical Lectures. Vol. 9. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Wilamowitz-Möllendorf, Ulrich von (1913). Sappho und Simonides (in German). Berlin: Weidmann.
  • Wiseman, T. P. (1969). Catullan Questions. Leicester: Leicester University Press.
  • Wiseman, T. P. (2002). Catullus and His World: A Reappraisal (1st pbk. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31968-4.
  • Wiseman, T. P. (1974). Cinna the poet and other Roman essays. Leicester: Leicester University Press. ISBN 0-7185-1120-4.

External links edit

  • Works by Catullus at Perseus Digital Library
  • Works by Catullus at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Catullus at Internet Archive
  • Works by Catullus at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Catullus translations: Catullus's work in Latin and multiple (ten or more) modern languages, including scanned versions of every poem
  • Catullus in Latin and English
  • Catullus translated exclusively in English Translated by A. S. Kline
  • Catullus Online: searchable Latin text, repertory of conjectures, and images of the most important manuscripts
  • Catullus: Latin text, concordances and frequency list
  • Catullus purified: a brief history of Carmen 16 by Thomas Nelson Winter

catullus, asteroid, 11965, confused, with, romans, named, catulus, catulus, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, s. For the asteroid see 11965 Catullus Not to be confused with Romans named Catulus see Catulus This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Catullus news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Gaius Valerius Catullus Classical Latin ˈɡaːiʊs waˈɫɛriʊs kaˈtʊllʊs c 84 c 54 BC known as Catullus ke TUL es was a Latin neoteric poet of the late Roman Republic His surviving works remain widely read due to their popularity as teaching tools and because of their personal or sexually explicit themes 2 Catullus20th century bust of Catullus on the Piazza Carducci in Sirmione 1 BornGaius Valerius Catullusc 84 BC Verona Italy Roman RepublicDiedc 54 BC age 29 30 RomeOccupationPoetLanguageLatinGenreLyric poetry Contents 1 Life 2 Poetry 2 1 Sources and organization 2 2 Intellectual influences 2 3 Style 3 Musical settings 4 Cultural depictions 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editGaius Valerius Catullus was born to a leading equestrian family of Verona in Cisalpine Gaul The social prominence of the Catullus family allowed the father of Gaius Valerius to entertain Julius Caesar when he was the Promagistrate proconsul of both Gallic provinces 3 In a poem Catullus describes his happy homecoming to the family villa at Sirmio on Lake Garda near Verona he also owned a villa near the resort of Tibur modern Tivoli 3 Catullus appears to have spent most of his young adult years in Rome His friends there included the poets Licinius Calvus and Helvius Cinna Quintus Hortensius son of the orator and rival of Cicero and the biographer Cornelius Nepos to whom Catullus dedicated a libellus of poems 3 the relation of which to the extant collection remains a matter of debate 4 He appears to have been acquainted with the poet Marcus Furius Bibaculus A number of prominent contemporaries appear in his poetry including Cicero Caesar and Pompey According to an anecdote preserved by Suetonius Caesar did not deny that Catullus s lampoons left an indelible stain on his reputation but when Catullus apologized he invited the poet for dinner the very same day 5 nbsp Catullus at Lesbia s by Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema The Lesbia of his poems is usually identified with Clodia Metelli a sophisticated woman from the aristocratic house of patrician family Claudii Pulchri sister of the infamous Publius Clodius Pulcher and wife to Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer consul of 60 BC In his poems Catullus describes several stages of their relationship initial euphoria doubts separation and his wrenching feelings of loss Clodia had several other partners From the poems one can adduce no fewer than five lovers in addition to Catullus Egnatius poem 37 Gellius poem 91 Quintius poem 82 Rufus poem 77 and Lesbius poem 79 There is also some question surrounding her husband s mysterious death in 59 BC in his speech Pro Caelio Cicero hints that he may have been poisoned However a sensitive and passionate Catullus could not relinquish his flame for Clodia regardless of her obvious indifference to his desire for a deep and permanent relationship In his poems Catullus wavers between devout sweltering love and bitter scornful insults that he directs at her blatant infidelity as demonstrated in poems 11 and 58 His passion for her is unrelenting yet it is unclear when exactly the couple split up for good Catullus s poems about the relationship display striking depth and psychological insight 6 nbsp Bithynia within the Roman Empire He spent the year from summer 57 to summer 56 BC in Bithynia on the staff of the commander Gaius Memmius While in the East he traveled to the Troad to perform rites at his brother s tomb an event recorded in a moving poem 101 3 No ancient biography of Catullus has survived His life has to be pieced together from scattered references to him in other ancient authors and from his poems Thus it is uncertain when he was born and when he died Jerome stated that he was born in 87 BC and died in Rome on his 30th year 7 However Catullus poems include references to events of 55 BC Since the Roman consular fasti make it somewhat easy to confuse 87 57 BC with 84 54 BC many scholars accept the dates 84 BC 54 BC 3 supposing that his latest poems and the publication of his libellus coincided with the year of his death Other authors suggest 52 or 51 BC as the year of the poet s death 8 Though upon his elder brother s death Catullus lamented that their whole house was buried along with the deceased the existence and prominence of Valerii Catulli is attested in the following centuries T P Wiseman argues that after the brother s death Catullus could have married and that in this case the later Valerii Catulli may have been his descendants 9 Poetry editMain article Poetry of Catullus See also List of poems by Catullus nbsp Catullus et in eum commentarius 1554 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Sources and organization edit Catullus s poems have been preserved in an anthology of 116 carmina the actual number of poems may slightly vary in various editions which can be divided into three parts according to their form approximately sixty short poems in varying meters called polymetra nine longer poems and forty eight epigrams in elegiac couplets Each of these three parts approximately 860 or more 1136 and 330 lines respectively would fit onto a single scroll 10 There is no scholarly consensus on whether Catullus himself arranged the order of the poems The longer poems differ from the polymetra and the epigrams not only in length but also in their subjects several of them are based on the theme of marriage The longest 64 of 408 lines contains two myths the abandonment of Ariadne and the marriage of Peleus and Thetis one story included inside the other The polymetra and the epigrams can be divided into four major thematic groups ignoring a rather large number of poems that elude such categorization poems to and about his friends e g an invitation like poem 13 erotic poems some of them about his attraction for a boy named Juventius but others about women especially about one he calls Lesbia which served as a false name for his married girlfriend Clodia source and inspiration of many of his poems invectives often rude and sometimes downright obscene poems targeted at friends turned traitors e g poem 16 other lovers of Lesbia well known poets and politicians e g Julius Caesar and Cicero condolences some poems of Catullus are solemn in nature 96 comforts a friend in the death of a loved one several others most famously 101 lament the death of his brother Above all other qualities Catullus seems to have valued venustas or charm in his acquaintances a theme which he explores in a number of his poems Intellectual influences edit nbsp Lesbia 1878 painting by John Reinhard Weguelin inspired by the poems of Catullus Catullus s poetry was influenced by the innovative poetry of the Hellenistic Age and especially by Callimachus and the Alexandrian school which had propagated a new style of poetry that deliberately turned away from the classical epic poetry in the tradition of Homer Cicero called these local innovators neoteroi newteroi or moderns in Latin poetae novi or new poets in that they cast off the heroic model handed down from Ennius in order to strike new ground and ring a contemporary note Catullus and Callimachus did not describe the feats of ancient heroes and gods except perhaps in re evaluating and predominantly artistic circumstances e g poem 64 focusing instead on small scale personal themes Although these poems sometimes seem quite superficial and their subjects often are mere everyday concerns they are accomplished works of art Catullus described his work as expolitum or polished to show that the language he used was very carefully and artistically composed Catullus was also an admirer of Sappho a female poet of the seventh century BC Catullus 51 partly translates partly imitates and transforms Sappho 31 Some hypothesize that 61 and 62 were perhaps inspired by lost works of Sappho but this is purely speculative Both of the latter are epithalamia a form of laudatory or erotic wedding poetry that Sappho was famous for Catullus twice used a meter that Sappho was known for called the Sapphic stanza in poems 11 and 51 perhaps prompting his successor Horace s interest in the form Catullus as was common to his era was greatly influenced by stories from Greek and Roman myth His longer poems such as 63 64 65 66 and 68 allude to mythology in various ways Some stories he refers to are the wedding of Peleus and Thetis the departure of the Argonauts Theseus and the Minotaur Ariadne s abandonment Tereus and Procne as well as Protesilaus and Laodamia Style edit Catullus wrote in many different meters including hendecasyllabic verse and elegiac couplets common in love poetry A great part of his poetry shows strong and occasionally wild emotions especially in regard to Lesbia e g poems 5 and 7 His love poems are very emotional and ardent and are relatable to this day Catullus describes his Lesbia as having multiple suitors and often showing little affection towards him He also demonstrates a great sense of humour such as in Catullus 13 Musical settings editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Hungarian born British composer Matyas Seiber set poem 31 for unaccompanied mixed chorus Sirmio in 1957 citation needed The American composer Ned Rorem set Catullus 101 to music for voice and piano the song Catullus On the Burial of His Brother was originally published in 1969 citation needed Catullus Dreams 2011 is a song cycle by David Glaser set to texts of Catullus scored for soprano and eight instruments it premiered at Symphony Space in New York by soprano Linda Larson and Sequitur Ensemble 11 Carmina Catulli is a song cycle arranged from 17 of Catullus s poems by American composer Michael Linton The cycle was recorded in December 2013 and premiered at Carnegie Hall s Weill Recital Hall in March 2014 by French baritone Edwin Crossley Mercer and pianist Jason Paul Peterson 12 13 14 Thomas Campion also wrote a lute song entitled My Sweetest Lesbia dating from 1601 15 using his own translation of the first six lines of Catullus 5 followed by two verses of his own 16 the translation by Richard Crashaw was set to music 17 in a four part glee by Samuel Webbe Jr citation needed It was also set to music when 18 in a three part glee by John Stafford Smith citation needed Catullus 5 the love poem Vivamus mea Lesbia atque amemus in the translation by Ben Jonson was set to music in 1606 lute accompanied song by Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger 19 20 Dutch composer Bertha Tideman Wijers used Catullus s text for her composition Variations on Valerius Where that one already turns or turns when 21 The Icelandic composer Johann Johannsson set Catullus 85 to music entitled Odi Et Amo the song is found on Johannsson s album Englaborn and is sung through a vocoder and the music is played by a string quartet and piano when citation needed Catulli Carmina is a cantata by Carl Orff dating from 1943 that sets texts from Catullus to music 22 Finnish jazz singer Reine Rimon has recorded poems of Catullus set to standard jazz tunes when citation needed Cultural depictions editThe 1888 play Lesbia by Richard Davey depicts the relationship between Catullus and Lesbia based on incidents from his poems 23 24 Catullus was the main protagonist of the historical novel Farewell Catullus 1953 by Pierson Dixon The novel shows the corruption of Roman society 25 26 Vladimir Nabokov s novel Lolita makes multiple explicit and implicit allusions to Catullus work 27 W G Hardy s novel The City of Libertines 1957 tells the fictionalized story of Catullus and a love affair during the time of Julius Caesar The Financial Post described the book as an authentic story of an absorbing era 28 A poem by Catullus is being recited to Cleopatra in the eponymous 1963 film when Julius Caesar comes to visit her they talk about him Cleopatra Catullus doesn t approve of you Why haven t you had him killed Caesar Because I approve of him and Caesar then recites other poems by him The American poet Louis Zukofsky in 1969 wrote a set of homophonic translations of Catullus that attempted in English to replicate the sound as primary emphasis rather than the more common emphasis on sense of the originals although the relationship between sound and sense there is often misrepresented and has been clarified by careful study his Catullus versions have had extensive influence on contemporary innovative poetry and homophonic translation including the work of poets Robert Duncan Robert Kelly and Charles Bernstein Catullus is the protagonist of Tom Holland s 1995 novel Attis Catullus appears in Steven Saylor s novel The Venus Throw as the embittered ex lover of Clodia sister of Publius Clodius Pulcher whom he calls Lesbia See also editPoetry of Catullus List of poems by Catullus Codex Vaticanus Ottobonianus Latinus 1829 Prosody Latin References edit The bust was commissioned in 1935 by Sirmione s mayor Luigi Trojani and produced by the Milanese foundry Clodoveo Barzaghi with the assistance of the sculptor Villarubbia Norri N Criniti amp M Arduino eds Catullo e Sirmione Societa e cultura della Cisalpina alle soglie dell impero Brescia Grafo 1994 p 4 Skinner Marilyn B 2010 A Companion to Catullus Wiley Blackwell p 481 ISBN 9781444339253 Retrieved 13 July 2019 a b c d e Gaius Valerius Catullus Encyclopedia of World Biography Retrieved 13 September 2014 M Skinner Authorial Arrangement of the Collection pp 46 48 in A Companion to Catullus Wiley Blackwell 2007 Suetonius Divus Iulius 73 Howe Quincy Jr 1970 Introduction to Catullus The Complete Poems for American Readers New York E P Dutton amp Co Inc pp vii to xvii Catullus 2005 The Poems of Catullus A Bilingual Edition Translated by Green Peter University of California Press p 1 ISBN 9780520242647 M Skinner Introduction p 3 in A Companion to Catullus Wiley Blackwell 2010 T P Wiseman The Valerii Catulli of Verona in M Skinner ed A Companion to Catullus Wiley Blackwell 2010 Dettmer 1997 p 2 A single scroll usually contained between 800 and 1100 verses Glaser s Song Cycle To Receive World Premiere At Symphony Space Yeshiva University Retrieved 6 March 2024 McMurtry Chris 19 August 2014 New Release Linton Carmina Catulli RefinersFire Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 8 October 2014 LINTON Carmina Catulli www operanews com Priape Lesbie Diane et caetera Forum Opera www forumopera com My Sweetest Lesbia For Better For Verse Retrieved 6 March 2024 Rumens Carol 22 March 2010 Poem of the week My Sweetest Lesbia by Thomas Campion The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 6 March 2024 Come and let us live Samuel Webbe Jr c 1770 1843 Music score PDF Cpdl org Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2022 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Let us my Lesbia live and love John Stafford Smith 1750 1836 Music score PDF Cpdl org Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2022 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Cunningham J ed 2015 The Cambridge edition of the Works of Ben Jonson Music Edition P 4 1 ccm Tideman Wijers Bertha Tideman Wijers composers classical music com Retrieved 12 July 2021 Ball Timothy 3 July 2003 Orff s Trionfi Jochum DG The Classical Source Retrieved 6 March 2024 Our Play Box Lesbia The Theatre 1 November 1888 pp 256 257 Amusements Lesbia The New York Times 9 October 1890 p 4 via Newspapers com Dixon Pierson 1954 Farewell Catullus via Biblio com Reine Rimon and her Hot Papas jazz band Gregg Stafford Tuomo Pekkanen Gaius Valerius Catullus Variationes iazzicae Catullianae in Latin retrieved 7 October 2013 Dyer Gary R 13 August 1988 Humbert Humbert s Use of Catullus 58 in Lolita Twentieth Century Literature 34 1 1 15 doi 10 2307 441433 JSTOR 441433 The City of Libertines by W G Hardy Winnipeg Free Press Winnipeg Manitoba 7 December 1957 p 38 nbsp Further reading editFurther information List of bibliographies of works on Catullus Library resources about Catullus Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Catullus Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Balme M Morwood J 1997 Oxford Latin Reader Oxford Oxford University Press Balmer J 2004 Catullus Poems of Love and Hate Hexham Bloodaxe Barrett A A 1972 Catullus 52 and the Consulship of Vatinius Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 103 23 38 doi 10 2307 2935964 JSTOR 2935964 Barwick K 1958 Zyklen bei Martial und in den kleinen Gedichten des Catull Philologus 102 1 2 284 318 doi 10 1524 phil 1958 102 12 284 S2CID 164713202 Calinski T 2021 Catull in Bild und Ton Untersuchungen zur Catull Rezeption in Malerei und Komposition Darmstadt WBG Academic Claes P 2002 Concatenatio Catulliana A New Reading of the Carmina Amsterdam J C Gieben Clarke Jacqueline 2006 Bridal Songs Catullan Epithalamia and Prudentius Peristephanon 3 Antichthon 40 89 103 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001672 S2CID 142365904 Coleman K M 1981 The persona of Catullus Phaselus Greece amp Rome N S 28 68 72 doi 10 1017 s0017383500033507 S2CID 162206320 Dettmer Helena 1997 Love by the Numbers Form and the Meaning in the poetry of Catullus Peter Lang Publishing Deuling Judy 2006 Catullus 17 and 67 and the Catullan Construct Antichthon 40 1 9 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001611 S2CID 145585439 Dorey T A 1959 The Aurelii and the Furii Proceedings of the African Classical Associations 2 9 10 Duhigg J 1971 The Elegiac Metre of Catullus Antichthon 5 57 67 doi 10 1017 S0066477400004111 S2CID 148299423 Ellis R 1889 A Commentary on Catullus Oxford Clarendon Press Ferguson J 1963 Catullus and Martial Proceedings of the African Classical Associations 6 3 15 Ferguson J 1988 Catullus Greece amp Rome New Surveys in the Classics Vol 20 Oxford Clarendon Press Ferrero L 1955 Interpretazione di Catullo in Italian Torino Torino Rosenberg amp Sellier Fitzgerald W 1995 Catullan Provocations Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position Berkeley University of California Press Fletcher G B A 1967 Catulliana Latomus 26 104 106 Fletcher G B A 1991 Further Catulliana Latomus 50 92 93 Fordyce C J 1961 Catullus A Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press Gaisser Julia Haig 1993 Catullus And His Renaissance Readers Oxford Clarendon Press Greene Ellen 2006 Catullus Caesar and the Roman Masculine Identity Antichthon 40 49 64 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001659 S2CID 140827803 Hallett Judith 2006 Catullus and Horace on Roman Women Poets Antichthon 40 65 88 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001660 S2CID 140917675 Harrington Karl Pomeroy 1963 Catullus and His Influence New York Cooper Square Publishers Havelock E A 1939 The Lyric Genius of Catullus Oxford B Blackwell Hild Christian 2013 Liebesgedichte als Wagnis Emotionen und generationelle Prozesse in Catulls Lesbiagedichten St Ingbert Rohrig ISBN 978 3 86110 517 6 Jackson Anna 2006 Catullus in the Playground Antichthon 40 104 116 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001684 S2CID 142720674 Kaggelaris N 2015 Wedding Cry Sappho Fr 109 LP Fr 104 a LP Catullus c 62 20 5 modern greek folk songs in Greek in Avdikos E Koziou Kolofotia B ed Modern Greek folk songs and history Karditsa pp 260 70 1 Kidd D A 1970 Some Problems in Catullus LXVI Antichthon 4 38 49 doi 10 1017 S0066477400004007 S2CID 147666304 Kokoszkiewicz Konrad W 2004 Et futura panda sive de Catulli carmine sexto corrigendo Hermes 32 125 128 Kroll Wilhelm 1929 C Valerius Catullus in German Leipzig B G Teubner Maas Paul 1942 The Chronology of the Poems of Catullus Classical Quarterly 36 1 2 79 82 doi 10 1017 s0009838800024605 S2CID 170577777 Martin Charles 1992 Catullus New Haven Yale Univ Press ISBN 0 300 05199 9 Munro H A J 1878 Criticisms and Elucidations of Catullus Cambridge Deighton Bell and co Newman John Kevin 1990 Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility Hildesheim Weidmann Quinn Kenneth 1959 The Catullan Revolution Melbourne Melbourne University Press Quinn Kenneth 1973 Catullus The Poems 2nd ed London Macmillan Radici Colace P Il poeta si diverte Orazio Catullo e due esempi di poesia non seria Giornale Italiano di Filologia XVI XXXVII 1 1985 pp 53 71 Radici Colace P Parodie catulliane ovvero quando il poeta si diverte Giornale Italiano di Filologia XXXIX 1 1987 39 57 Radici Colace P Tra ripetizione struttura e ri uso il C 30 di Catullo in Atti 175 anniversario Liceo Ginnasio Statale T Campanella Reggio Calabria 1989 137 142 Radici Colace P Mittente messaggio destinatario in Catullo tra autobiografia e problematica dell interpretazione in AA VV Atti del Convegno La componente autobiografica nella poesia greca e latina fra realta e artificio letterario Pisa 16 17 maggio 1991 Pisa 1992 1 13 Radici Colace P La parola e il segno Il rapporto mittente destinatario e il problema dell interpretazione in Catullo Messana n s 15 1993 23 44 Radici Colace P Riuso e parodia in Catullo Atti del Convegno su Forme della parodia parodia delle forme nel mondo greco e latino Napoli 9 maggio 1995 A I O N XVIII 1996 155 167 Radici Colace P Innografia e parodia innografica in Catullo in Paideia LXIV 2009 553 561 Rothstein Max 1923 Catull und Lesbia Philologus 78 1 2 1 34 doi 10 1515 phil 1922 1 203 S2CID 164356664 Small Stuart G P 1983 Catullus Lanham Md University Press of America ISBN 0 8191 2905 4 Swann Bruce W 1994 Martial s Catullus The Reception of an Epigrammatic Rival Hildesheim Georg Olms Thomson Douglas Ferguson Scott 1997 Catullus Edited with a Textual and Interpretative Commentary Phoenix Vol 34 suppl Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 0676 0 Townend G B 1980 A Further Point in Catullus attack on Volusius Greece amp Rome n s 27 2 134 136 doi 10 1017 s0017383500025791 S2CID 163057658 Townend G B 1983 The Unstated Climax of Catullus 64 Greece amp Rome n s 30 21 30 doi 10 1017 s0017383500026437 S2CID 161731074 Tesoriero Charles 2006 Hidden Kisses in Catullus Poems 5 6 7 and 8 Antichthon 40 10 18 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001623 S2CID 145676407 Tuplin C J 1981 Catullus 68 Classical Quarterly n s 31 113 139 doi 10 1017 s000983880002111x S2CID 187104503 Uden James 2006 Embracing the Young Man in Love Catullus 75 and the Comic Adulescens Antichthon 40 19 34 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001635 S2CID 142740848 Watson Lindsay C 2003 Bassa s Borborysms on Martial and Catullus Antichthon 37 1 12 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001386 S2CID 140932135 Watson Lindsay C 2006 Catullus and the Poetics of Incest Antichthon 40 35 48 doi 10 1017 S0066477400001647 S2CID 141549179 Wheeler A L 1934 Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry Sather Classical Lectures Vol 9 Berkeley University of California Press Wilamowitz Mollendorf Ulrich von 1913 Sappho und Simonides in German Berlin Weidmann Wiseman T P 1969 Catullan Questions Leicester Leicester University Press Wiseman T P 2002 Catullus and His World A Reappraisal 1st pbk ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 31968 4 Wiseman T P 1974 Cinna the poet and other Roman essays Leicester Leicester University Press ISBN 0 7185 1120 4 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Catullus nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of The Poetry of Gaius Valerius Catullus nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Catullus nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Catullus Works by Catullus at Perseus Digital Library Works by Catullus at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Catullus at Internet Archive Works by Catullus at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Catullus translations Catullus s work in Latin and multiple ten or more modern languages including scanned versions of every poem Catullus in Latin and English Catullus translated exclusively in English Translated by A S Kline Catullus Online searchable Latin text repertory of conjectures and images of the most important manuscripts Catullus Latin text concordances and frequency list Catullus purified a brief history of Carmen 16 by Thomas Nelson Winter SORGLL Catullus 5 read by Robert Sonkowsky Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catullus amp oldid 1223690858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.