Παρουσίαση
Sensual, salacious and above all scandalous, the erotic verse of the Roman poet Catullus has delighted - and shocked - readers for centuries. Charting the lives and loves of a group of smart young men about Rome during the late Republic, Catullus' urbane poetry is renowned for its emotional range and psychological insight, not to mention its often startling obscenity.Josephine Balmer's new translation of the complete shorter poems highlights both the intense lyricism and the scabrous wit of the original, bringing Catullus' vivid cast of characters back to life for a new audience: the refined Suffenus who writes poetry like a goat-milker, Egnatius who cleans his teeth in the repulsive 'Spanish' manner, Rufus with his goat-like armpits, and Lesbia, the poet's teasing, torturing lover
Both tender and coruscating, elegant and unrestrained, here is poetry to fall in (and out) of love by, celebrating the power of friendship and the even stronger bond of enmity: poetry of passion.
Gaius Valerius Catullus (c.84-c.54 bc) came from a wealthy Verona family. He was part of a new movement in Latin poetry, fusing Roman vernacular traditions with imported Greek forms. Although his poetry mentions many famous figures of his day, including Cicero and Julius Caesar, little is known of Catullus' own life. A few poems refer to his provincial service in Bithynia in 57 bc, while his married mistress, Lesbia, may have been the notorious noblewoman Clodia Metelli. According to classical tradition Catullus died at the age of 30. Despite its high reputation, most of his poetry was subsequently lost for over a thousand years, to be rediscovered during the Renaissance. (From the publisher)
Κριτικές για το προϊόν
Δεν υπάρχουν κριτικές για αυτό το προϊόν.
Παρακαλούμε συνδεθείτε για να γράψετε μία κριτική.