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Catullus - Hubbard - Poems
A false friend and a successful rival.
CARMEN LII.
On Lesbius.
A man of unkissable lips, but whom Lesbia pre-
ferred to Catullus.
12 ?
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? ] 42 NOTES.
4. notorum] 'of his acquaintance. '
CARMEN LIU.
To Juventius.
A young Roman, whom Catullus reproves and
ridicules for having preferred to himself a jaundice
visaged Pisaurian.
CARMEN LIV.
A neatly expressed epigram addressed to Quin-
tius, probably a rival with Catullus in the favors of
Aufilena. #
CARMEN LV.
Of Arrius.
A Roman cockney, who made himself notorious
by an affected pronunciation.
8. eadem hac] 'these same' words, to which
Arrius had given the aspirate. leniter ac leviter]
'softly and lightly. '
9. postiila] i. q. postea.
CARMEN LVII.
Of Quintia and Lesbia.
Catullus compares Quintia, who was esteemed a
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? NOTES. 143
great beauty, with his own Lesbia, allowing to
Quintia many beauties, but denying her claim to
be called beautiful.
3. venustas] 'grace. '
4. salis] 'elegance. '
CARMEN LV1II.
Of Lesbia.
Love surviving disdain and reproaches.
3. deprecor] seems here to have not merely the
force of ' to pray against,' to deprecate, but also
includes the notion of imprecation. So many mal-
edictions as Lesbia utters against him, he forthwith
and continually invokes on her.
CARMEN LIX.
On the Smyrna of the Poet Cinna.
Fragments of a poem in which Catullus gives his
opinion of the worth of several cotemporary writers,
and of their prospects of immortality.
1. Smyrna] the name of an elaborate poem of
Cinna. This was an intimate friend of Caesar and
of Catullus, (met) Corn. Helvius Cinna.
3. Hortensius] Quintus the celebrated orator.
6. pervolvent] 'turn over,'' read. '
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? 144 NOTES.
7. Volusi annales] vide Carm. 26.
8. ] for the use of fishmongers in wrapping1 up
fish.
10. Antimacho] a native of Colophon, who wrote -
a huge poem on the Theban war.
CARMEN LX.
To lAcinias Calvus.
On the early death of Quintilia, solacing hia
grief with the hope that if an affectionate remem-
brance by the survivors, may be grateful to the de-
parted, the sadness of her untimely loss of the joys
of life, would be overpaid by the strength and con-
stancy of his love.
CARMEN LX1.
Catullus had gone to Troas, to pay the last honors
to the Manes of his brother, who was buried there.
After the usual solemnities, he addresses the dead
in the words of this poem. The love of Catullus
for his brother, the only relative he mentions, is one
of the brighter features in a character too deeply
stained with the licentiousness of the age.
CARMEN LXII.
He commends to his friend Cornelius, his power
of keeping secrets.
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? NOTES. 145
3. Ulorum jure sacratum] 'bound by the oath of
such. '
4. Harpocratem] the god of Silence.
CARMEN LXIII.
To Lesbia.
On the unexpected renewal of her attachment to
him.
CARMEN LXIV.
On Cominius.
Whose license of his tongue, and crimination of
virtuous citizens, had made him universally odious.
CARMEN LXV.
To Lesbia.
From whom he had been estranged, on her offer- -
ing a reconciliation; expressing a prayer for its
sincerity and permanence.
CARMEN LXVI.
To Gellius.
1. studioso animo venanda] 'to be studied with
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? 146 NOTES.
thoughtful mind,' applied to a poem of Callimachus,
obscure and full of invective against Apollonius
Rhodius, of which Catullus had attempted an imita-
tion, against Gellius. Ovid in Ibide, v. 55. seq. , in
allusion to these,
carmina Battiadae,
Nunc, quo Battiades inimicum devovet Ibin,
Hoc ego devoveo teque tuosque modo.
Utque tile, historiis involvam carmina caecis:
4. ] Tela infesta meum mittere inusque caput.
Sillig.
7. contra] still,' but yet. '
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