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| Study Guide for Classical LovePoetry
Study Guide for Classical LovePoetry
Study Guide for Classical LovePoetry
Sources:
Barnstone, Willis, trans. Greek Lyric Poetry.
Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1967. Carrier,
Constance, trans. The Poems of Propertius . Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1963. Kate Farrell: Art & Love: An Illustrated
Anthology of Love Poetry. New York: Bulfinch Press, 1990. Lind, L. R.,
ed. Latin Poetry in Verse Translation. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957.
Wendy Mulford, ed.: Love Poems by Women. New York: Fawcett,
1991. Rexroth, Kenneth, trans. Poems from the Greek Anthology. Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1962. Whigham, Peter, trans. The
Poems of Catullus. Baltimore: Penguin, 1966. Wilhelm, James J., ed.
Medieval Song: An Anthology of Hymns and Lyrics. New York: E. P. Dutton,
1971.
Greek Love Poetry
Sappho (Lesbos, 7th Century BCE):
ToAnaktoria Barnstone, Willis, trans. Greek Lyric Poetry.
Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1967, pp. 66-67.
The term"lesbian" comes from Sappho, born on the Island of Lesbos,
oftenconsidered the greatest lyric poet of antiquity; but whether she was
a"lesbian" in the modern sense is still disputed. She was married andhad a
daughter, celebrated marriage, and wrote love poems to both men and women;but
her most famous lines are generally addressed to other women. Today we
wouldprobably call her a bisexual. Plato called her "the Tenth Muse,"
otherscriticized her shamelessness, but until the Christian era she was widely
read andadmired. The Church set itself against her, destroying her writings when
theywere found and--more importantly--not recopying them. They exist today
primarilyas "fragments": brief quotations in discourses on literature, etc.
Somesubstantial pieces were recovered in our own time from a papyrus manuscript
whichhad been cut into strips to wrap an Egyptian mummy. Her modern fame thus
rests ona mere handful of poems, of which "To Anaktoria" is one of the
mostfamous. Helen of Troy left her husband King Agamemnon to go with Paris,
Prince ofTroy, an act that triggered the
Trojan War
whenAgamemnon decided to try to get her back. The Kyprian is
Aphrodite,the
goddess of sexual passion, born near the island of Kypris (or Cypris).
The"hoplites" were Greek foot soldiers. What is the main contrast Sapphois
drawing in this poem? What is its main
message? Poems aboutSapphoMaterials for acourse on homosexuality in the Ancient World
Ibykos (Samos,,1st half , 6th C. BCE) Love`s
Season From Barnstone,no. 297.
Here a lesser-known poet describes the effects of Kypris
( Aphrodite)and
her son
Eros.Thrace
lay to the north and east of Greece, and was considered a wild and savageland.
What is the basic contrast the poet is drawing here? Theognis (Megara,
544 -c.480 BCE)TheAthleteFrom Barnstone, no. 403 In no
other culture hashomosexuality been so institutionalized and praised as in
ancient Greece. Even
Zeus,ruler
of the Gods, was susceptible to homosexual passion. However, it was mainlythe
love of mature men for adolescent boys that was prized: adult male loverswere
often scorned. The Greeks were very male-oriented, and some of themconsidered a
male`s love for another male as being more "masculine,"more worthy, than love
for a mere woman. This sort of relationship was oftenhighly idealized, but
sometimes, as here, it was taken lightly. Here the speakerimagines having two
lovers, one at home (the boy) and the other elsewhere. Thesex of the other lover
is not clear, but it is probably another male. What aboutthis poem suggests
self-conscious "maleness?" Anakreon (Samos c. 572-c. 490
BCE)CharioteerFrom Barnstone, no. 330
Chariot racing was wildly popularin antiquity, and star charioteers were
treated like movie stars today. The poetclearly has a crush on one of these, who
cannot be all that young if he ismanaging a racing chariot. The poem could be
read either as a message to theindifferent youth or as the musings of the poet
to himself. Anakreon was one ofthe most famous lyric poets of
antiquity.
Philodemos: "Philainion is short"
Rexroth, Kenneth, trans. Poems from the Greek Anthology. AnnArbor:
University of Michigan Press, 1962., p. 29.
People of African originwere unusual enough in Greek culture to stand out,
but far from rare. Some ofthem were quite wealthy and powerful. The subject of
this poem is a prostitute,but a gold-hearted one. Prostitutes had a considerably
higher status in Greeksociety than in ours, some of them being widely admired
for their intelligenceand creativity. A cestus is a musical instrument.
In what ways isthe poet rebelling against standard notions of beauty?
Asklepiades (Alexandria, fl. c. 270 BCE): "Negress"
From Barnstone, no. 195.
This poem from theHellenistic period was written in the Egyptian city of
Alexandria, a great centerof both learning and luxury, where many blacks would
have lived. By this date,the population was very mixed, with all pigmentations
mingling freely. Like thepreceding poem, it reflects the mild general prejudice
against dark skin amongthe Greeks, but rejects it. How does the poet make
blackness a positive quality?
Anonymous: "It is sweet insummer"; From Rexroth, p. 29.
Only very wealthy people couldhave snow carried down from the mountains by
special runners for a summer treat;so the poet is using it as an example of
something rare but highly desirable. The"worship of Kypris" is, of course,
lovemaking.
Anonymous (from a gravestone at Corinth) From
Rexroth, p.13.
In antiquity people often inscribed messages on tombstones. Here a
wifepoignantly addresses her dead husband. When people died and went to Hades
theywere thought to drink from the waters of the River Lethe, which wiped
theirmemories clean and left them little better then mindless ghosts. Can you
deduceanything about the writer`s beliefs from this poem?
Roman Poetry Virgil (Publius Vergilius
Maro, 70-19 BCE): Eclogue II Trans. Mary Grant From Lind, R.
Editor. Latin Poetry in Verse Translation, New York: Houghton Mifflin
Co.,1957, pp. 62-64.
By far the most famous and influential of all Roman poetswas Virgil, author
of the great Latin epic of the founding of Rome, the
Aeneid. He
also wrote many shorter poems, including the pastoral verses called"eclogues."
Based on pastoral verse forms invented by Greek poetsduring the Hellenistic age,
they create an idealized countryside in whichshepherds and goatherds have little
to do but play panpipes, sing, and try toseduce each other. This dream-world,
utterly removed from the real world ofordinary peasants, exercised an enormous
fascination over Greeks, Romans, andlater Europeans for many centuries,
inspiring innumerable poems, novels,
paintings,
sculptures,ballets, operas, and other works. There is a set list of names
associated withArcadia (the rural area in Greece depicted in this poetry), and
the mere mentionof a name such as "Corydon" or "Alexis" (both names
ofmen--calling women "Alexis" is a modern innovation) immediatelyidentifies a
poem as pastoral. Some pastoral poetry is heterosexual,some homosexual.
The latter is presented as a common and unremarkablealternative. (When the
Arcadian ideal is resurrected in the Renaissance, however,it is overwhelmingly
heterosexual in orientation.) How does Corydon release theanguish he feels at
being rejected by Alexis? His songs are called"artless" to signify that this is
natural, spontaneous, rustic poetryrather than polished urban verse. This notion
is part of the essence of Arcadianpoetry, which is in fact the product of highly
urbanized poets who cansentimentalize about the simple life in the country from
a safe distance. Thepassage beginning "Were it not best to bear" means that
Corydon isasking himself whether he wouldn`t be better off loving Amaryllis (a
woman`sname) or Menalcas (another man). What is he saying about Alexis` light
skin colorin this stanza? Amphion was famous for his musical skills. Myth said
that hecontributed to the development of the lyre and was able to charm stones
from theground with his music to rebuild ruined walls. It was his brother Zethus
who wasmore interested in tending herds; but Virgil imagines him as an
especiallymusical cowherd. Attica is the Greek peninsula where Athens is
located. Why wasCorydon able to see what he looked like only when the wind died
down? Daphnis is a common Arcadian name. One of the idylls of
Theocritus--theHellenistic poet who founded the Arcadian tradition--tells the
story of a youthnamed Daphnis who dies resisting love, and Longus` Daphnis
andChloe is familiar to modern audiences by having been made into a balletby
Serge Diaghilev with music by Maurice Ravel. Another of Virgil`s Eclogues isalso
about Daphnis. Since the name was associated with extraordinarily
attractiveyouths, what is Corydon claiming about this own looks? "Pierce
thehind" means "hunt deer."
Panis
a god of the countryside, famous for his reed "panpipes." Corydonoffers Alexis
his own panpipe, given him by Damoetas, though Amyntas coveted itfor himself. By
telling this story, Corydon is trying to establish the worth ofhis gift, well
worth having. In addition he offers a pair of fawns. How is whathe says about
them similar to what he has said about the panpipes? Notice howflexible gender
relations are in this poetry: Thestylis is a woman.
Nymphsare
fun-loving demigods especially associated with Arcadia, and Naiads are
waterspirits associated with rivers and streams. These spirits, always portrayed
asbeautiful, are said to be bringing flowers and herbs as an offering to
Alexis,rather than he worshipping them. This is a typical form of flattery, not
to betaken too seriously. The narrator who spoke the first stanza
returns,with the exclamation "Foolish!" Iollas is yet another beautiful youth.It
becomes clear that the narrator feels that he is superior to Corydon as asuitor,
and is trying to argue his rival into giving up. With the words"What have I
done" this narrator begins to address Alexis, complainingthat his own pursuit of
the youth has laid waste to the countryside. Alexisshould be happy to stay in
the country instead of fleeing to the city. Paris,Prince of Troy, appears first
in mythology tending his sheep on the hills outsidethe city. Pallas is
PallasAthena,
the patron goddess of Athens, of wisdom, and therefore a symbol ofcivic virtue.
The poet prefers the ways of nature. What is the pattern of naturalbehavior
depicted in the next to last stanza? Does it seem designed to reassureAlexis?
Frustrated, in the last stanza the narrator turns back to Corydon toargue that
Corydon will never succeed in seducing Alexis and might as well getback to work.
An "osier" is a willow stem. The final lines imply thatif Corydon can`t get his
mind off Alexis by working, he should content himselfwith another handsome young
man instead.
Catullus (c. 84-54 BCE)
Catullus is one of the most famous and influential love poets of
antiquity,renowned for the wit and passion which he poured into many short but
intensepoems devoted to Lesbia. Note that this name had no "lesbian"associations
for the ancients. It is probably a fictional name for a real woman,though some
have argued that she was wholly
imaginary. Notes onCatullus"Who
loves beauty"Whigham,Peter, trans. From The Poems of
Catullus.Baltimore: Penguin, 1966,p. 52
The first poem is a mock elegy for a dead sparrow.Although Lesbia is upset
and Catullus is trying to be sympathetic, he is alsobeing self-consciously
"cute." "Beauty" is here personifiedas if she were a goddess. The first line
calls for the statue of beauty(associated with the beautiful Lesbia) to be
veiled in a sign of sympatheticmourning. Orcus is a less common name for Pluto,
the King of the Underworld, orHades, where all dead souls go. What do you think
might be his motivation forwriting this poem?
"Lesbia/live with
me" From Whigham, p.55
This is one of Catullus` most famous poems. The tumblingurgency of this
translation is most apparent if it is read aloud rapidly. This isa classic
example of the theme tempus fugit--"time flies."
What is the argument the poet is presenting as itrelates to time? Odi
et AmoFrom Whigham, p. 197
A frequently-quoted verse which expresses typical classical ambiguity about
love.Readers of more of the poems to Lesbia will realize why Catullus is in
suchanguish over her: their relationship was a troubled one, to put it mildly.
Thewomen featured in almost all Roman love elegies were courtesans who felt
littleobligation to be strictly faithful to their
admirers.
Propertius(c. 50 -c. 10 BCE): Quam fueram magnis
olim patefactatriumphis . . . Carrier, Constance, trans. The Poems
ofPropertius. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1963, pp.
48-49.
Like the Egyptian poem we read earlier, this is a poem about a door
whichseparates lovers. It was customary for rejected lovers to sleep on
theirbeloved`s doorsteps in a public demonstration of their devotion designed to
shamethee woman into opening up. Propertius displays his originality by having
thedoor itself be the speaker. But this is actually a satire in which
Propertiuscynically comments on the promiscuity of Tarpeia. The door begins by
rememberingthe "good old days" when she was visited by respectable people, but
nowher reputation is gone, drunken louts come at all hours, and she shuts out
onlyher faithful lover (Propertius?). The door used to be able to fend off
allcomers, but now crowds of men fling the torches which have lit their way
throughthe dark streets at the doorstep as they enter unhindered. The door`s
hingesgroan and creak from frequent use. Meanwhile, the faithful lover complains
to thedoor in classic style. What does the word "cruel" seem to mean in
thispoem?
O me felicem! O nox mihi candida! Et tu . . . From
Carrier, pp. 80-81.
Propertius` most famous love was named Cynthia. Thispoem is simply a
rapturous celebration of lovemaking combined with a
tempus fugit closing designed to persuade her torepeat the
experience. Paris` love for Helen, wife of Menelaus, was famous as thecause of
the
Trojan War.Diana,
the virgin moon goddess, usually shunned men, but nevertheless fell inlove with
Endymion. Qualis Thesea iacuit cedente carina . ..From
Carrier, pp. 28-29.
The Roman love poets seem strikinglycontemporary partly because of their
informality, but even more because of theway in which they reveal themselves so
personally as individuals. Very fewpersonalities from the ancient past come
across so vividly as those of Ovid,Catullus, and Propertius, partly because they
are not afraid to describe theirown flaws, even exposing themselves to ridicule.
The Roman poets were famous assatirists, but these three had the rare gift of
satirizing themselves as well asothers. In this poem Propertius portrays himself
as having come home to Cynthiaafter a late-night party, drunk and sentimental.
The contrast between his moodand hers when he awakens here is startling, and
shows the poet trying to"think like a woman." What makes these poets
distinctly un-modern is their fondness for alluding to classical myths which
everycontemporary reader knew intimately. Ariadne, the daughter of King Minos
ofCrete,
helped theadventurer Theseus slay the fearsome Minotaur
to whom he had been given as asacrifice. Theseus repaid her love by abandoning
her on the island of Naxos
[ click here to see a contemporarypainting related to this scene:
warning--contains frontal nudity] where,according to the most common version of
her myth, she committed suicide byjumping off the rocky headland into the sea.
Andromeda was chained to a rock tobe sacrificed to a sea monster, but was
rescued by the hero Perseus. Maenads werethe female worshippers and companions
of
Dionysus(Bacchus)
who danced themselves into an orgiastic frenzy in his worship and thencollapsed.
This trio of exhausted women has little in common besides theirexhaustion, but
for Roman readers a whole set of images of anguish and frenzywould be conjured
up which are half-seriously applied to the upset Cynthia. Thewealthy had their
way lit for them through dark Roman streets by torch-bearingslaves. Argus had a
hundred eyes all over his body. Juno jealously changed Iointo a cow because her
husband Jupiter had fallen in love with the mortal maiden.When Jupiter continued
to pursue her, Juno set Argus to guard her, for even whenhe slept, some of his
eyes were open. But
Hermes,the
divine thief, was sent by Jupiter to steal Io and succeeded in lulling all
ofArgus` eyes closed with stories and songs, after which he cut off the
guard`shead. Obviously to gaze at a woman like Argus is to gaze very intently.
(For thesame reason, "Argus" used to be a popular name for newspapers.)
Romanswore wreaths--typically vine-leaves--in their hair during parties. Fruit
wasexpensive, and the poet has tried to please Cynthia by bringing some home
forher; but the original poem makes it clear that he dumps them clumsily in
herbosom. "Trying the window" suggests a would-be intruder trying to breakin.
What gestures suggest that the poet has genuine affection for Cynthia? How doyou
react to Cynthia`s accusations? Is she more or less sympathetic than
thepoet? Anonymous (2nd-4th C. BCE?):The
Vigilof VenusWilhelm, James J., ed. Medieval
Song: An Anthology ofHymns and Lyrics. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1971, pp.
21-24.
This lateRoman hymn differs from the previous poems by being a serious
religious textdevoted to the goddess Venus (or "Dione" as she is also known, not
tobe confused with "Diana," the anti-sexual virgin goddess). The occasionis the
night before her springtime holiday on April 1. Because so many of theRoman
authors we still read were cynical about traditional religion, we sometimeslose
sight of the fact that many people took the gods quite seriously. Mostscholars
agree that the poem is an artificial composition rather than anauthentic hymn;
but though it is elegantly written, it reflects the primevalbelief underlying
all fertility goddesses: that human sexuality is intimatelyconnected with the
fertility of nature. Because of this linkage, Venus` holidaywas celebrated when
plants were sprouting in the early rains. The raindrops areimagined as
fertilizing sperm, nature as fertile femininity. "Dione" is"terrible" in the
sense of "awe-inspiring." The law of lovewhich she lays down must be obeyed, or
defied at the risk of awful punishment(like that meted out to the sex-hating
Hippolytus). When Uranus, the creatorsky-god ("Father Heaven"), imprisoned his
children, they rebelled, andhis son Saturn castrated him, flinging his bloody
genitals into the sea near theisland of Cyprus. The combination of blood, semen,
and sea water gave rise toVenus: full of erotic passion and the potential for
violence. In this variant,the blood is said to be Saturn`s. What imagery in the
second stanza links Venusto agriculture? The opening of rosebuds into full
flowers is an ancient metaphorfor the loss of virginity--or the gaining of
sexual maturity. Venus is called"the Paphian" after Paphos, the city on Cyprus
where her cult wascelebrated. Cupid (Greek Eros) is her son. Whereas Venus
inspires love, Cupid is love. He is depicted as naked, but armed with a bow and
arrows whichinevitably cause love in their victims. Note the edge of danger
which the ancientworld consistently associated with love; it was desirable, but
hazardous. How isthe virginal Diana treated on this holiday? Ceres is the
goddess of grain,Bacchus of wine: so people are planning to eat and drink
freely.
Apollois
the god of poetry. Mount Hybla is associated with flowers and with Venus.Aeneas,
son of Venus by the Trojan Anchises, is the "Trojan offspring"she led to Italy
("the land of Latium`), as told in Virgil`s Aeneid. .According to the same
source, Mars (Greek
Hephaestus),the
god of war, fathered
Romulusand
Remus (the founders of Rome) on Rea Silvia, the daughter of Numitor, King
ofAlba, though she had been dedicated as a Vestal Virgin.
When the early Romansseized the Sabine women, they began a
war resolved only when Romulus suggestedthat the two groups intermarry. The
incident is known as "the rape[kidnapping] of the Sabine women," and has often
been depicted in art. Theresult of this union is all future Romans, including
Julius Caesar and his nephewAugustus. Given these facts, can you explain why
Venus was politically significant to the ancient Romans?
"The wife of Tereus" is Procne,whose husband Tereus
tried to kill her to keep her from telling the world that hehad seduced her
sister Philomela after having cut out Philomela`s tongue to keep her silent.
Procne was rescued by a miracle which turned her into a nightingale,while her
sister was turned into a swallow. So when the nightingale sings itsounds lovely,
but is actually singing of a terrible crime. Note the consistentassociation of
violence, rape, and betrayal that runs through these storiesassociated with
Venus. The poet finally expresses her/his yearning to be able tosing of love
from experience.
This late classical poem isan example of a theme closely related to
tempus fugit: carpe diem("seize the day"). Although
theoretically it could be interpreted asan exhortation to enjoy any aspect of
life in the brief time allotted to us onearth, in poetry it is in fact almost
always an argument made by a man topersuade a young woman to make love with him.
The standard metaphor is the rose.If not appreciated while it is young and
fresh, it soon wilts and withers, and noone wants it. The warning to women is
plain: do not resist so long that you loseyour attractiveness. Put so crudely,
the message is repulsive to modern tastes.Can you make a case for a more
complex, perhaps less offensive reading of themessage conveyed by such a
poem?
More poems by women authors from Wendy Mulford, ed.:
Love Poems byWomen
"I Hear that Andromeda"; FromMulford, p. 27.
It is impossible to tell whether the "you" of thispoem is a woman or man. A
"hayseed" is a countryfied, unsophisticatedperson. Why do you think the poet is
being so critical of Andromeda?
"Honestly, I Wish I Were
Dead" From Mulford, pp.39-40.
This poem has been badly mutilated in the only copy surviving, hencethe
many ellipses toward the end. As Sappho parts from her friend (lover?),
shereminds him of the things they have enjoyed together. It provides some of
thestrongest evidence for those who argue that Sappho was indeed "lesbian"in the
modern sense, though this is strenuously rejected by others.
"He is
More Than a Hero" From Mulford, pp. 231-232.
This poem is famous for the intensity with which Sappho expresses desire
andjealousy. The opening situation is that the poet is in love with a woman who
istalking to a man, rendered god-like in Sappho`s eyes only because he is
allowedto be where she would like to be, next to the beloved woman, and the
focus of herattention. What about these lines suggests that it is the woman that
she admiresmore than the man? In what way does Sappho see herself as being at a
disadvantagecompared to the man, even when she meets her beloved alone on the
street? Theexistence of only a brief rainy season in Greece means that grass
more often acreamy color than a bright green.
Nossis of Locri:
"Nothing is Sweeter than Eros" From Mulford, p.161.
Read the biographical note on p. 261. "Cypris" is
Aphrodite,named
after her home island of Cyprus. Sulpicia: "Finally a Love
Has Come"From Mulford, p.195.
Read the biographical note on p. 266. Female Roman poets were even
rarerthan Greek ones. "Rumor" is here personified as a god. Cythera wasanother
island associated with Venus. The
Museswere
gods who inspired various arts, in this case poetry. What is the mood andmessage
of this poem? "Light of My Life"FromMulford, p. 211.
Of what is Sulpicia ashamed in this apologetic poem? We willread similar
expressions of regret in later European women`s poetry. Can youcompare the
attitudes these women express toward love with the mens`?
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