Tuplin, C.J. (1981), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>’, CQ 31, 113-139. Bright, David F. (1982), ‘Allius and Allia’, RhM 125, 138-140. Jenkyns, Richard (1982), Three Classical Poets: Sappho, Catullus, and Juvenal (London). – At 89f. Papanghelis, T.D. (1982), ‘A Note on Catullus <strong>68</strong>.156-157’, QUCC n.s. 11, 139-149. Brenk, Frederick E. (1983), ‘Lesbia’s arguta solea : <strong>68</strong>.72 and Greek λιγύς’, Glotta 61, 234-236. Fredricksmeyer, E.A. (1983), ‘Catullus 51 and <strong>68</strong>.51-6 : An Observation’, CPh 78, 42-45. Sarkissian, John (1983), Catullus <strong>68</strong>: An Interpretation (Leiden). Shipton, K.M.W. (1983), ‘A House in the City: Catullus <strong>68</strong>.<strong>68</strong>’, Latomus 42, 869-876. Whitaker, Richard (1983), Myth and Personal Experience in Roman Love-Elegy. A Study in Poetic Technique (Göttingen). – Esp. 59-62. Woodman, A.J. (1983), ‘A Reading of Catullus <strong>68</strong>A’, PCPhS n.s. 29, 100-106. Hubbard, Thomas K. (1984), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>. The Text as Self-Demystification’, Arethusa 17, 29-49. Németh, Béla (1984), ‘Communes exerceremus amores, Catullus <strong>68</strong>.69’, ACD 20, 43-47. – At 43f. Skinner, Marilyn B. (1984), ‘Rhamnusia Virgo’, ClAnt 3, 134-141. Capponi, Filippo (1984/85), ‘Note filologiche’, QCTC 2-3, 17-34. – At 17-20 on <strong>68</strong>.157. Cavallini, Eleonora (1984/85), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>.70ss.’, MCr 19-20, 191. Giardina, Gian Carlo (1984/85), ‘Note a Catullo’, MCr 19-20, 193-197. – At 194-196. Courtney, E. (1985), ‘Three poems of Catullus: (3). Catullus <strong>68</strong> and Its Compositional Scheme’, BICS 32, 92-100. Ferguson, John (1985), Catullus (Lawrence, Kansas). At 225-234. Poliakoff, Michael (1985), ‘Clumsy and Clever Spiders on Hermann’s Bridge (Catullus <strong>68</strong>.49-50; Culex 1- 3)’, Glotta 53, 248-250. Rambaux, Claude (1985), Trois analyses de l’amour. Catulle: Poésies, Ovide: Les Amours; Apulée: Le conte de Psyché (Paris). – At 44-47. Schilling, R. (1985), ‘La paronomasie domum-dominus dans l’élégie <strong>68</strong> de Catulle’, AFLNice 50, 284-291. Schmidt, Ernst A. (1985), Catull (Heidelberg). – Esp. 95-101. Shipton, K.M.W. (1985a), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong> and the Myth of Agamemnon’, Latomus 44, 55-71. --- (1985b), ‘A successful kômos in Catullus’, Latomus 44, 503-520. Allen, Archibald (1986), ‘Sacrificial Negligence in Catullus’, Latomus 45, 861-863. Lain, Norbert F. (1986), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>.145’, HSCPh 90, 155-158. Brenk, Frederick E. (1987), ‘Arguta solea on the Threshold : The Literary Precedents of Catullus, <strong>68</strong>, <strong>68</strong>-72’, QUCC n.s. 26, 121-127. Forsyth, P.Y. (1987), ‘Muneraque et Musarum hinc petis et Veneris: Catullus <strong>68</strong>A.10’, CW 80, 177-180. Shipton, K.M.W. (1987), ‘No Alternative to Ceremonial Negligence (Catullus <strong>68</strong>.73ff.)’, SO 62, 51-<strong>68</strong>. Ferguson, John (1988), Catullus (Oxford). – At 36f. Heath, Malcolm (1988), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>b’, LCM 13, 117-119. Milanese, G. (1988), ‘Non possum reticere (Catullus <strong>68</strong>a, 41), Aevum antiquum 1, 261-264. 280
Newman, John Kevin (1990), Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility (Hildesheim). – At 228-243. Powell, J.G.F. (1990), ‘Two Notes on Catullus’, CQ n.s. 40, 199-206. – At 202-206 on <strong>68</strong>.27-30. Syndikus, Hans Peter (1990), Catull: eine Interpretation. Zweiter Teil: Die großen Gedichte (61-<strong>68</strong>) (Darmstadt). – At 239-246. Allen, Archibald (1991), ‘Domus data ablataque: Catullus <strong>68</strong>.157’, QUCC n.s. 37, 101-106. Edwards, M.J. (1991), ‘The Theology of Catullus <strong>68</strong>b’, Antike und Abendland 37, <strong>68</strong>-81. Lefèvre, Eckard (1991), ‘Was hatte Catull in der Kapsel, die er von Rom nach Verona mitnahm? Zu Aufbau und Aussage der Allius-Elegie’, RhM 134, 311-326. Arkins, Brian (1992), ‘Two Notes on Catullus: I <strong>68</strong>.145; II Crucial constants in Catullus: Callimachus, the Muses, friends and enemies’, LCM 17, 115-118. – At 115f. Fear, Trevor (1992), ‘Veronae Turpe, Catulle, Esse’, ICS 17, 245-263. Feeney, Denis C. (1992), ‘Shall I Compare Thee …? Catullus <strong>68</strong>B and the Limits of Analogy’, in: Author and Audience in Latin Literature, ed. Tony Woodman & Jonathan Powell (Cambridge), 33-44. Simpson, C.J. (1992), ‘A Note on Catullus <strong>68</strong>a, 14f.’, LCM 17, 12. Fear, Trevor (1993), ‘Another Note on Catullus <strong>68</strong>a.34f.’, LCM 18, 4. Janan, Micaela (1994), “When the Lamp is Shattered”: Desire and Narrative in Catullus (Carbondale and Edwardsville, Ill.). – At 112-142. Simpson, C.J. (1994), ‘Unnecessary Homosexuality. The Correspondent’s Request in Catullus <strong>68</strong>A’, Latomus 53, 564-569. Clauss, James J. (1995), ‘A Delicate Foot on the Well-Worn Threshold: Paradoxical Imagery in Catullus <strong>68</strong>b’, AJPh 116, 237-253. Delvigo, Maria Luisa (1995), ‘Ambiguità dell’emendatio: edizioni, riedizioni, edizioni postume’, in: Pecere and Reeve (1995), 7-38. – At 28f. Casali, Sergio (1996), ‘Il letto celibe: ‘Mallio’, Laodamia, e l’unità di Catullo <strong>68</strong>’, RFIC 124, 440-444. Ackroyd-Cross, B.G. (1997), ‘Catullus <strong>68</strong>, 41-86’ [misprinted for ‘... 41-66’], in: Carl Deroux ed., Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History VIII (Bruxelles), 116-121. Dettmer, Helena (1997), Love by the Numbers. Form and the Meaning in the Poetry of Catullus (New York). – At 134-139 and 148-150. Arkins, Brian (1999), An Interpretation of the Poems of Catullus (Lampeter). 81ff. Jackson, Giorgio (1999), ‘Catullo <strong>68</strong>, 109 (= 69)’, Vichiana ser. IV, 1.2, 39-46. Kennedy, Duncan (1999), ‘ ‘Cf.’: Analogies, Relationships and Catullus <strong>68</strong>’, in: Susanna Morton Braund and Roland Mayer edd., amor: roma – Love & Latin Literature ... (Cambridge), 30-43. E. Vandiver (2000), ‘Hot Springs, Cool Rivers, and Hidden Fires: Heracles in Catullus <strong>68</strong>.51-66’, CPh 95, 151-159. Holzberg, Niklas (2002), Catull: Der Dichter und sein erotisches Werk (München). – At 163-172. 281
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CATULLUS 68 Edited with an Introduc
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Bei irgendeinem Spätling muß doch
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the first place. As a result of all
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When I started working on this volu
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CONTENTS PREFACE ..................
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At first sight, this debate could a
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so that one would not have to look
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least, non utriusque in line 39 cou
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artistic unity of the poem ...” 2
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can only claim that an expression s
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later than the 6 th century A.D., a
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(c) Carmen 68 is unitary and concer
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Morgan is a separatist, while Lachm
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This solution was proposed by Frank
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(S 3) Lines 20 and 22-24 are repeat
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(S 5) In lines 1-40 Catullus says h
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in that of 1973 or in his 1988 revi
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address in poem 68 for a number of
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(1) R 2 (Coluccio Salutati) has add
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whether the evidence at our disposa
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later Torquatus tried unsuccessfull
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68a that may support such an identi
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straightforward Yes or No. In short
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from a private letter. This could b
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desertum in line 6). The second pai
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I propose a twofold solution. There
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***** Does Catullus reject both Man
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some sort of practical contribution
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methods and ideals of the doctus po
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If a wealthy Roman male 122 was des
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friends appear to have found romant
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CATULLUS 68B ‘Goddesses, I cannot
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There is space for disagreement abo
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to be rather flexible; evidently Ca
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loc.) - but here too it is not clea
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and Lesbia. Twenty-five years have
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One is the theme of human and divin
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his exemplar from those that he mad
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have been using not the archetype,
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The apparatus criticus I should cla
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It has been hard to decide whether
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38 Hamburg - Stadt- und Universitä
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CATULLI CARMEN LXVIIIA Quod mihi fo
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nam mihi quam dederit duplex Amathu
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ne Paris abducta gauisus libera moe
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huc addant diui quam plurima, quae
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poem through several stages of tran
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mihi mitto ‘to send’, ‘to hav
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daughter Tullia (Erskine 1997). Cic
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Να⌠ακο⎜ω ≥δη, δεσ
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spumantibus exspuit undis This expr
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A somewhat peculiar interpretation
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Prop. 1.8.33 and Tib. 1.1.43; terra
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In the present passage caelibe evid
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contemporaries; and it made Catullu
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10 ‘… and that (it is) from her
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• Theognis 249f. ο⎡ξ 〈ππ
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• Solon frg. 26 West ƒργα δ
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position to give them; he implies t
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Ellis (ad loc.), Schöll (1880: 473
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15-26 ‘I had my share of amorous
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man (and a Roman citizen), that is,
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actions (compare the plural of demo
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would not have been taken over into
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comedy (Pl. Curc. 697, Men. 1133, A
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their own (see on sepulta in the pr
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not] employ the offensively hyperbo
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closer to turpe. This would be an e
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quid agis? ...’). In general, scr
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frigida ... membra Since erotic fer
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29. What is ‘sad rather than sham
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introduces a new point that is in s
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1955 on Verg. Aen. 4.2, and cfr. Ca
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you both, if I had any to hand.’
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unius tantum ‘only of one’? Ove
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without any hint that the investmen
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68B: IN PRAISE OF ALLIUS 41-50 ‘G
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are solved by Scaliger’s brillian
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me’ is a much more suitable expre
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monument (Fordyce), which is the pl
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What makes the image effective and
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eference to Allius’ funeral is po
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Alternatively, it could be assumed
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the island of the cattle of the Sun
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fletu This verbal noun is well-esta
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Culex 123f. primum prona surgebant
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valley as if it were a slope than t
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It remains to consider the rest of
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prefers to follow O and writes uiat
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pronoun (‘this man’), as this w
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clausum Fordyce is probably right t
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characterize the gift and not the g
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far from the transmitted text, and
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the Elder, N.H. 17.134 cum sit mutu
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eloved as a goddess: thus Pl. Bacch
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significantly different from the pr
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511.65. constituo is not used elsew
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exist in Latin, to -au-, which did;
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77f. Catullus interrupts his narrat
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ieiuna … desideret ara The altar
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85f. The Parcae knew that Laodamia
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y this time. Argiuus, meaning not o
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Meillet s.v. cinis), but the Italia
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that might simply be because it is
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cognatos … cineres Enallage: ‘r
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should be attached to the orthograp
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were using the aspirated forms (Ora
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109 quale Here and at 111 quod the
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Stymphalia monstra ‘The Stymphali
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altior illo, / qui … , which woul
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First, it is hard to see how the ne
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et flumina uim minuerunt and 6.645
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126 improbius ‘More shamelessly
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1549 - see Nomenclator 96), whose a
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- Page 271 and 272: BIBLIOGRAPHY A note on references C
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- Page 277 and 278: Hartman, J.J. (1916), ‘De Catulli
- Page 279: Heine, Rolf (1975), ‘Zu Catull c.
- Page 283 and 284: Berry, D.H. (1996), Cicero: Pro P.
- Page 285 and 286: Graziosi Acquaro, Maria Teresa (197
- Page 287 and 288: Pomey, Patrice (1997), ‘Les dange
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