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Tibullus: Elegies
Tibullus: Elegies: lateinisch und englisch | Tibullus
6 posts | 2 read
Tibullus's two books of elegies belong to the early part of the reign of Augustus (31-19 B.C.). His themes were love, the countryside and Rome, its gods and traditions. His patron was the great general and orator M. Valerius Messalla Corvinus. One of the four canonical Latin elegiac poets (Gallus, of whom almost nothing survives, Propertius and Ovid being the others), Tibullus has a distinctive voice and an individual approach to the conventional subject matter, bland on the surface but turbulent and passionate on deeper examination. His easy stylistic mastery cloaks vivid intellectual activity and turbulent emotion. This edition, revised in collaboration with Robert Maltby, includes for the first time the third book of the Corpus Tibullianum, a collection of poems by others within Messalla's circle, including the female elegist Sulpicia. Guy Lee's acclaimed verse translation, rhythmically subtle and lively in verbal texture, can be read with delight on its own and enhances our enjoyment and appreciation of Tibullus's Latin. Robert Maltby has provided for the third edition an extensive new commentary, illuminating many aspects of Tibullus' art and literary background.
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Andrea4
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"She burns like the swift flames burn on the altars,
And does not, though she could be healed, wish so."
Highly recommend reading/translating these elegies. Quite entertaining and on the scale of difficulty for Latin poetry, fairly straightforward. Lee's notes are entertaining, helpful, and not overdone.

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Andrea4
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In the 3rd book of Tibullus lie the poems of Sulpicia; a likely relative of Mesalla, Tibullus' patron.
Her poems are heartfelt and beautiful- amazing to read another ancient female poet as there aren't too many on my list.

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Andrea4
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This is the first appearance of the phrase "the Eternal City" (Rome). Go Tibby!

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Andrea4
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"The god himself has ordered those overpowered by sleep to let slip their voice and, unwillingly, speak of deeds that ought be hid."

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Andrea4
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"on you may I gaze when the final hour comes for me; you may I hold, as I die, in my failing grasp."

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Andrea4
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Oh yay! Scored with not one but TWO Latin books today at the second hand bookstore!!! And it's great timing because next month I'm back to translating Latin again :)

llwheeler Nice! 8y
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