Lesbia Essays

  • Catullus And Lesbia Analysis

    1281 Words  | 6 Pages

    Introduction Lesbia is the subject of Catullus’s most passionate and seemingly sincere poems. The relationship between Catullus and Lesbia is tumultuous to say the least. His poems about Lesbia and their relationship display a wide range of emotions which change from a relationship of tenderness and love, to one of uncertainty, to one of sorrow and disappointment. They rapidly fall in and out of love with another. Their affections for one another are fickle and constantly changing. They have a mercurial

  • Catullus Relationship Analysis

    1994 Words  | 8 Pages

    Relationship Introduction Lesbia is the subject of some of Catullus’s most passionate and sincere poems. The relationship between Catullus and Lesbia is distinctly tumultuous. His poems about Lesbia and their relationship display a wide range of emotions which vary from a relationship of tenderness and love, to one of uncertainty, to one of sorrow and disappointment. They rapidly fall in and out of love with another. They have a mercurial kind of love. Catullus obviously loved Lesbia deeply, but he also

  • Catullus Figurative Language

    754 Words  | 4 Pages

    “Most challenging in his attempt to do so is his relationship with Lesbia, whom Catullus portrays as constantly confounding his sense of masculinity and traditional gender roles, perhaps as a method of exploring the author’s own tensions regarding ancient conceptions of gender and sexuality and his relationship with Greek poetic traditions” (Boylan, Rebecca F., "Eros the Man, Eros the Woman: Conflicting Identities and Gender Construction in the Catullan Corpus" (2014). Classics Honors Projects.Paper

  • Catullus 51 Poem

    485 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poetry that Catullus wrote shows that he was a sentimental, romantic man. In Catullus poems he expresses his love towards Lesbia and his preciseness of getting Lesbia to love him back. After being rejected by Lesbia it deeply hurts him since he shows her so much affection but only speaks ill of him. Catullus is very passionate and is obsessed with kissing, in “Catullus 16” he speaks of getting thousands and thousands of kisses from his lover. Even though he is passionate and sentimental, he is

  • Catullus Carmen 11 Analysis

    660 Words  | 3 Pages

    towards Lesbia - initially he is enamored by her and their apparent love for each other. With time, Lesbia's betrayal leads Catullus to become bitter towards his former lover, which then manifests itself into slander, mockery and invective to demoralize her image. As we touched on earlier, women in Roman society during this era, possess no public persona except for those that are assigned by rumores. Due to this social construct, any negative account circulated among the public about Lesbia lends to

  • Civilization In Livy's The History Of Rome

    1360 Words  | 6 Pages

    The achievements of Roman civilization are numerous, both in the public life of Rome and for the individual. In the poems of Catullus, Catullus describes his personal achievement of starting a relationship with Lesbia and the subsequent degeneration of the relationship. In Livy’s The History of Rome, Livy lays out several public Roman achievements, such as the founding of the city and the establishment of the monarchy; Livy depicts the struggles of maintaining some form of stability associated with

  • How Did Catullus Influence Shakespeare

    735 Words  | 3 Pages

    The love of two people, what is more special than that? Their carnal instinct to be with one another. Gaius Valerius Catullus the famed Roman poet was lovestruck, for one special female, Lesbia. She was the girl of his dreams but there was one small detail that changed everything, she was married to another man. He did not care he loved her. He loved everything about her. William Shakespeare wrote about love and many other parts. Romeo and Juliet was the romantic comedy that has inspired many. He

  • Gaius Catullus 'Carpe Diem'

    409 Words  | 2 Pages

    however. Another example of the theme of seizing the day is with the use of youthful love or lust like that between Catullus and Lesbia. The dilemma suggested by carpe diem includes a sense of helplessness and senselessness, sentiments which are often expressed in a poet’s acceptance to a life filled with inexplicable losses and hardships. For instance, Catullus knows that Lesbia is not faithful to him because she is married to someone else yet he still yearns for her and allows himself to get hurt by

  • Catullus Use Of Literary Elements In The Aeneid

    330 Words  | 2 Pages

    Poets in late republican Rome imitated the forms and meters of Hellenistic verse. Catullus was an elite poet who was remembered for the 25 love poems he wrote regarding his love affair with "Lesbia". Virgil was the poet who composed Rome's greatest epic Aeneid. Aeneid was Rome's answer to Homer. The epic Aeneid was used as a propagandistic aim of justifying imperial power and predicting the future of peace and order. In the Aeneid, a Trojan warrior leaves his burning city to travel to Italy. Aeneas

  • Compare And Contrast Milo And Clodius

    520 Words  | 3 Pages

    Milo and Clodius T.J. Broderick Publius Clodius Pulcher and Titus Annius Milo were political agitators infamous for disrupting and causing violence in Roman politics in 50’s BCE. Both of these men were known for their hooligan acts and worked on behalf of their respective factions using violence to get what they want in Roman government. Milo worked on behalf of the the Senatorial Faction and was to be a strong

  • Nietzsche's Use Of Meter In Poetry

    1348 Words  | 6 Pages

    In aphorism 98, Nietzsche talks about the effect of meter in poetry. He says that “meter lays a veil over reality; it effectuates a certain artificiality of speech and unclarity of thinking; by means of the shadows it throws over thoughts it now conceals, now brings into prominence.” The effects of meter in certain poems like Catullus’ poem 5 is very prominent, and in the way Nietzsche is thinking, it brings into prominence things that would not have previously been considered, but contrary to Nietzsche

  • The Pros And Cons Of Discrimination

    803 Words  | 4 Pages

    Dont Discriminate Eventhough soceity has overcomed several obstacles in discrimination. In todas soceity teens as well as adults are being discriminated to people sexual orientation. (Wolfe 1) Homosexuals suffer with homophobics, costumers feeling uncomfortable and low self esteem. (1) November 7th became a historic day when the House Of Representative passed a bill that protects lesbians, gay mens and bisexuals from being discriminated in the work place. (1) Due to recent studies sixteen percent

  • Gender Roles In Twelfth Night

    1242 Words  | 5 Pages

    In Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, his sonnets, and the sonnets of other sixteenth century poets all show a concern for beauty, concealment, and inner reality versus outward appearance. These themes occur throughout these works. Not only do they concern these themes, but they are also significant to the time period in which women were slowly gaining power after Mary I became Queen. Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night showed readers that Viola, a woman, had to conceal her inner reality from the world so she