Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 99Association, 1968 - Classical philology Beginning with v. 31, the proceedings and papers of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast are included. |
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Page 237
... Catullus was quite conventional , in principles at least.18 Nor is this really surprising , for his successors in the elegiac tradition all sub- scribed to the traditional denigration of amor even while they indulged in it.19 If , then ...
... Catullus was quite conventional , in principles at least.18 Nor is this really surprising , for his successors in the elegiac tradition all sub- scribed to the traditional denigration of amor even while they indulged in it.19 If , then ...
Page 488
... Catullus , had not done . Among the three , poem 65 employs patterning in the most bold , pronounced manner . Catullus exploits a formative potential of the couplet under the spur of recent death and burial - nuper ( 5 ) —in a place ...
... Catullus , had not done . Among the three , poem 65 employs patterning in the most bold , pronounced manner . Catullus exploits a formative potential of the couplet under the spur of recent death and burial - nuper ( 5 ) —in a place ...
Page 499
... Catullus contrives a paradox of base matter in elegant forms , as in the poem's last line ( 67.48 ) : falsum mendaci ventre puerperium . Ostensibly , another loquacious female object is the subject of c . 66 as well . We do not know if ...
... Catullus contrives a paradox of base matter in elegant forms , as in the poem's last line ( 67.48 ) : falsum mendaci ventre puerperium . Ostensibly , another loquacious female object is the subject of c . 66 as well . We do not know if ...
Contents
My Tongue Swore But My Mind | 19 |
Cosmological Myth and the Tuna | 37 |
77 | 59 |
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