Carmina

Catullus

Catullus, Gaius Valerius. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus. Burton, Sir Richard Francis, translator. London, Printed for the Translators, 1894.

  1. Lest with a stolen punk with fullest of pleasure should Paris
  2. Fairly at leisure and ease sleep in the pacific bed.
  3. Such was the hapless chance, most beautiful Laodamia,
  4. Tare fro' thee dearer than life, dearer than spirit itself,
  5. Him, that husband, whose love in so mighty a whirlpool of passion
  6. Whelmed thee absorbed and plunged deep in its gulfy abyss,
  7. E'en as the Grecians tell hard by Phenéus of Cylléne
  8. Drained was the marish and dried, forming the fattest of soils,
  9. Whenas in days long done to delve through marrow of mountains
  10. Daréd, falsing his sire, Amphtryóniades;
  11. What time sure of his shafts he smote Stymphalian monsters
  12. Slaying their host at the hest dealt by a lord of less worth,
  13. So might the gateway of Heaven be trodden by more of the godheads,
  14. Nor might Hébé abide longer to maidenhood doomed.
  15. Yet was the depth of thy love far deeper than deepest of marish
  16. Which the hard mistress's yoke taught him so tamely to bear;
  17. Never was head so dear to a grandsire wasted by life-tide