Carmina

Catullus

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

  1. Neither shall fugitive Time from centuries ever oblivious
  2. Veil in the blinds of night friendship he lavisht on me.
  3. But will I say unto you what you shall say to the many
  4. Thousands in turn, and make paper, old crone, to proclaim
  5. ---
  6. And in his death become noted the more and the more,
  7. Nor let spider on high that weaves her delicate webbing
  8. Practise such labours o'er Allius' obsolete name.
  9. For that ye weet right well what care Amathúsia two-faced
  10. Gave me, and how she dasht every hope to the ground,
  11. Whenas I burnt so hot as burn Trinacria's rocks or
  12. Mallia stream that feeds Œtéan Thermopylae;
  13. Nor did these saddened eyes to be dimmed by assiduous weeping
  14. Cease, and my cheeks with showers ever in sadness be wet.
  15. E'en as from aëry heights of mountain springeth a springlet
  16. Limpidest leaping forth from rocking felted with moss,
  17. Then having headlong rolled the prone-laid valley downpouring,
  18. Populous region amid wendeth his gradual way,
  19. Sweetest solace of all to the sweltering traveller wayworn,
  20. Whenas the heavy heat fissures the fiery fields;
  21. Or, as to seamen lost in night of whirlwind a-glooming
  22. Gentle of breath there comes fairest and favouring breeze,
  23. Pollux anon being prayed, nor less vows offered to Castor:—
  24. Such was the aidance to us Manius pleased to afford.
  25. He to my narrow domains far wider limits laid open,
  26. He too gave me the house, also he gave me the dame,
  27. She upon whom both might exert them, partners in love deeds.
  28. Thither graceful of gait pacing my goddess white-hued
  29. Came and with gleaming foot on the worn sole of the threshold
  30. Stood she and prest its slab creakihg her sandals the while;
  31. E'enso with love enflamed in olden days to her helpmate,
  32. Laodamía the home Protesiléan besought,
  33. Sought, but in vain, for ne'er wi' sacrificial blood shed
  34. Victims appeased the Lords ruling Celestial seats:
  35. Never may I so joy in aught (Rhamnusian Virgin!)
  36. That I engage in deed maugrè the will of the Lords.
  37. How starved altar can crave for gore in piety poured,
  38. Laodamia learnt taught by the loss of her man,
  39. Driven perforce to loose the neck of new-wedded help-mate,
  40. Whenas a winter had gone, nor other winter had come,
  41. Ere in the long dark nights her greeding love was so sated
  42. That she had power to live maugrè a marriage broke off,
  43. Which, as the Parcae knew, too soon was fated to happen