Carmina
Catullus
Catullus, Gaius Valerius. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus. Burton, Sir Richard Francis, translator. London, Printed for the Translators, 1894.
- Stifles her stench of goat, he too is kilt by his gout.
- Wont thou to vaunt whilòme of, knowing only Catullus
- (Lesbia!) nor to prefer Jupiter's self to myself.
- Then, too, I loved thee well, not as vulgar wretch his mistress
- But as a father his sons loves and his sons by the law.
- Now have I learnt thee aright; wherefor though burn I the hotter,
- Lighter and viler by far thou unto me hast become.
- "How can this be?" dost ask: 'tis that such injury ever
- Forces the hotter to love, also the less well to will.
- Cease thou of any to hope desirèd boon of well-willing,
- Or deem any shall prove pious and true to his dues.
- Waxes the world ingrate, no deed benevolent profits,
- Nay full oft it irks even offending the more:
- Such is my case whom none maltreats more grievously bitter,
- Than does the man that me held one and only to friend.
- Wont was Gellius hear his uncle rich in reproaches,
- When any ventured aught wanton in word or in deed.
- Lest to him chance such befall, his uncle's consort seduced he,
- And of his uncle himself fashioned an Harpocrates.
- What so he willed did he; and nowdays albe his uncle