Monday, December 1, 2008

Wearing Short Skirts Without Panties



www.ciao.it From:

"I hate and love. Because I do it, Perhaps you wonder.
do not know, but I feel that happens, and I am in agony. "
" Odi et amo. Quare id faciam fortare requiris.
Nescio, sed proud heard excrucior et. "With these few sentences

Catullo was able to understand how troubled was his relationship with Lesbia.
Many of the poems of Catullus are permeated by this double sense, unconditional love when Lesbia / Clodia is with him, hatred and anger for his betrayal: the woman, cultured and refined, in fact, did not disdain the adventures outside of her relationship with the unfortunate poet, who after the death of his brother will still leave the decision to finally know his amata.Non well if it really existed or if Lesbia is was a literary fiction, but the pseudonym Lesbia, however, has been used to allude to Sappho, and then to make a portrait of Clodia intelligent woman and learned

The Nugae are the poems that best demonstrate the conflicting feelings that test Catullo Lesbia, he loved, as he was free from the marriage after the early death of her husband, to have so many young men at his side, including the poet, who instead wanted to be the only thing that ever gave him, however, Lesbia.

poems I still do not speak only of the tormented relationship with the woman unchaste, but also issues such as friendship, or the vices of the business or family ties.

He was the first to express something in his poems of his life: indeed, for Catullus life is love and love and poetry are one, even if he speaks of love as it was tormenting him. This is how the nine
poetae Catullo in part, that is, those poets who were able to write about their passions and their feelings.

"My Lesbia, you ask me when I'm full of your kisses
. What is the 'Libyan sands
where Cyrene is full of Silphium,
between the oracle of Jupiter's fiery
and the sacred tomb of ancient Battus, or how many
star in the silent night,
observe the furtive loves land, lots of kisses
are the crowds like Catullus,
many that the curious can not count, nor
do spells with evil language "

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