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Catullus 64: The Descent of Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2015

Phyllis Young Forsyth*
Affiliation:
University of Waterloo

Extract

Editors and critics of Catullus, both recent and not so recent, seem content with viewing lines 384-408 of Catullus’ sixty-fourth poem as a ‘moralizing epilogue’ which contrasts the poet’s own time with that of the Age of Heroes as represented by Peleus and Thetis, Ariadne and Theseus. For example, E. T. Merrill in his venerable school edition of Catullus comments succinctly: ‘Epilogue, commenting upon the withdrawal of divine presence from the ceremonies of men after the heroic age, on account of the impiety of the race’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Australasian Society for Classical Studies 1975

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References

1 Merrill, E.T. (ed.), Catullus (Cambridge, Mass., 1951), p. 161.Google Scholar

2 Fordyce, C.J. (ed.), Catullus (Oxford, 1961), p. 322.Google Scholar

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4 Italics mine.

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17 Quinn (above, note 3), p. 347.

18 Kinsey (above, note 14), 921.

19 Curran (above, note 15), 185.

20 The use of succumbens in poem 64 can also have sexual overtones, as Polyxena becomes a ‘bride’ to the dead Achilles.

21 Curran (above, note 15), 189.

22 Bramble, J.C., ‘Structure and ambiguity in Catullus LXIV’, PCPhS 16 (1970), 36.Google Scholar

23 Cf. Quinn (above, note 3), p. 337.

24 Cf. Bramble (above, note 22), 22–41.

25 Merrill (above, note 1), p. 162.

26 Fordyce (above, note 2), p. 324.

27 Cf. Iliad XX 39.

28 Kinsey (above, note 14), 928.

29 Quinn (above, note 3), p. 349.

30 Kinsey (above, note 14), 928.

31 Kinsey (above, note 14), 929.

32 Quinn (above, note 3), p. 350.

33 Herrmann (above, note 13).

34 Cf. Lucretius ii 22 and Suetonius, Aug. 68.

35 Wolfe (above, note 6), 300.