Il y a plus affairs à interpréter les interprétations qu'à interpréter les choses.
Montaigne
The ninety-three line galliambic narrative of the story of Attis and his encounter with Cybele occupies an important position in the oeuvre of Catullus, yet it has received relatively little attention from Catullan scholars and critics. One reason for this inattention may be traced to the fact that Poem 63, one of the carmina maiora, seems to contain little or no biographical information; thus it has been passed over by critics and scholars of the biographical persuasion and by those who tend in that direction, in favor of the shorter poems which are more closely connected to Catullus' personal life and experience. The old but tenacious belief in the ‘spontaneous Catullus’ has also served to divert attention from the carmina maiora as a group, since these poems are such obvious products of a doctus poeta writing in the neoteric and Alexandrian fashion. Critics like Elder and Quinn have done well to demonstrate that the so-called ‘spontaneous’ poems are often full of the same carefully calculated artistic effects and subtle doctrina which characterize the long poems, and such efforts have led to renewed consideration of the carmina maiora, especially of Poem 64. Moreover, the demonstration of stylistic connections between the long poems and the rest of the Catullan oeuvre has provided the impetus for Ross's recent study, which argues that there are closer links between the carmina maiora and the polymetrics than between the polymetrics and the epigrams which make up the last part of the liber Catulli. Despite all this, however, I would maintain that serious critical discussion of Poem 63 still lags behind some of the work being done on other poems of Catullus, that consideration of the Attis is still hampered by its distance from the poet's ‘experience’ or by misguided and forced attempts to make it somehow connect with that experience.