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Comments on Catullus 116
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
It has recently been argued by C. W. MacLeod that Catullus 116 not only has a poetic meaning, but also has a significant position in the Catullan corpus. MacLeod in fact views this poem as a programmatic piece, whose position at the end of the Catullan corpus is purposeful and part of the poet's own design. Since poem 116 has been one of the most neglected of the Catullan epigrams, MacLeod's suggestions are very welcome and serve to reopen the questions surroundingthis poem.
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- Copyright © The Classical Association 1977
References
page 352 note 1 MacLeod, C. W., ‘Catullus 116’, CQ 23 (1973), 304–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 352 note 2 MacLeod, , p.305.Google Scholar
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page 352 note 7 Wheeler, A. L., Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1934) pp.9–25.Google Scholar
page 352 note Wheeler, , p.24.Google Scholar
page 353 note 1 Wiseman, T. P., Catullan Questions (Leicester, 1969), p.17.Google Scholar
page 353 note 2 Quinn, K., Catullus: An Interpretation (London, 1972), pp.264–5.Google Scholar
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