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Two Notes on Catullus

Classical Quarterly 40 (01):199- (1990)

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  1. Cerinthus' Pia Cura.J. C. Yardley - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (2):568-570.
    In a recent issue of CQ, N. J. Lowe refers to the ‘slyly Catullan appeal to the language of pietas’ in [Tib.] 3.7 1–2 . In this he follows Matthew Santirocco, who comments on these lines: ‘significantly, the expression for love here is not just cura as before [sc. in 3.16 [4.10] 3], but pia cura. We recall the pietas Catullus proclaimed in his affair with Lesbia and perhaps also pius Aeneas and all that pietas meant to the Augustan age, (...)
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  • Medea's response to Catullus: Ovid, Heroides 12.23–4 and Catullus 76.1–6.Federica Bessone - 1995 - Classical Quarterly 45 (02):575-.
    After an opening of the elegiac epistle which recalls the Euripidean-Ennian Medea-prologue, Ovid's heroine thus states her purpose : est aliqua ingrato meritum exprobrare voluptas; hac fruar, haec de te gaudia sola feram.
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  • Medea's response to Catullus: Ovid, Heroides 12.23–4 and Catullus 76.1–6.Federica Bessone - 1995 - Classical Quarterly 45 (2):575-578.
    After an opening of the elegiac epistle which recalls the Euripidean-Ennian Medea-prologue, Ovid's heroine thus states her purpose : est aliqua ingrato meritum exprobrare voluptas; hac fruar, haec de te gaudia sola feram.
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