Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts125/v4/f1/19/a0/f119a099-ad44-2218-74e4-ab0b9abed6f9/mza_11179334252019157606.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Latin Poetry Podcast
Latin Poetry Podcast
81 episodes
9 months ago
Short Latin passages, discussed, translated, and read aloud by Christopher Francese, Asbury J. Clarke Professor of Classical Studies at Dickinson College.
Show more...
Books
Arts,
Education,
Language Learning
RSS
All content for Latin Poetry Podcast is the property of Latin Poetry Podcast and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Short Latin passages, discussed, translated, and read aloud by Christopher Francese, Asbury J. Clarke Professor of Classical Studies at Dickinson College.
Show more...
Books
Arts,
Education,
Language Learning
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts125/v4/f1/19/a0/f119a099-ad44-2218-74e4-ab0b9abed6f9/mza_11179334252019157606.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Penelope to Odysseus part 2 (Ovid, Heroides 1.37-74)
Latin Poetry Podcast
15 minutes 7 seconds
5 years ago
Penelope to Odysseus part 2 (Ovid, Heroides 1.37-74)
If you love Ovid’s Heroides, consider joining Chun Liu (Professor of Comparative Literature at Peking University) and me at the Dickinson Summer Latin Workshop (online this year), July 15-20, 2020. http://blogs.dickinson.edu/dcc/2019/11/06/dickinson-summer-latin-workshop-ovid-heroides/
Omnia namque tuō senior tē quaerere missō
rettulerat nātō Nestor, at ille mihi.
rettulit et ferrō Rhēsumque Dolōnaque caesōs,
utque sit hic somnō prōditus, ille dolō.                                               40
ausus es—ō nimium nimiumque oblīte tuōrum!—
Thrācia nocturnō tangere castra dolō
totque simul mactāre virōs, adiūtus ab ūnō!
at bene cautus erās et memor ante meī!
usque metū micuēre sinūs, dum victor amīcum                                 45
dictus es īsse per agmen equīs.
 
Sed mihi quid prōdest vestrīs disiecta lacertīs
Īlios et, mūrus quod fuit, esse solum,
sī maneō, quālis Troiā dūrante manēbam,
virque mihi dēmptō fīne cārendus abest?                                                 50
dīruta sunt aliīs, ūnī mihi Pergama restant,
incola captīvō quae bove victor arat.
iam seges est, ubi Troia fuit, resecandaque falce
luxuriat Phrygiō sanguine pinguis humus;
sēmisepulta virum curvīs feriuntur arātrīs                                                  55
ossa, ruīnōsās occulit herba domōs.
victor abes, nec scīre mihi, quae causa morandī,
aut in quō lateās ferreus orbe, licet!
 
Quisquis ad haec vertit peregrīnam lītora puppim,
ille mihi dē tē multa rogātus abit,                                                                60
quamque tibi reddat, sī tē modo vīderit usquam,
trāditur huic digitīs charta notāta meīs.
nōs Pylon, antīquī Nēlēia Nestoris arva,
mīsimus; incertā est fāma remissa Pylō.
mīsimus et Spartēn; Spartē quoque nescia vērī.                                        65
quās habitās terrās, aut ubi lentus abes?
ūtilius stārent etiamnunc moenia Phoebī—
īrāscor vōtīs, heu, levis ipsa meīs!
scīrem ubi pugnārēs, et tantum bella timērem,
et mea cum multīs iūncta querēlā foret.                                                    70
quid timeam, ignōrō—timeō tamen omnia dēmēns,
et patet in cūrās ārea lāta meās.
quaecumque aequor habet, quaecumque perīcula tellus,
tam longae causās suspicor esse morae.
 
Latin Poetry Podcast
Short Latin passages, discussed, translated, and read aloud by Christopher Francese, Asbury J. Clarke Professor of Classical Studies at Dickinson College.