I believe Catullus is a materialistic person, who defines love and beauty by his sights rather than his heart. As he talks about Quintia that she is not “stunning”, for “there is no spice at all in the length of her body”. He judges people based on their appearance. I also think his love is very shallow. People’s appearance may not last forever. So does it mean a person will love someone only because that person looks good, and dump in the next day because that person don’t looks as great as before? I would argue that it is unfair.
To me a romantic love is not necessarily the way someone looks, though it is a part of it, but the most important part is the personality of that person. The reason is a person may looks great, but one can’t stand the way other person talks, thinks, or views certain thing. It is very hard to grow emotion and have romantic feeling for such a person. In order to have a romantic love, one should love and enjoy each other in every moment of their lives. It reminds me of the lyric “ I love you for what’s you are” (not the way you look). Any thing a couple does can be romantic; even it is just staring at each other’s face silently.
In the Poem #33, the poet is talking about a father and a son who might be involving with homosexual activities. The poet is saying to them, especially to the son that why don’t you flee from this place where your father is abusing you? He wants them to get ride of this bad behavior and get a better life. I don’t know of any situation where a father abused his son sexually; however it comes in the news sometime that man rapes his daughter.
4 comments:
I definetly agree that Catullus is a materialistic person. At no point in any of his poems does he mention Lesbia's intellect, he only focuses on her beauty. I also think that he is very shallow as well because he does not care that he is calling all of these other women unattractive.
You showed a good picture of Catullus being a person attracted to beauty, but at the same time if you were attracted to a person you would automatically see him/her as being better than others in all aspects. The phrase “beauty is in the eye of the beholder” is the best example in here.
I agree with you Mohammad, I think Catullus is basing his idea of love on physical appearance. Another student in a later blog mentioned that he saw things the opposite way that Mohammad and I see it. He said that Catullus was very into intellect and looks beyond physical beauty. I guess this poem can be interpreted very differently depending on the person.
I would pretty much agree on above material all of you covered. In Catullus of view love is absolute "just for myself", thus the slef-centered way of viewing everything else including love affiar would be biased: Only that woman can bring you in physical arousal. He definitly regradless other parts like personality and intellgence.
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