Carmina

Catullus

Catullus, Gaius Valerius. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus. Burton, Sir Richard Francis, translator. London, Printed for the Translators, 1894.

  1. Idly (Licinius!) we our yesterday,
  2. Played with my tablets much as pleased us play,
  3. In mode becoming souls of dainty strain.
  4. Inditing verses either of us twain
  5. Now in one measure then in other line
  6. We rang the changes amid wit and wine.
  7. Then fared I homewards by thy fun so fired
  8. And by thy jests (Licinius!) so inspired,
  9. Nor food my hapless appetite availed
  10. Nor sleep in quiet rest my eyelids veiled,
  11. But o'er the bedstead wild in furious plight
  12. I tossed a-longing to behold the light,
  13. So I might talk wi' thee, and be wi' thee.
  14. But when these wearied limbs from labour free
  15. Were on my couchlet strewn half-dead to lie,
  16. For thee (sweet wag!) this poem for thee wrote I,
  17. Whereby thou mete and weet my cark and care.
  18. Now be not over-bold, nor this our prayer
  19. Outspit thou (apple of mine eyes !): we pray
  20. Lest doom thee Nemesis hard pain repay :—