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| Author | Message |   | | Posted on Sun Mar 26, 2017 03:31:17 |    |  
  |   |  I happen to possess a very old (16th century) printing of Catullus. What I found interesting is that back then the famous "Odi et amo" was not considered a separate Carmen on its own, but was added as closing lines to Carmen 72. And when you read it like that, it fits very nicely, doesn't it?   |   |  
  |   | | Posted at Sun Mar 26, 2017 17:42:05 |   Quote |  
  |   |  | Quote: |   |  |  |    | I happen to possess a very old (16th century) printing of Catullus. What I found interesting is that back then the famous "Odi et amo" was not considered a separate Carmen on its own, but was added as closing lines to Carmen 72. And when you read it like that, it fits very nicely, doesn't it?   |  
  That is interesting, and neither Mynors nor Thomson mention it in their editions. Thomson does point out that if you read it with 72 and 75 both, you can a more and more condensed poem each time. Specifically, count the lines: 8, 4, 2. |   |  
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