ABSTRACT

Recent attacks on contemporary art have portrayed the erotic content of works by Robert Mapplethorpe and others as if it were a deviation from the Western artistic tradition. On the contrary, there is a rich tradition of eroticism in the arts beginning with the erotic verse of ancient Greek and Roman poets.

Games of Venus, the first comprehensive anthology in English of ancient Greek and Roman erotic verse, revives this tradition for the modern reader. It presents the whole spectrum of erotic poetry from Sappho to Ovid in translations which evoke the full range of styles and tones present in the original Greek and Latin.

Brief biographical sketches accompany the work of each poet as do notes referring to the myths, geography, historical events, personages, and sexual and social customs mentioned in the verse.

chapter |50 pages

Introduction

part |143 pages

Greece

chapter |7 pages

Archilochus

chapter |7 pages

Alkman

chapter |2 pages

Mimnermos

chapter |11 pages

Sappho

chapter |4 pages

Ibycus

chapter |6 pages

Anacreon

chapter |12 pages

Theognis

The “Second Book”

chapter |4 pages

Hippnax

chapter |3 pages

Pindar

chapter |2 pages

Bacchylides

chapter |6 pages

Hermesianax

chapter |4 pages

Asclepiades

chapter |5 pages

Callimachus

chapter |31 pages

Theocritus

chapter |5 pages

Herodas

chapter |3 pages

Machon

chapter |2 pages

The Grenfell Papyrus

chapter |1 pages

Anonymous Song from Marisa

chapter |2 pages

Anonymous Epigrams

chapter |5 pages

Meleager

part |81 pages

Rome

chapter |19 pages

Catullus

chapter |8 pages

Virgil

chapter |7 pages

Horace

chapter |10 pages

Tibullus

chapter |1 pages

Sulpicia

chapter |18 pages

Propertius

chapter |13 pages

Ovid