Reading Latin Poetry Podcast

Episode 15 - A Gormless Grin, a Spanish Smile (Catullus 39)

06.06.2015 - By Play

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

(Toothpaste advertisement, 1938.)

  Egnatius, quod candidos habet dentes,renidet usquequaque. si ad rei uentum estsubsellium, cum orator excitat fletum,renidet ille; si ad pii rogum fililugetur, orba cum flet unicum mater,           5renidet ille. quidquid est, ubicumque est,quodcumque agit, renidet: hunc habet morbum,neque elegantem, ut arbitror, neque urbanum.quare monendum est te mihi, bone Egnati.si urbanus esses aut Sabinus aut Tiburs       10aut parcus Vmber aut obesus Etruscusaut Lanuuinus ater atque dentatusaut Transpadanus, ut meos quoque attingam,aut quilubet, qui puriter lauit dentes,tamen renidere usquequaque te nollem:       15nam risu inepto res ineptior nulla est.nunc Celtiber es: Celtiberia in terra, quod quisque minxit, hoc sibi solet manedentem atque russam defricare gingiuam,ut, quo iste uester expolitior dens est,          20hoc te amplius bibisse praedicet loti.    Bibliography Fordyce, C.J. (1961). Catullus. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Garrison, D.H. (2008). The Student’s Catullus (3rd ed.). Norman, USA: University of Oklahoma Press. Godwin, J. (1999). Catullus: The Shorter Poems. Warminster, England: Aris & Phillips Ltd.   Listen by using the player below. Remember also that the podcast is available on iTunes here, or by searching for "reading Latin poetry" in the iTunes store.   

More episodes from Reading Latin Poetry Podcast