Posted on 02/13/2010 7:16:09 AM PST by decimon
While valentine notes today tend to stress caring and warmth, love letters from ancient Rome often highlighted the wrenching, painful side of romance, historians say.
Valentine's Day itself didn't yet exist in ancient Rome, but men still wrote love poems about their sweethearts - often married women, and sometimes men. But where modern declarations of love often involve flattery and gratitude, the ancient Romans wrote more about pain.
Unlike what you see in contemporary stores where we have valentines that are all clouds and dreamy and romantic, the Romans had a very different kind of take on love," said Barbara Gold, a professor of classics at Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y. "It's not something that is a good feeling usually; it's something that torments you."
She described ancient love poems from about the first century B.C. to around A.D. first century that call love a plague, accuse love of making the writer see double and causing his tongue to swell up.
"You would never go out today and find a valentine that says 'You're like a plague, you set my bone marrow on fire,'" Gold told LiveScience.
In ancient Rome ideas of romantic love were very different - most people never expected to love their spouse.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
Romance language ping.
My love is like a bloody nose
That drips upon the floor
How ever sweet her countenance
Inside she's guts and gore
Perhaps it was more than whiskey to keep the Irish from ruling the world.
They can treat that now...
Time to que up Love Stinks by J. Geils Band
Ahhhhhhhhhhhh .... love poems by men....//swoon
Pithy.
Catullus, poem 85
She walks in beauty, like the night ..
Lord Byron of Lady Oxford (not his wife)
I hate and yet I love. Why I do this, you might ask?
I do not know, but I feel it happening, and I am tormented.
In these matters the only certainty is that nothing is certain.
Pliny the Elder
An object in possession seldom retains the same charm that it had in pursuit.
Pliny The Younger
Gay culture. Jess sayin’
They still are.
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Thanks decimon.To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. |
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I meant the message on the fridge is to the point.
I bought roses the other day. Damn, THAT hurt!
The fountains mingle with the river
And the rivers with the ocean,
The winds of Heaven mix forever
With a sweet emotion;
Nothing in the world is single;
All things by a law divine
In one spirit meet and mingle.
Why not I with thine? -
See the mountains kiss high Heaven
And the waves clasp one another;
No sister-flower would be forgiven
If it disdained its brother;
And the sunlight clasps the earth
And the moonbeams kiss the sea:
What is all this sweet work worth
If thou kiss not me?
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