If I didnt love you more than my eyes,
most delightful Calvus, Id dislike you
for this gift, with a true Vatinian dislike:
Now what did I do and what did I say,
to be so badly cursed with poets?
Let the gods send ill-luck to that client
who sent you so many wretches.
But if, as I guess, Sulla the grammarian
gave you this new and inventive gift,
thats no harm to me, its good and fine
that your efforts arent all wasted.
Great gods, an amazing, immortal book!
That you sent, of course, to your Catullus,
so he might immediately die,
on the optimum day, in the Saturnalia!
No you wont get away with this crime.
Now when its light enough Ill run
to the copyists bookstalls, Ill acquire
Caesius, Aquinus, Suffenus,
all of the poisonous ones.
And Ill repay you for this suffering.
Meanwhile farewell take yourself off, there,
whence your unlucky feet brought you,
cursed ones of the age, worst of poets.
What a Book! : to Calvus the Poet
written byGaius Valerius Catullus
© Gaius Valerius Catullus