Question

In a poem sometimes titled for these people, the speaker wishes that one of them would leave childhood so they can be free “from this weight of depression.” For 10 points each:
[10m] Name these people, the subject of a poem that Dirk Obbink’s team discovered in 2014. One of these people is told “hail and farewell” at the end of a poem by Catullus.
ANSWER: brothers [accept the “Brothers Poem” or the “Brothers Song”]
[10e] This poet of the “Brothers Poem” describes being left by a woman who used to “on soft beds…let loose [her] longing.” That fragment may be the most explicitly homoerotic of the surviving poems by this poet from Lesbos.
ANSWER: Sappho [or Psápphō; accept Sappho 94 or “Sappho’s Confession”]
[10h] Sappho wrote “time is passing, but I sleep alone” in her “midnight poem,” which has been suggested to be about this mythological figure. A later poem titled after this figure includes a “Hymn to Pan” and renames his lover Cynthia.
ANSWER: Endymion (The later poem is by John Keats.)
<World/Other Literature>

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Summary

Data

Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Mississippi StateNYU B0000
Mississippi StateNYU B0000
Mississippi StateMcGill E0000
Mississippi StateMcGill E0000
Vassar ACentral Oklahoma001010
Vassar BArkansas010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
Central OklahomaWUSTL A010010
IowaVassar A010010
Texas AMcGill E1010020
Mississippi StateNYU B010010
Mississippi StateNYU B010010
Mississippi StateMcGill E010010
Mississippi StateMcGill E010010
NYU ATexas D010010
Texas COle Miss010010
Texas BColorado College1010020