Friday, June 29, 2012

Cicero and the Benches

I've recently been keeping up with my Latin by reading Cicero's Second Speech Against Catiline and it has reminded me how one cannot get the same feeling, which Cicero wanted the Senate to see, when his speech is read in English. So much more meaning and irony bleeds through when you read it in the Latin. Here's an excerpt for you to translate. My humble translation and notes are below the excerpt. Cicero brings me such joy (although I must admit that sometimes he reminds of Obama)!

Hesterno die, Quirites, cum domi meae paene interfectus essem, senatum in aedem Iovis Statoris convocavi, rem omnem ad patres conscriptos detuli: quo cum Catilina venisset, quis eum senator appellavit? quis salutavit? quis denique ita aspexit ut perditum civem, ac non potius ut importunissimum hostem? quin etiam principes eius ordinis partem illam subselliorum, ad quam ille accesserat, nudam atque inanem reliquerunt.

Hesterno die - yesterday
interfectus essem - subjunctive with "cum" to denote time
ut - as

Literary Love: Notice that in the last sentence (and one can only do this in Latin) "nudam atque inanem" agrees with "partem illam subselliorum" but the Latin listener would hear "ille accesserat" before "nudam atque inanem." He wants everyone in the room to feel that not only the benches/seats are empty but also Catiline himself. His "principes" have abandoned him. Don't you just love the bluntness of the great Latin rhetor!

My translation (even though it seems a little choppy, I believe a more "to the letter" translation is better.):
Yesterday, Quirites, when I almost had been murdered in my own house, I called together the senate in the temple of Stator Jove, I reported all this to the conscript fathers: whither he had come with Catiline, which senator called out to him? Who hailed him? Who finally thus looked at him as a destructive citizen, and not rather as a most unbridled enemy? Nay more even the princes of his order (interesting choice of words) abandoned that part of the benches - naked and also empty - towards which that guy had ascended (perhaps Cicero pointed theatrically in Catiline's direction). 

P.S. - If anyone would like for me to write some fun little stories in Latin just let me know!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Puto de Natura


Puto de Natura
This little story reminds me of some poems by Vergil. It's a bit pastoral.
In colle clamor est mortuus et audio carmen de natura. Est hiems sed exspecto carmen vivum. Puella dormit et puer cantat ad eam. Arbores cantabunt ad stellas et luna. Est hiems sed colles cantabant ad me et te. Puto de natura et gaudeo. Est hiems sed viri carmina feminarum in aura audiunt. Etiam Vergil audit clamorem beatum et caela gaudent. Est hiems sed natura carminis est calor.
Glossary
Eam: pronoun; meaning “her”
Etiam: even
Calor: warmth

Puer Parvus et Luna Magna


Puer Parvus et Luna Magna
This was a little, fantastical story I wrote a few months ago.
Puer parvus magnam lunam cum oculis spectat. Luna magna pro eo lucet. Lux eum adit et puer parvus lunam magnam laudat, “Sum parvus. Es magna. Adsum. Abes. Eheu! Deus ea magna et parva creat!” Puer parvus ad stellas et luna cantat. Is est laetus. Deus puerum spectat et gaudet, “Hic puer mihi gaudium dat et eum beabo.”

Glossary
lucet: shines
eo: from is, ea, id
lux: light
eum: from is, ea, id
Eheu!: latin exclamation which means Oh my!
ea: from is, ea, id; it’s neuter, plural, accusative: meaning “things”
hic: this
beabo: I will bless