Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Remarks on Individual Poets
Catullus and Horace
You prefer Catullus [to Horace]
because he was a philosopher? You have certainly rolled Lucretius here into
Catullus — Lucretius who wrote an epic about the “Nature of Things” and invested
the Epicurean philosophy with a rudely Roman and most unepicurean majesty and
grandeur. Catullus had no more philosophy in him than a red ant. He was an
exquisite lyrist — much more spontaneous in his lyrism than the more
sophisticated and well-balanced Horace, a poet of passionate and irregular love,
and he got out of the Latin language a melody no man could persuade it to before
him or after. But that was all. Horace on the other hand knew everything there
was to be known about philosophy at that time and had indeed all the culture of
the age at his fingers’ ends and carefully put in its place in his brain also —
but he did not make the mistake of writing a philosophical treatise in verse. A
man of great urbanity, a perfectly balanced mind, a vital man with a strong
sociability, faithful and ardent in friendship, a bon vivant fond of good
food and good wine, a lover of women but not ardently passionate like Catullus, an Epicurean who took life gladly but not superficially
— this was his character. As a poet he was the second among the great Augustan
poets, a great master of phrase — the most quoted of all the Roman writers,— a
dexterous metrist who fixed the chief lyric Greek metres in Latin in their
definitive form, with a style and rhythm in which strength and grace were
singularly united, a writer also of {{0}}satire[[Yes, he wrote a series of
satires in verse — he ranks among the greatest satirists, but without malice or
violence, his satire is good-humoured but often pungent criticism of life and
men.]] and familiar epistolary verse as well as a master of the ode and the
lyric — that sums up his work.
June or July 1933