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[10] tristis animi curas: of the painful passion of love, as v. 7 doloris; cf. Catul. 64.72, Catul. 64.95; Catul. 68.18; Hor. Epod. 2.37quas amor curas habet.” With animi modifying curas cf. Catul. 64.372animi amores” ; Catul. 68.26delicias animi” ; Catul. 102.2fides animi.

Some critics have judged that vv. 1-10 form a complete whole, or that, at any rate, vv. 11-13 are the conclusion of some other poem and not of this (cf. Crit. App.). But there seems to be no good reason to doubt that the poem is not concluded with v. 10, while a study of Catul. 65.1ff. shows how naturally such a picture as that of vv. 11-13 may conclude a poem of warm emotion. Yet the change of mood from possem (v. 9) to est (v. 11) makes it probable that a lacuna exists here, though perhaps of only a single verse, containing in the form of an infinitive-phrase some repetition of the thought in tecum ludere sicut ipsa.


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