![]() ![]() Richmond Lattimore ’s anthology “Greek Lyrics,” first published in 1955, includes nine texts attributed to Sappho, though in one case he acknowledges that this attribution is questionable. ![]() In this article, I review four translations of Sappho produced over the past six decades. While translators of Sappho today as a rule avoid such censorship of her work, modern translations nevertheless differ widely. Until recent decades, however, English translations of Sappho have frequently obscured more than they revealed, heterosexualizing her expressions of desire to suit the sensibilities of their audience. Translation has been intimately bound up with the reception of Sappho’s poetry for centuries. Yet, for the majority of Sappho’s readers over the millennia, her poetry, composed in the Aeolic dialect, has always been inaccessible in the original language. (Courtesy of Poem, Sweet Poem)įew poets in human history have inspired such lasting devotion as Sappho. Excerpts from “If Not, Winter” by Anne Carson. ![]()
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