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CATULLUS EXAMINATION Classical Association of Virginia 2010 Latin Tournament Carmen 51 Ille mī pār esse deō vidētur, ille, sī fās est, superāre dīvōs, quī sedēns adversus identidem tē spectat et audit 1 2 3 4 dulce rīdentem, miserō quod omnīs ēripit sēnsūs mihi: nam simul tē, Lesbia, adspexī, nihil est super mī (vōcis in ōre) 5 6 7 8 lingua sed torpet, tenuis sub artūs flamma dēmānat, sonitū suōpte tintinant aurēs, geminā teguntur lūmina nocte. 9 10 11 12 ōtium, Catulle, tibī molestum est: ōtiō exsultās nimiumque gestīs. ōtium et rēgēs prius et beātās perdidit urbēs. 13 14 15 16 1. Catullus modeled this poem on an already existing poem. Who was the author of that previously existing poem? a. Callimachus b. Sappho c. Tibullus d. Horace 2. To whom does ille refer in lines 1 and 2? a. Publius Clodius Pulcher b. Lesbia c. Marcus Caelius Rufus d. Quintus Caecilius Metellus 3. What use of the infinitive can be seen in line 2? a. historical b. indirect statement c. complementary d. objective 4. What is the best meaning of identidem in line 3? a. same b. therefore c. suitable d. repeatedly 1 5. Which of the following is NOT described as lost or disabled in some fashion? a. speech b. touch c. sight d. hearing 6. What is the case, number, and gender of artūs in line 9? a. nominative, singular, masculine b. genitive, singular, feminine c. nominative, plural, masculine d. accusative, plural, masculine 7. What is the best meaning of dēmānat in line 10? a. to stay down from b. to succumb to c. to demand from d. to flow down from 8. What literary device can be seen in line 11? a. onomatopoeia b. tmesis c. synecdoche d. hysteron proteron 9. Which of the following words is an example of metonymy? a. flamma b. lingua c. sonitū d. lūmina 10. What is the case and use of Catulle in line 13? a. ablative of personal agent b. vocative of direct address c. dative with special verbs d. genitive of possession 11. Which of the following verbs used in the passage is reduplicative? a. torpeo b. exsulto c. tego d. perdo 12. In the last stanza, what is Catullus’s final admonition? a. Abandon love, for it has laid waste to far greater powers. b. Gather courage to prevent your destruction. c. Avoid leisure for it can prove dangerous. d. Bearing grief can only lead to chaos. 13. Which of the following lines contains an elision? a. Line 1 b. Line 5 c. Line 10 d. Line 15 2 Carmen 43 Salvē, nec minimō puella nāsō nec bellō pede nec nigrīs ocellīs nec longīs digitīs nec ōre siccō nec sānē nimis ēlegante linguā. dēcoctōris amīca Fōrmiānī, tēn prōvincia nārrat esse bellam? tēcum Lesbia nostra comparātur? ō saeclum īnsipiēns et īnficētum! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 14. Which of the following characteristics does Catullus say the girl does NOT possess? a. a large nose b. ugly feet c. long fingers d. a wet mouth 15. What is the best meaning of sānē in line 4? a. without b. really c. crazy d. bloody 16. What is the best meaning of dēcoctōris in line 5? a. bankrupt b. mischievous c. cheating d. wicked 17. In line 6, tēn is an archaic form of what word? a. teneo b. tendo c. tene d. tu 18. What case is saeclum in line 8? a. nominative c. vocative b. accusative d. genitive 19. What literary device is seen in line 8? a. apostrophe b. litotes b. pleonasm d. chiasmus 20. What is the best meaning of saeclum in line 8? a. group of companions b. age c. society d. practice 3 Carmen 50 Hesternō, Licinī, diē ōtiōsī multum lūsimus in meīs tabellīs, ut convēnerat esse dēlicātos: scrībēns versiculōs uterque nostrum lūdēbat numerō modo hōc modo illōc, reddēns mūtua per iocum atque vīnum. atque illinc abiī tuō lepōre incēnsus, Licinī, facētiīsque, ut nec mē miserum cibus iuvāret nec somnus tegeret quiēte ocellōs, sed tōtō indomitus furōre lectō versārer, cupiēns vidēre lūcem, ut tēcum loquerer simulque ut essem. at dēfessa labōre membra postquam sēmimortua lectulō iacēbant, hoc, iūcunde, tibī poēma fēcī, ex quō perspicerēs meum dolōrem. nunc audāx cave sīs, precēsque nostrās, ōrāmus, cave dēspuās, ocelle, nē poenās Nemesis reposcat ā tē. est vēmēns dea: laedere hanc cavētō. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 21. After what occasion is this poem written? a. a dinner party b. a trip abroad c. a poetry session d. a political speech 22. In what case is Licinī in line 1? a. nominative c. ablative b. dative d. vocative 23. With what does ōtiōsī agree in line 1? a. Hesternō (line 1) c. diē (line 1) b. subject of lūsimus (line 2) d. Licinī (line 1) 24. What is the best translation of ut (line 3) in context? a. so that b. to c. that d. as 25. What is the best meaning of the impersonal verb convēnerat in line 3? a. we had gathered together b. we had combined c. we had agreed d. we had interviewed 26. To what does numerō refer in line 5? a. the number of poems written c. the meter of the poems b. the number of lines written d. the two poets writing the poems 27. Lines 7-8 indicate Catullus' feelings of a. intimidation c. serenity b. inspiration d. anger 4 28. What type of word is quiēte in line 10? a. imperative verb form b. perfect passive participle c. adverb d. noun 29. ocellōs (line 10) is an example of a(n) a. diminutive c. euphemism b. transferred epithet d. allusion 30. To whom or what does cupiēns refer (line 12)? a. Catullus b. the wine c. Licinius d. the bed 31. What is the tense, voice, and mood of versārer (line 13)? a. future, passive, subjunctive b. future, active, indicative c. imperfect, active, subjunctive d. imperfect, passive, subjunctive 32. ut...loquerer (line 13) is best rendered a. so that I might speak c. if only I could speak b. as I was speaking d. might I speak 33. What word in lines 14-15 is the subject of iacēbant (line 15)? a. dēfessa b. membra c. sēmimortua d. lectulō 34. What is the correct translation of iacēbant (line 15)? a. were being thrown b. were lying c. were tossing d. were throwing 35. What does hoc (line 16) refer to? a. this night of restlessness c. this poem b. this labor d. this bed 36. How is precēs (line 18) used? a. appositive to dolōrem (line 17) c. object of ōrāmus (line 19) b. object of cave (line 19) d. object of dēspuās (line 19) 37. Nemesis (line 20) is the goddess of what? a. inspiration b. vengeance c. discord d. reconciliation 38. What verb form is cavētō (line 21)? a. supine c. future imperative b. participle d. present indicative 39. What is Licinius’ cognomen (used in other poems)? a. Veranius b. Caecilius c. Volusius d. Calvus 40. In what meter is the poem written? a. hendecasyllabic c. iambic trimeter b. dactylic hexameter d. elegiac couplets 5 Carmen 4 Phasēlus ille, quem vidētis, hospitēs, ait fuisse nāvium celerrimus, neque ūllius natantis impetum trabis nequīsse praeterīre, sīve palmulīs opus foret volāre sīve linteō. et hoc negat minācis Hadriāticī negāre lītus īnsulāsve Cycladās Rhodumque nōbilem horridamque Thrāciam Propontida trucemve Ponticum sinum, ubi iste post phasēlus anteā fuit comāta silva; nam Cytōriō in iugō loquente saepe sībilum ēdidit comā. Amastri Pontica et Cytōre buxifer, tibi haec fuisse et esse cognitissima ait phasēlus, ultimā ex orīgine tuō stetisse dīcit in cacūmine, tuō imbuisse palmulās in aequore, et inde tot per impotentia freta erum tulisse (laeva sīve dextera vocāret aura, sīve utrumque Iuppiter simul secundus incidisset in pedem), neque ūlla vōta lītorālibus deīs sibi esse facta, cum venīret ā marī novissimō hunc ad usque limpidum lacum. sed haec prius fuēre: nunc reconditā senet quiēte sēque dēdicat tibi, gemelle Castor et gemelle Castoris. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 41. The meter of this passage is a. dactylic hexameter c. iambic trimeter b. hendecasyllabic d. elegiac couplets 42. Phasēlus is a. a person c. a fish b. a boat d. a lake 43. Which of the following is NOT found in lines 2-3? a. hyperbole b. personification c. onomatopoeia d. ellipsis 44. What is the case and use of impetum in line 3? a. accusative subject of indirect statement b. nominative subject c. accusative of respect d. accusative direct object 6 45. palmulīs in line 4 metaphorically means a. winds b. leaves c. sails d. oars 46. volāre in line 5 literally means a. to desire c. to swim b. to roll d. to fly 47. What rhetorical device is found in line 8? a. chiasmus b. synchysis c. transferred epithet d. apostrophe 48. Ponticum sinum in line 9 refers to which sea? a. Sea of Marmara b. Mediterranean Sea c. Black Sea d. Aegean Sea 49. The phasēlus used to be a _____ forest (lines 10-11). a. friendly b. dark c. vast d. leafy 50. How many elisions are in line 11? a. 1 b. 2 c. 3 51. What is the case of Amastri in line 13? a. nominative c. dative d. 4 b. genitive d. vocative 52. What is the best translation of cacūmine in line 16? a. beach b. peak c. forest d. entrance 53. What is the meaning of erum in line 19? a. master b. air c. beast d. water 54. Which word in lines 18-19 contains a dipthong? a. inde b. freta c. laeva d. sive 55. What tense is vocāret (line 20)? a. present c. perfect b. imperfect d. future 56. What type of dative is sibi (unusually with a perfect passive and not a future passive) in line 23? a. agent b. reference c. indirect object d. separation 57. reconditā in line 25 agrees with what word? a. haec (line 25) b. quiēte (line 26) c. sē (line 26) d. tibi (line 26) 7 58. In line 25, fuēre is what mood? a. imperative c. subjunctive b. indicative d. infinitive 59. Who is gemelle Castoris mentioned in line 27? a. Zeus b. Heracles c. Jason d. Pollux 60. Which of the following is NOT influenced by Greek usage in the poem? a. celerrimus (line 2) b. lītus (line 7) c. Propontida (line 9) d. sibi (line 23) Carmen 64 (lines 147 – 157) sed simul ac cupidae mentis satiāta libīdō est, dicta nihil metuēre, nihil periūria cūrant. certē ego tē in mediō versantem turbine lētī ēripuī, et potius germānum āmittere crēvī, quam tibi fallācī suprēmo in tempore dēssem. prō quō dīlaceranda ferīs dabor ālitibusque praeda, neque iniactā tumulābor mortua terrā. quaenam tē genuit sōlā sub rūpe leaena? quod mare conceptum spūmantibus exspuit undīs, quae Syrtis, quae Scylla rapāx, quae vasta Charybdis, tālia quī reddis prō dulcī praemia vītā? 61. Who is speaking in this passage? a. Theseus c. Minos 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 b. Ariadne d. Juno 62. To what is the speaker referring in line 147? a. ambition b. thought c. sex d. betrayal 63. Translate metuēre in line 148. a. to fear c. be feared b. they fear d. they feared 64. Which legal term is NOT a derivative of a Latin word found in line 148? a. indictment b. immaterial c. perjury d. curator 65. Scan the first four feet of line 149. a. DSDS c. DSSS b. DDSS d. SDSD 8 66. In line 150, to whom does germānum refer? a. Absyrtus b. Minotaur c. Minos d. Theseus 67. What poetic device is in lines 150-151? a. tmesis b. pleonasm c. ellipsis d. simile 68. What is the basic meaning of ālitibus in line 152? a. nourishment b. fury c. birds d. beasts 69. What is the best meaning of the present active infinitive of dīlaceranda in line 152? a. to delight b. to tear to pieces c. to set on fire d. to devour 70. Which of the following means the same thing as tumulābor? a. subdūcam b. iactābor c. vexābor d. sepeliar 71. What is being described in lines 152-153? a. a feast b. a sacrifice c. a slaughter d. a prayer 72. With what word does sōlā agree in line 154? a. tē (line 154) b. rūpe (line 154) c. leaena (line 154) d. mare (line 155) 73. In line 154, what is the best meaning of quaenam? a. just what b. for what c. certain d. some 74. In line 156, the speaker discusses both Scylla and Charybdis. Which of the following is NOT true about these two creatures? a. they were once both maidens b. they reside in the Straights of Messana c. both Odysseus and Jason faced them d. they’re both in their current state because of Circe 75. In line 157, who is the antecedent of quī? a. Scylla b. leaena c. Theseus d. Minos (Translation worth 25 points is on next page.) 9 Sight Translation: On the back of the scantron, write out a translation of the following passage neatly and as literally as good English allows. Zmyrna meī Cinnae nōnam post dēnique messem quam coepta est nōnamque ēdita post hiemem, Mīlia cum intereā quīngenta Hatriēnsis in ūnō versiculōrum annō pūtidus ēvomuit Zmyrna cavās Satrachī penitus mittētur ad undās Zmyrnam cāna diū saecula pervolvent At Volusī annālēs Paduam morientur ad ipsam et laxās scombrīs saepe dabunt tunicās Parva meī mihi sint cordī monimenta Philītae, at populus tumidō gaudeat Antimachō. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Zmyrna – Zmyrna (Greek word), short epic Greek poem, an epyllion messis, messis, f. – harvest Hatriēnsis, is, e – of Hatria/Hatrian (a town in northern Italy on the Adriatic coast which is presumably the birthplace of Volusius the author of Annals criticized in Catullus poem 36) Satrachus – Satrachus, river in Cyprus Padua – city of Padua scomber, scombrī – mackerel (fish) Philītas, -ae – Philetas (a Greek poet and founder of Alexandria poetry school) by metonymy “Cinnae” Antimachus, -ī, m. – Antimachus (a Greek scholar and author of a famous epic poem; Callimachus condemned him for his verbose style) by metonymy “Volusius” 10