Wednesday, April 15, 2020

A Woman's Longing: Sappho, fr. 168B


A Woman’s Longing: Sappho 168b

Name: Sappho

Date d. 570 BCE

Region:   Lesbos [modern Greece]

Citation:    Fragment 168b

The moon has set,

The Pleiades have, too.

It is now the middle of the night.

Time is passing,

And I sleep alone.


A Woman’s Longing: Sappho 168b

δέδυκε μὲν ἀ σελάννα
καὶ Πληΐαδες, μέσαι δὲ
νύκτες πάρα δ᾽ ἔρχετ᾽ ὤρα,
ἔγω δὲ μόνα κατεύδω.

Occidit quidem Luna
et Pleiades; mediae autem sunt iam
noctes, praeteritque hora;
ego vero sola dormio.

Translated into Latin by Hugo Grotius



Sappho [d. 570 BCE, modern Greece] was universally applauded by the ancient world as the “Tenth Muse.” Because she was one of the earliest Greek lyric poets, there is very little definitive information on Sappho’s life.  It is generally agreed that Sappho was a wealthy noblewoman from the island of Lesbos who had three brothers and a daughter named Kleis. She used her prominent social position to support a cohort of other women artists, and composed many poems about them, expressing her love for them, praising their beauty, and celebrating their marriages. Whereas earlier Greek poetry was epic poetry with serious themes of gods, warfare, and the state, Sappho’s lyric poetry was emotional, intimate and personal. Her poetry centered around womanhood and womanly love, providing rare insight into the time period. The modern terms “sapphic” and “lesbian” reveal the longevity of her impact upon modern culture. Unfortunately, although her poetry was universally revered by the Greeks and Romans alike, Sappho’s works only exist as fragments, adding mysterious allure to her larger-than-life status but unfortunately hindering our understanding of her life and thoughts.