- The
Priapeia (or
Carmina Priapea) is a
collection of
eighty (in some
editions ninety-five)
anonymous short Latin poems in
various meters on
subjects pertaining...
-
subject of the
often humorously obscene collection of
verse called the
Priapeia.
Priapus was
described in
varying sources as the son of
Aphrodite by Dionysus;...
-
Priapeia 68 or
Priapea 68 is the sixty-eighth poem in the
Priapeia, a
collection of
Latin poetry of
uncertain authorship. The
eighty poems lack a unified...
-
Catullus and
Martial in
their shorter poems.
Another source is the
anonymous Priapeia (see
External links below), a
collection of 95
epigrams supposedly written...
-
Archived from the
original on June 22, 2011.
Retrieved December 9, 2010. "
Priapeia,
translated by
Leonard Smithers and
Richard Francis Burton: Irrumation"...
- W. Hooper's
edition of The
Priapus Poems, a
corpus of
poems known as
Priapeia in Latin,
states that "some
Roman ****ual practices, like irrumatio, lack...
-
Minor Poems of Vergil:
Comprising the Culex, Dirae, Lydia, Moretum, Copa,
Priapeia, and
Catalepton (Birmingham:
Cornish Brothers, 1916),
scanned as part of...
- him when he
retreated to his
resort on Capri. One of the
poems in the
Priapeia refers to her books:
Obscenas rigido deo
tabellas dicans ex Elephantidos...
- Fortuna. The
indecent finger features again in a
mocking context in the
Priapeia, a
collection of
poems relating to the
phallic god Priapus. In Late Antiquity...
-
along with
smaller groupings of
verse on
specialized subjects, such as the
Priapeia (circa 100). The
initial modern collection of
these fragmented pieces was...