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  1. Feb 12, 2018 · Love of women. But Sappho was no epic poet, rather she composed lyrics: short, sweet verses on a variety of topics from hymns to the gods, marriage songs, and mini-tales of myth and legend. She...

  2. Sep 7, 2023 · Much earlier poetry had been liturgical, ceremonial, or courtly: in various ways emphatically public. But much of Sappho's work is intimate and putatively private, addressed to specific women or to her friends; and her tone of colloquial familiarity anticipates medieval and modern practice.

  3. Jan 11, 2022 · Sappho was the quintessential lyric poet of ancient Greece. Although the bulk of her poetry has been lost, she was well-known and greatly admired throughout antiquity as one of the greatest of lyric poets, and her immense reputation has endured through surviving fragments.

  4. www.britannica.com › summary › Sappho-Greek-poetSappho summary | Britannica

    Sappho , (flourished 610– c. 570 bc, Lesbos, Asia Minor), Greek lyric poet. Although legends about her abound, little is known of her life. She was born on the island of Lesbos and became the leader of a thiasos, an informal female community, whose purpose was the education of young women, especially for marriage.

  5. The Ode to Aphrodite (or Sappho fragment 1 [a]) is a lyric poem by the archaic Greek poet Sappho, who wrote in the late seventh and early sixth centuries BCE, in which the speaker calls on the help of Aphrodite in the pursuit of a beloved.

  6. Aug 10, 2023 · An ancient Greek poet hailing from the island of Lesbos, Sappho remains one of the most renowned and intriguing figures of ancient Greece. Revered as a bold and autonomous woman, she has become an emblematic figure for feminist movements across history. Although only a few fragments of her work have survived, they express a singular and inventive voice that has inspired countless writers over ...

  7. Sappho 1 (“Prayer to Aphrodite”) 1. You with pattern-woven flowers, immortal Aphrodite, 2. child of Zeus, weaver of wiles, I implore you, 3. do not devastate with aches and sorrows, 4. Mistress, my heart!

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