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Sappho Among The Famous Love Poets Known Term Paper

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Sappho Among the famous love poets known today, few of them are women, even though women are generally considered to be the more romantic and sentimental gender. However, one of the most influential of the ancient Greek poets was in fact a woman. Sappho is still known today for her incredible influence on the direction of poetry and the passion involved in her work. Also, Sappho is famous for her unconventional lifestyle which influenced her poetry, and also for the controversy surrounding the Christian condemnation of her work. Sappho is an outstanding poet because of her interesting lifestyle, creation of a unique poetic style, and the passion of her work which continues to influence poets and artists today.

Sappho was born between 630 and 612 BC, and lived in Mytilene, a city on the island of Lesbos. At the time, Lesbos was a cultural center of the ancient Greek world. She was an aristocrat who was married to a wealthy merchant, and with him she bore one daughter, Cleis. She spent her time studying the arts, and also was the head of...

Sappho's family was politically active, and it allowed her to travel widely and become renown for her poetry. Sappho's lifestyle is possibly best known today because she was openly passionate about other women, and most of her love poetry is written for females. It is speculated that, much like most male teachers in ancient Greece, she had romantic relations with her students, for whom her poetry may have been written.
Sappho's love poetry had a unique style. She was referred to as a lyrist because her poems were written to be performed with the accompaniment of a lyre, as was the custom of the time. Sappho composed her own music. She used several metrical forms for her writing, but she is best known for what is today called Sapphic meter. Sapphic meter is a poetic form which spans four lines, which consists of "3 hendecasyllabic lines of trochee, trochee, dactyl, trochee, trochee and a concluding line of dactyl, trochee, known as the Adonic or adonean line." ("Sapphic Stanza") It can be diagramed using "-"…

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Bibliography

Sumreen et al. "Sappho." Wikipedia. Mar. 2004. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sappho

Dysprosia et al."Sapphic stanza." Wikipedia. Oct. 2003. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapphic_meter

North, Alix. "Sappho." Isle of Lesbos: Poetry. http://www.sappho.com/poetry/sappho.html
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