"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Pride Month 2025: Words of the Day

In a Kiss, a World

“Sweet boy, with honeyed eyes,
if I could kiss you as many times as I wish,
I’d kiss you three hundred thousand times —
and not once would I be satisfied.”

— Gaius Valerius Catullus, Poem 48 (1st century BCE)

Catullus, the Roman poet whose work straddled personal confession and biting wit, is best known for his turbulent relationship with “Lesbia” — but his poems also include unambiguous expressions of homoerotic desire, written with both candour and lyricism. In Poem 48, he speaks to a beautiful male youth nicknamed Juventius not as a mentor, conqueror, or satirist, but as a lover overwhelmed by longing. Same-gender desire is not coded in metaphor nor couched in apology. The speaker is direct: he wants to kiss his lover again and again, with no shame, only hunger. The intensity of his repetition — “three hundred thousand times” — transforms a kiss into a ritual of desire, obsession, and joy. He brings us into the immediacy of touch, gaze, and longing.

Catullus’s poem reminds us that queer desire in antiquity wasn’t always tragic or allegorical. It could be flirtatious, physical, even playful — a moment suspended between lips, not burdened by shame. In this fragment, we are given not only a kiss, but a glimpse into the long continuum of a queer tenderness preserved in verse.

architecture, engineering and construction

Mermaids in Milan

I know, I know, it’s hot.And if you’re still in Milan — maybe marooned here because of a project that just couldn’t wait or simply because life sucks or because, on the contrary, you enjoy the empty city just as I do — I’ve got

Read More »
books and literature

Bepi from the Ice

During this summer break, I started reading a charming little book I bought in Venice at the remarkable venue Libreria Acqua Alta (High Waters Bookshop): it’s a small volume whose title roughly translates to Mysteries of the Lagoon and Tales of Witches, by one Alberto

Read More »
books and literature

The Ghost Tower

Remember Edogawa Ranpo? The Japanese author of horror and thrilller who gave us the strange and haunting Panorama Island. After reading the graphic novel, I read the novel last summer, and apparently it became tradition that I read Japanese horror when I’m on the traditional

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
No Comments

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Mermaids in Milan

I know, I know, it’s hot.And if you’re still in Milan — maybe marooned here because of a project that just couldn’t wait or simply because life sucks or because, on the contrary, you enjoy the empty city just as I do — I’ve got

Read More

Bepi from the Ice

During this summer break, I started reading a charming little book I bought in Venice at the remarkable venue Libreria Acqua Alta (High Waters Bookshop): it’s a small volume whose title roughly translates to Mysteries of the Lagoon and Tales of Witches, by one Alberto

Read More

The Ghost Tower

Remember Edogawa Ranpo? The Japanese author of horror and thrilller who gave us the strange and haunting Panorama Island. After reading the graphic novel, I read the novel last summer, and apparently it became tradition that I read Japanese horror when I’m on the traditional

Read More