From The Guardian: After 2,600 years, the world gains a fourth poem by Sappho.
A newly found poem by Sappho, acknowledged as one of the greatest poets of Greek classical antiquity and seen by some as the finest of any era, is published for the first time today.
Written more than 2,600 years ago, the 101 words of verse deal with a theme timeless in both art and soap operas; the stirrings of an ageing body towards the nimbleness, youth and love it once knew.
The poem is the rarest of discoveries. Sappho's pre-eminent reputation as an artist of lyricism and love is based on only three complete poems, 63 complete single lines and up to 264 fragments.
These are all that have survived of the writings of a woman who the Greek philosopher Plato said should be honoured not merely as a great lyric poet but as one of the Muses, the goddesses who inspire all art. [continue]
Update: Oh good; here are more details. A reader wrote to tell me about Martin West's article in The Times Literary Supplement: A new Sappho poem. It includes a translated version of the poem.
Posted on June 24, 2005 06:16 PM. Filed under: books & lit.