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The Poet Index · Entry 042

Sappho
Poems

Lifespan
-650–-569
Nationality
Mytilene
Indexed Works
45

As one of the main surviving fragments, it instantly conveys Sappho's voice — concise, straightforward, and full of emotion, even in its incomplete state.

Editorial intro

Nikola Gulevski, Editor, Storgy

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Editorial intro

Sappho wrote about desire with a physical and emotional precision unmatched by any other ancient poet, and she did so in fragments so small that a single surviving stanza can still stop a reader cold. Her one nearly complete poem, the Ode to Aphrodite, directly addresses a goddess, feeling less like religion and more like someone expressing heartbreak openly. This quality—intimate, specific, unguarded—was rare in 630 BCE and remains so today.

She represents the origin point of lyric poetry in the Western tradition, with her influence evident in Catullus, Horace, and every poet who has since sought to make private feeling universal. First-time readers often find two things surprising: how modern the emotional register sounds and how much of her work is fragmented. Many of her poems do not conform to traditional poetry—they are shards, sometimes just a few words, preserved because a grammarian centuries later needed an example of her meter. Engaging with Sappho involves finding something whole in what is incomplete, which offers its own unique experience.

Where to start

The Works

Sort byYearTitle
  1. 01[st]'.Undated
  2. 02A MADAME A. DE SAINT-REMY.Undated
  3. 03A SAPHO.Undated
  4. 04A UNE FEMME IGNORANTE.Undated
  5. 05a'.Undated
  6. 06AD VENEREM.Undated
  7. 07b'.Undated
  8. 08d'.Undated
  9. 09e'.Undated
  10. 10ET CHEZ L'AUTEUR, RUE RICHER, 45.Undated
  11. 11EUDAIMONIA EN PLOUTOU.Undated
  12. 12g'.Undated
  13. 13i'.Undated
  14. 14i[st]'.Undated
  15. 15ia'.Undated
  16. 16ib'.Undated
  17. 17id'.Undated
  18. 18ie'.Undated
  19. 19ig'.Undated
  20. 20ith'.Undated
  21. 21iz'.Undated
  22. 22k'.Undated
  23. 23ka'.Undated
  24. 24KALLIOPA.Undated
  25. 25kb'.Undated
  26. 26kg'.Undated
  27. 27L'AMANT VOLAGE.Undated
  28. 28LA ROSE.Undated
  29. 29LA TOMBE DE TIMAS.Undated
  30. 30LE BONHEUR DANS LA RICHESSE.Undated
  31. 31ODE II.Undated
  32. 32ODE IV.Undated
  33. 33ODE V.Undated
  34. 34ODE VI.Undated
  35. 35ODE VIII.Undated
  36. 36OURANIA.Undated
  37. 37POLYMNIA.Undated
  38. 38POLYMNIE.Undated
  39. 39PROS APAIDEUTON GYNAIKA.Undated
  40. 40RECUEILLISUndated
  41. 41SAPPHOUSUndated
  42. 42th'.Undated
  43. 43THALIA.Undated
  44. 44TO RODON.Undated
  45. 45z'.Undated

Recurring themes

Biographical record

About Sappho

Sappho was born around 630 BCE on the island of Lesbos in the eastern Aegean, likely in Mytilene, although Eresos also claims her birthplace. She wrote in the Aeolic dialect of Greek, crafting her work to be performed aloud and sung with the accompaniment of a lyre. This performance context is important: her poems weren't just meant to be read silently; they were vibrant, rhythmic pieces meant for occasions.

In the ancient world, her reputation was remarkable. Plato is said to have called her the "Tenth Muse," placing her alongside the nine divine patrons of the arts. She was simply known as "The Poetess," much like Homer was referred to as "The Poet," highlighting the high regard her contemporaries had for her. Aristotle referenced her work, and Horace admired her meter. By any ancient standard, she was a canonical figure.

However, what we actually have of her work tells a different story.

Most of her poems have been lost—faded away with time, the fragility of papyrus, and the general ravages of history. What does survive mostly exists in fragments: a word here, a stanza there, or even just a single line preserved because a later grammarian quoted it to discuss meter. The one poem we possess in something resembling complete form is the Ode to Aphrodite, a prayer to the goddess of love that is direct, emotionally precise, and still striking after 2,600 years.

As far as we can tell, her subject matter revolved around love, desire, longing, and the lives of women—topics that felt personal and immediate in ways much ancient poetry did not. She seems to have led or been part of a community of women on Lesbos, possibly a group devoted to music, poetry, and the worship of Aphrodite and the Muses, though scholars continue to debate the exact nature of that community.

Biographical span
-650Birth
-569Death

Poets in the same orbit

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