Sappho’s Fragments on Longing
"I simply want to be dead." — Sappho’s poetry, fragment 95, lays bare the ache of heartbreak (quoted in the Oxyrhynchus Papyri).

Jacques Louis David — "The Death of Socrates" (1787), public domain
Sappho’s Starkest Line Survives by a Thread.
Her voice almost vanished. Only scraps remain. In fragment 95, preserved on a battered papyrus and quoted centuries later, Sappho writes straight from the wound: "I simply want to be dead." For a Greek audience unused to such intimacy, this was jarring power.
Love, Grief — and Literary Immortality.
Sappho’s poetry echoes through time because it refused to blink. She wrote for and about women, longing, separation — emotions the official histories ignored. This surviving shred is more than a line: it’s proof that ancient voices can still cut through centuries.
Sappho’s verses turn raw emotion into literary survival — her words survived centuries of censors, fires, and time, giving voice to private longing in a public world.