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Lush Diodorus sets the lads on fire, But now another has him in his net - Timarion, the boy with wanton eyes . . . Meleager, AP 12.109 Encompassing four thousand short poems and more, the ramshackle classic we call the Greek Anthology gathers up a millennium of snapshots from ancient daily life. Its influence echoes not merely in the classic tradition of the English epigram (Pope, Dryden) but in Rudyard Kipling, Ezra Pound, Virgina Woolf, T. S. Eliot, H.D., and the poets of the First World War. Its variety is almost infinite. Victorious armies, ruined cities, and Olympic champions share space with lovers' quarrels and laments for the untimely dead - but also with jokes and riddles, art appreciation, potted biographies of authors, and scenes from country life and the workplace. This selection of more than 600 epigrams in verse is the first major translation from the Greek Anthology in nearly a century. Each of the Anthology's books of epigrams is represented here, in manuscript order, and with extensive notes on the history and myth that lie behind them.
A collection of short poems which, when reversed, provide new perspectives on the characters from Greek Mythology which they feature.
"This book is the result of extensive research, and highlights the thoughts and works of Hecataeus the cartographer on Herodotus' survey of the then 'known world'. Also presented are the thoughts of Anaxagoras, and the sayings of Xenophanes and Simonides' work on the art of memory, ('the Loci') and its influence many years later on the heretic Giordano Bruno."