词条 | Stesichorus |
释义 |
Stesichorus ({{IPAc-en|s|t|ə|ˈ|s|ɪ|k|ə|r|ə|s}}; {{lang-grc-gre|Στησίχορος}}, Stēsikhoros; c. 630 – 555 BC) was the first great lyric poet of the West. He is best known for telling epic stories in lyric metres[1] but he is also famous for some ancient traditions about his life, such as his opposition to the tyrant Phalaris, and the blindness he is said to have incurred and cured by composing verses first insulting and then flattering to Helen of Troy. He was ranked among the nine lyric poets esteemed by the scholars of Hellenistic Alexandria and yet his work attracted relatively little interest among ancient commentators,[2] so that remarkably few fragments of his poetry now survive. As one scholar observed in 1967: "Time has dealt more harshly with Stesichorus than with any other major lyric poet."[3] Recent discoveries, recorded on Egyptian papyrus (notably and controversially, the Lille Stesichorus),[4] have led to some improvements in our understanding of his work, confirming his role as a link between Homer's epic narrative and the lyric narrative of poets like Pindar.[5] The following description of the birthplace of the monster Geryon, preserved as a quote by the geographer Strabo,[6] is characteristic of the "descriptive fulness" of his style:[7] {{lang|grc|σχεδὸν ἀντιπέρας κλεινᾶς Ἐρυθείας}} < > {{lang|grc|Ταρτησ-}} {{lang|grc|σοῦ ποταμοῦ παρὰ παγὰσ ἀπείρονας ἀρ-}} {{lang|grc|γυρορίζους}} {{lang|grc|ἐν κευθμῶνι πέτρας.}}[8] A nineteenth century translation imaginatively fills in the gaps while communicating something of the richness of the language: Where monster Geryon first beheld the light, Famed Erytheia rises to the sight; Born near th' unfathomed silver springs that gleam 'Mid caverned rocks, and feed Tartessus' stream.[9] Stesichorus exercised an important influence on the representation of myth in 6th century art[10] and on the development of Athenian dramatic poetry.[11] BiographyStesichorus was born in Metauros (modern Gioia Tauro) in Calabria, Southern Italy[12][13][14][15][16] c. 630 BC and died in Katane (modern Catania) in Sicily in 555 BC. Some say that he came from Himera in Sicily, but that was due to him moving from Metauros to Himera later in life. When exiled from Pallantium in Arcadia he came to Katane (Catania) and when he died there was buried in front of the gate which is called Stesichorean after him. In date he was later than the lyric poet Alcman, since he was born in the 37th Olympiad (632/28 BC). He died in the 56th Olympiad (556/2 BC). He had a brother Mamertinus who was an expert in geometry and a second brother Helianax, a law-giver. He was a lyric poet. His poems are in the Doric dialect and in 26 books. They say that he was blinded for writing abuse of Helen and recovered his sight after writing an encomium of Helen, the Palinode, as the result of a dream. He was called Stesichorus because he was the first to establish (stesai) a chorus of singers to the cithara; his name was originally Tisias. ChronologyThe specific dates given by the Suda for Stesichorus have been dismissed by one modern scholar as "specious precision"[17] {{em dash}} its dates for the floruit of Alcman (the 27th Olympiad), the life of Stesichorus (37th–56th Olympiads) and the birth of Simonides (the 56th Olympiad) virtually lay these three poets end-to-end, a coincidence that seems to underscore a convenient division between old and new styles of poetry.[18] Nevertheless, the Suda's dates "fit reasonably well" with other indications of Stesichorus's life-span {{em dash}} for example, they are consistent with a claim elsewhere in Suda that the poet Sappho was his contemporary, along with Alcaeus and Pittacus, and also with the claim, attested by other sources, that Phalaris was his contemporary.[19] Aristotle quoted a speech the poet is supposed to have made to the people of Himera warning them against the tyrannical ambitions of Phalaris.[20] The Byzantine grammarian Tzetzes also listed him as a contemporary of the tyrant and yet made him a contemporary of the philosopher Pythagoras as well.[21] According to Lucian, the poet lived to 85 years of age.[22] Hieronymus declared that his poems became sweeter and more swan-like as he approached death,[23] and Cicero knew of a bronzed statue representing him as a bent old man holding a book.[24] Eusebius dated his floruit in Olympiad 42.2 (611/10 BC) and his death in Olympiad 55.1 (560/59 BC).[25] FamilyThe Suda's claim that Hesiod was the father of Stesichorus can be dismissed as "fantasy"[26] yet it is also mentioned by Tzetzes[27] and the Hesiodic scholiast Proclus[28] (one of them however named the mother of Stesichorus via Hesiod as Ctimene and the other as Clymene). According to another tradition known to Cicero, Stesichorus was the grandson of Hesiod[29] yet even this verges on anachronism since Hesiod was composing verses around 700 BC.[30] Stesichorus might be regarded as Hesiod's literary "heir" (his treatment of Helen in the Palinode, for example, may have owed much to Hesiod's Catalogue of Women)[31] and maybe this was the source of confusion about a family relationship.[32] According to Stephanus of Byzantium[33] and the philosopher Plato[34] the poet's father was named Euphemus, but an inscription on a herm from Tivoli listed him as Euclides.[35] The poet's mathematically inclined brother was named Mamertinus by the Suda but a scholiast in a commentary on Euclid named him Mamercus.[36] BackgroundStesichorus's lyrical treatment of epic themes was well-suited to a western Greek audience, owing to the popularity of hero-cults in southern Italy and Magna Graeca, as for example the cult of Philoctetes at Sybaris, Diomedes at Thurii and the Atreidae at Tarentum.[37] It was also a sympathetic environment for his most famous poem, The Palinode, composed in praise of Helen, an important cult figure in the Doric diaspora.[38] On the other hand, the western Greeks were not very different from their eastern counterparts and his poetry cannot be regarded exclusively as a product of the Greek West .[39] His poetry reveals both Doric and Ionian influences and this is consistent with the Suda'a claim that his birthplace was either Metauria or Himera, both of which were founded by colonists of mixed Ionian/Doric descent.[40] On the other hand, a Doric/Ionian flavour was fashionable among later poets {{em dash}} it is found in the 'choral' lyrics of the Ionian poets Simonides and Bacchylides {{em dash}} and it might have been fashionable even in Stesichorus's own day.[41] His poetry included a description of the river Himera[42] as well as praise for the town named after it,[43] and his poem Geryoneis included a description of Pallantium in Arcadia.[44] His possible exile from Arcadia is attributed by one modern scholar to rivalry between Tegea and Sparta.[45] Traditional accounts indicate that he was politically active in Magna Graeca. Aristotle mentions two public speeches by Stesichorus: one to the people of Himera, warning them against Phalaris, and another to the people of Locri, warning them against presumption (possibly referring to their war against Rhegium).[46] Philodemus believed that the poet once stood between two armies (which two, he doesn't say) and reconciled them with a song {{em dash}} but there is a similar story about Terpander.[47] According to the 9th century scholar Photius, the term eight all (used by gamblers at dice) derives from an expensive burial the poet received outside Catana, including a monument with eight pillars, eight steps and eight corners,[48] but the 3rd century grammarian Julius Pollux attributed the same term to an 'eight all ways' tomb given to the poet outside Himera.[49] CareerMany modern scholars don't accept the Suda's claim that Stesichorus was named for his innovations in choral poetry {{em dash}} there are good reasons to believe that his lyrical narratives were composed for solo performance (see Works below). Moreover the name wasn't unique {{em dash}} there seems to have been more than one poet of this name[50] (see Spurious works below). The Suda in yet another entry refers to the fact, now verified by Papyrus fragments, that Stesichorus composed verses in units of three stanzas (strophe, antistrophe and epode), a format later followed by poets such as Bacchylides and Pindar. Suda claims this three-stanza format was popularly referred to as the three of Stesichorus in a proverbial saying rebuking cultural buffoons ("You don't even know the three of Stesichorus!"). According to one modern scholar, however, this saying could instead refer to the following three lines of his poem The Palinode, addressed to Helen of Troy:[51] There is no truth in that story, You didn't ride in the well-rowed galleys, You didn't reach the walls of Troy.[52] Helen of Troy's bad character was a common theme among poets such as Sappho and Alcaeus[53] and, according to various ancient accounts, Stesichorus viewed her in the same light until she magically punished him with blindness for blaspheming her in one of his poems.[54] According to a colourful account recorded by Pausanias, she later sent an explanation to Stesichorus via a man from Croton, who was on a pilgrimage to White Island in the Black Sea (near the mouth of the Blue Danube), and it was in response to this that Stesichorus composed the Palinode,[55] absolving her of all blame for the Trojan War and thus restoring himself to full sight. WorksThe ancients associated the lyrical qualities of Stesichorus with the voice of the nightingale, as in this quote from the Palatine Anthology: "...at his birth, when he had just reached the light of day, a nightingale, travelling through the air from somewhere or other, perched unnoticed on his lips and struck up her clear song."[56] The account is repeated by Pliny the Elder[57] but it was the epic qualities of his work that most impressed ancient commentators,[50] though with some reservations on the part of Quintillian: {{Quotation|"The greatness of Stesichorus' genius is shown among other things by his subject-matter: he sings of the most important wars and the most famous commanders and sustains on his lyre the weight of epic poetry. In both their actions and their speeches he gives due dignity to his characters, and if only he had shown restraint he could possibly have been regarded as a close rival of Homer; but he is redundant and diffuse, a fault to be sure but explained by the abundance of what he had to say." Quintillian[58]}}In a similar vein, Dionysius of Halicarnassus commends Stesichorus for "...the magnificence of the settings of his subject matter; in them he has preserved the traits and reputations of his characters",[59] and Longinus puts him in select company with Herodotus, Archilochus and Plato as the 'most Homeric' of authors.[60] Modern scholars tend to accept the general thrust of the ancient comments – even the 'fault' noted by Quintillian gets endorsement: 'longwindedness', as one modern scholar calls it, citing, as proof of it, the interval of 400 lines separating Geryon's death from his eloquent anticipation of it.[61] Similarly, "the repetitiveness and slackness of the style" of the recently discovered Lille papyrus has even been interpreted by one modern scholar as proof of Stesichorean authorship[62] – though others originally used it as an argument against.[4] Possibly Stesichorus was even more Homeric than ancient commentators realized – they had assumed that he composed verses for performance by choirs (the triadic structure of the stanzas, comprising strophe, antistrophe and epode, is consistent with choreographed movement) but a poem such as the Geryoneis included some 1500 lines and it probably required about four hours to perform – longer than a chorus might reasonably be expected to dance.[63] Moreover, the versatility of lyric meter is suited to solo performance with self-accompaniment on the lyre[64] – which is how Homer himself delivered poetry. Whether or not it was a choral technique, the triadic structure of Stesichorean lyrics allowed for novel arrangements of dactylic meter – the dominant meter in his poems and also the defining meter of Homeric epic – thus allowing for Homeric phrasing to be adapted to new settings. However, Stesichorus did more than recast the form of epic poetry – works such as the Palinode were also a recasting of epic material: in that version of the Trojan War, the combatants fought over a phantom Helen while the real Helen either stayed home or went to Egypt (see a summary below). The 'Lyric Age' of Greece was in part self-discovery and self-expression – as in the works of Alcaeus and Sappho – but a concern for heroic values and epic themes still endured: {{Quotation|"Stesichorus' citharodic narrative points to the simultaneous coexistence of different literary genres and currents in an age of great artistic energy and experimentation. It is one of the exciting qualities of early Greek culture that forms continue to evolve, but the old traditions still remain strong as points of stability and proud community, unifying but not suffocating." – Charles Seagal.[65]}}An 'Homeric' simileThe Homeric qualities of Stesichorus' poetry are demonstrated in a fragment of his poem Geryoneis describing the death of the monster Geryon. A scholiast writing in a margin on Hesiod's Theogony noted that Stesichorus gave the monster wings, six hands and six feet, whereas Hesiod himself had only described it as 'three-headed'.[66] yet Stesichorus adapted Homeric motifs to create a humanized portrait of the monster,[67] whose death in battle mirrors the death of Gorgythion in Homer's Iliad, translated here by Richard Lattimore: He bent drooping his head to one side, as a garden poppy bends beneath the weight of its yield and the rains of springtime;" (Iliad 8.306-8)[68] Homer here transforms Gorgythion's death in battle into a thing of beauty{{em dash}}the poppy has not wilted or died.[69] Stesichorus adapted the simile to restore Death's ugliness while still retaining the poignancy of the moment:[70] Then Geryon rested his neck to one side As might a poppy when it mars The tenderness of its body shedding Suddenly all of its petals... (Geryoneis)[71] The mutual self-reflection of the two passages is part of the novel aesthetic experience that Stesichorus here puts into play.[72] The enduring freshness of his art, in spite of its epic traditions, is borne out by Ammianus Marcellinus in an anecdote about Socrates: happening to overhear, on the eve of his own execution, the rendition of a song of Stesichorus, the old philosopher asked to be taught it: "So that I may know something more when I depart from life." [73] See The Queen's Speech in the Lille fragment for more on Stesichorus's style. The 26 booksHis works, according to the Suda, were collected in 26 books but each of these was probably a long, narrative poem. The titles of more than half of them are recorded by ancient sources:[74]
Spurious worksSome poems were wrongly attributed to Stesichorus by ancient sources, including bucolic poems and some love songs such as Calyce and Rhadine. It is possible that these are the works of another Stesichorus belonging to the fourth century, mentioned in the Marmor Parium.[99] Tabula IliacaBovillae, about twelve miles outside Rome, was the original site of a monument dating from the Augustan period and now located in the Capitoline Museum. The stone monument features scenes from the fall of Troy, depicted in low relief, and an inscription: {{lang|grc|Ιλίου Πέρσις κατα Στησίχορον}} ('Sack of Troy according to Stesichorus').[100] Scholars are divided as to whether or not it accurately depicts incidents described by Stesichorus in his poem Sack of Troy. There is, for example, a scene showing Aeneas and his father Anchises departing 'for Hesperia' with 'sacred objects', which might have more to do with the poetry of Virgil than with that of Stesichorus.[101][102][103]{{Clear}}References1. ^Charles Segal, "Archaic Choral Lyric" in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Greek Literature, P. Easterling and B. Knox (eds.), Cambridge University Press (1985), page 186 2. ^D.A. Campbell (ed.), Greek Lyric Vol 3, Loeb Classical Library (1991) page 5 3. ^David Campbell, Greek Lyric Poetry, Bristol Classical Press (1982), page 253, reprinted from 1967 Macmillan edition 4. ^1 P.J. Parsons, "The Lille Stesichorus", Zeitschreift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik Vol. 26 (1977), pages 7–36 5. ^Charles Segal, "Archaic Choral Lyric" in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Greek Literature, P. Easterling and B. Knox (eds.), Cambridge University Press (1985), page 187 6. ^Strabo 3.2.11 = Stesichorus S7 = PMG 184. 7. ^Charles Segal, "Archaic Choral Lyric" in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Greek Literature, P. Easterling and B. Knox (eds.), Cambridge University Press (1985), page 188 8. ^Stesichorus (S7 Loeb): D.A. Campbell (ed.), Greek Lyric Vol 3, Loeb Classical Library (1991) page 64 9. ^Sir Edward Bromhead, The Remains of Stesichorus in an English Version, (1849), page 11 [https://books.google.com/books?id=NkwEAAAAQAAJ Google digitalized version] 10. ^C.M. Bowra, Greek Lyric Poetry, Oxford University Press (1961), pages 119–26 11. ^Richard Jebb, Bacchylides: The poems and fragmentsCambridge University Press (1905), page 32 [https://archive.org/stream/bacchylidespoem00jebbgoog#page/n53/mode/1up Google digitalized version] 12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/565868/Stesichorus|title=Stesichorus|work=Encyclopædia Britannica}} 13. ^{{cite web|url=http://writershistory.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=820&Itemid=32|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714184346/http://writershistory.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=820&Itemid=32|dead-url=yes|archive-date=2014-07-14|title=Writers History - Stesichorus|work=writershistory.com}} 14. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.calabria.nu/magna.htm#Like|title=Ooops! I can't find the page you're looking for|work=calabria.nu}}{{Dead link|date=January 2017}} 15. ^{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xFhMG7G1q5kC&pg=PA254&lpg=PA254&dq=Stesichorus+was+born+in+Metauros&source=bl&ots=RDiNzxAeNk&sig=bhoz-8O94Ns0NdqfrJaJDV5azC0&hl=en&sa=X&ei=I0y1U4XFDoemkQW1_ICYCw&ved=0CC8Q6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=Stesichorus%20was%20born%20in%20Metauros&f=false|title=Aristotle, Rhetoric II|work=google.com.au}} 16. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.forgottenbooks.com/readbook_text/A_History_of_Ancient_Greek_Literature_1000014498/125|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714225605/http://www.forgottenbooks.com/readbook_text/A_History_of_Ancient_Greek_Literature_1000014498/125|dead-url=yes|archive-date=2014-07-14|title=p.114-5. A History of Ancient Greek Literature|work=forgottenbooks.com}} 17. ^M.L.West, 'Stesichorus', The Classical Quarterly, New Series Vol.21, No.2 (Nov. 1971) page 302 18. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 186-7 19. ^, Campbell in Loeb page 3 20. ^Aristotle Rhet." 2.20.1393b, cited by David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 39 21. ^Tzetzes Vit.Hes. 18, cited by David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 33 22. ^Lucian Macr., cited by David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 33 23. ^Hieronymus Epistles 52.3, David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 33 24. ^Cicero Verr. 2.2.86, cited by David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 45 25. ^Eusebius Chron., cited by David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III: Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides and Others, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 31 26. ^Cambell, Loeb page 35 27. ^Tzetzes Vit.Hes. 18, cited by Campbell, Loeb page 35 28. ^Proclus Hes. Op. 271a, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 35 29. ^Cicero De Rep. 2.20, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 37 30. ^Jasper Griffin, "Greek Myth and Hesiod", J. Boardman, J. Griffin and O. Murray (eds), The Oxford History of the Classical World, Oxford University Press (1986), page 88 31. ^Charles Segal, "Archaic Choral Lyric" in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 191 32. ^Richard Lattimore translation, "Hesiod" Intro. pp. 5, The University of Michigan Press, 1959 33. ^Stephanus of Byzantium s.v. {{lang|grc|Μάταυρος}}, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 35 34. ^Plato Phaedrus 244a, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 37 35. ^Inscriptiones Graecae xiv 1213, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 37 36. ^Proclus in Euclid Prolog. 2, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 37 37. ^Richard Jebb, Bacchylides: The poems and fragments Cambridge Uni Press (1905), page 32 38. ^1 Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 191 39. ^G.O.Hutchinson, Greek Lyric Poetry: a commentary on selected larger pieces, Oxford University Press (2001), page 113 40. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 186 41. ^G.O.Hutchinson, Greek Lyric Poetry: a commentary on selected larger pieces, Oxford University press (2001), page 115 42. ^Vibius Sequester, de fluminibus fontibus etc, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 181 43. ^Himerius Orationes 27.27, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 181 44. ^Pausanias 8.3.2, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 89 45. ^W.G.Forrest, A History of Sparta 950–192 BC, page 76, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 28, note 4 46. ^Aristotle Rhet. 2.21. 1394b-95a, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 39 47. ^Phildemus Mus. 1.30.31ss, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 41 48. ^Photius Lexicon, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 45 49. ^Pollux 9.100, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 43 50. ^1 Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 187 51. ^note 2 to Suda T 943, Campbell in Loeb page 49 52. ^Plato Phaedr. 243a, cited by Campbell in Loeb page 93 53. ^Sappho 16.6–10 and Alcaeus B 10 PLF, cited by Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 191 54. ^Isocrates Hel. 64, cited by Campbell in Loeb, page 93 55. ^Pausanias 3.19.11–13, cited by Campbell in Loeb, page 41 (Campbell's translation: "In the Black Sea off the mouths of the Danube there is an island called White Island...note: Actually off the estuary of the Dnieper.") 56. ^Anth.Pal. 2.125ss, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, pages 59 57. ^Plin.N.H.10.82, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 55 58. ^Quintilian Inst.10.1.62, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, pages 59 59. ^Dion.Hal.Imit.2.421, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, pages 55 60. ^Longinus de subl.13.3, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, pages 55 61. ^David A. Campbell, Greek Lyric III, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 4 62. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 186, note 2 63. ^C.O.Pavese, Tradizione e generi poetici della Graecia arcaica, Rome (1972), cited by C.Segal, The Cambridge History of Greek Literature, page 187 64. ^M.L.West, 'Stesichorus', Classical Quarterly 21 (1971) pages 302–14, cited by D.Campbell in Greek Lyric III, page 5 65. ^1 Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 200 66. ^Schol.Hes.Theog.287, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 89 67. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 190, 194–95 68. ^Iliad 8.306-8, translated by Richard Lattimore, The Iliad of Homer, University of Chicago Press (1951) 69. ^Susanne Lindgren Wofford, The Choice of Achilles: The Ideology of Figure in the Epic. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1992. 70. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 190 71. ^Geryoneis, P.Oxy.2617 fr.5, cited by D.Campbell, Greek Lyric III page 76 72. ^Richard Garner, From Homer to Tragedy: the art of allusion in Greek poetry, Routledge (1990), page 17 73. ^Amm.Marc.28.4.15, cited by D.Campbell, Greek Lyric III page 56 74. ^David A. Campbell, Greek Lyric Poetry, Bristol Classical Press (1982), page 254 75. ^See M. Noussia-Fantuzzi in M. Fantuzzi and C. Tsagalis, eds., "The Epic Cycle and Its Ancient Reception," 2015; also P. J. Finglass and A. Kelly, eds. Stesichorus in Context, 2015. 76. ^Argum.Theocr.18, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 91 77. ^P.Oxy.2506 fr.26col.i, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 97 78. ^Dio Chrysostom Or.11.40s, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 95 79. ^Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 192 80. ^David Cambell, Loeb, pages 109, 119 81. ^1 Charles Segal, 'Archaic Choral Lyric' – P. Easterling and E. Kenney (eds), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature, Cambridge University Press (1985), page 193 82. ^Iliad 12.310-280 83. ^Iliad 18 84. ^Iliad 22 85. ^Iliad 8.306-8. 86. ^Pollux 10.152, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 121 87. ^Schol.A.Pind.10.19, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 123 88. ^Schol.Ap.Rhod.4.825-31, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 133 89. ^David Cambell, Loeb, page 137 90. ^Anne Burnett, 'Jocasta in the West: The Lille Stesichorus, Classical Antiquity Vol.7, No.2 (Oct 1988) page 107 91. ^Sextus Empiricus adv.mathem. 1.261, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 97 92. ^Schol.Eur.Phoen. 670, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 101 93. ^Ar.Pax 797ss, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 127 94. ^Schola.Vat. in Dion.Thrac. Art. 6, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 129 95. ^Athen. 3.95d, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 133 96. ^Zenobius vi 44, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 63 97. ^Athenaeus 4.172de, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 63 98. ^Et.Mag. 544.54, cited by David Cambell, Loeb, page 61 99. ^Marm.Par. Ep.50, cited by Charles Segal in 'Archaic Choral Lyric' page 192 100. ^I.G.14.1284 101. ^Zahra Newby, Art and Inscription in the Ancient World', Cambridge University Press (2006), Introduction 102. ^David A.Campbell, Greek Lyric III, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 107 103. ^Charles Seagal, Archaic Choral Lyric, 'The Cambridge History of Classical Literature I: Greek Literature', Cambridge University Press (1985), page 196, note 1 Further reading
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