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Epigrams of Julian

From Wikisource
Epigrams
by Julian, translated by Emily Wilmer Cave Wright

From The Works of the Emperor Julian, volume III, pp 304–9. (1913) Loeb Classical Library.

1475787EpigramsEmily Wilmer Cave WrightJulian


Epigrams

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1. On wine made from barley[1]

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Who art thou and whence, O Dionysus? By the true Bacchus I recognise thee not; I know only the son of Zeus. He smells of nectar, but you smell of goat. Truly it was in their lack of grapes that the Celts brewed thee from corn-ears. So we should call thee Demetrius,[2] not Dionysus, wheat-born[3] not fire-born, barley god not boisterous god.[4]

Palatine Anthology 9. 365, and in several MSS.

2. On the Organ

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A strange growth of reeds do I behold. Surely they sprang on a sudden from another brazen field, so wild are they. The winds that wave them are none of ours, but a blast leaps forth from a cavern of bull's hide and beneath the well-bored pipes travels to their roots. And a dignified person, with swift moving fingers of the hand, stands there and handles the keys that pass the word to the pipes; then the keys leap lightly, and press forth the melody.[5]

The Greek Anthology vol. 3, 365, Paton; it is found in Parisinus 690.

3. Riddle on a performer with a pole

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There is a tree between the lords, whose root has life and talks, and the fruits likewise. And in a single hour it grows in strange fashion, and ripens its fruit, and gets its harvest at the roots.[6]

Palatine Anthology vol. 2. p. 769.

4. On the Homeric hexameter which contains six feet of which three are dactyls

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"The daughter of Icarius, prudent Penelope," appears with three fingers[7] and walks on six feet.

Anthology 2. 659.

5. To a Hippocentaur

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A horse has been poured from a man's mould, a man springs up from a horse. The man has no feet, the swift moving horse has no head. The horse belches forth as a man, the man breaks wind as a horse.

Assigned to Julian by Tzetzes Chiliades 959; Anthology, vol. 2, p. 659.

6. By Julian the Apostate

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Even as Fate the Sweeper wills to sweep thee on, be thou swept. But if thou rebel, thou wilt but harm thyself, and Fate still sweeps thee on.[8]

First ascribed to Julian, from Baroccianus 133, by Cumont, Revue de Philologie, 1892. Also ascribed to St. Basil; cf. a similar epigram in Palatine Anthology 10. 73, ascribed to Palladas.

Footnotes

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  1. i.e. beer, which Julian met with in Gaul and Germany.
  2. i.e. son of Demeter goddess of corn.
  3. πῦρογενῆ, not πὔρογενῆ, a play on words. See The Greek Anthology, Vol. 3. 368, Paton.
  4. βρόμος means "oats"; Bromius "boisterous" was an epithet of Dionysus; it is impossible to represent the play on the words.
  5. A note in the MS. (Parisinus 690) explains that Julian composed this poem during a procession, when he was leaving the church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. He was then a mere boy, pursuing his education in Constantinople, before he was interned in Cappadocia.
  6. The performer balances on his forehead, between his temples, a pole at the end of which is a cage or bar, supporting a child or children.
  7. There is a play of words on δάκτυλος = "finger" and "dactyl," a metrical foot. In the title, "foot" and "dactyl" are metrical terms, in the riddle they are used in the original, physical sense. The hexameter quoted has three dactyls.
  8. Perhaps there is a similar meaning in the phrase ὑπὸ τῶν θεῶν ἐφερόμην in the puzzling frag. 13, p. 303.

 This work is a translation and has a separate copyright status to the applicable copyright protections of the original content.

Original:

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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Translation:

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The longest-living author of this work died in 1951, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 72 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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