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Idylls (New ed.)

Part of the Oxford World's Classics series
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'Eucritus and I and pretty Amyntas turned asideTo the farm of Phrasidamus, where we sank downWith pleasure on deep-piled couches of sweet rushes,And vine leaves freshly stripped from the bush.'The Greek poet Theocritus of Syracuse (first half of the third century BC) was the inventor of 'bucolic' poetry.

These vignettes of country life, centred on competitions in song and love, are the foundational poems of the western pastoral tradition.

They were the principal model for Virgil in the Eclogues and their influence can be seen in the work of Petrarch and Milton.

Although it is the pastoral poems for which he is chiefly famous, Theocritus also wrote hymns to the gods, brilliant mime depictions of everyday life, short narrative epics, epigrams, and encomia of the powerful.

The great variety of his poems illustrates the rich and flourishing poetic culture of what was a golden age for Greek poetry.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0199552428 / 9780199552429
Paperback / softback
884.01
11/09/2008
United Kingdom
English
144 p. : 1 ill.
20 cm
Reprint. This translation originally published: 2002.