Sfiso when jesus say yes
"Then the heaven-born hero, golden-haired Polyneices, first set beside Oedipus a rich table of silver which once belonged to Cadmus the divinely wise: next he filled a fine golden cup with sweet wine. Homer travelled about reciting his epics, first the Thebaid, in seven thousand verses, which begins: "Sing, goddess, of parched Argos, whence lords. The authors of the Story of Oedipus (say) of the Sphinx: "But furthermore (she killed) noble Haemon, the dear son of blameless Creon, the comeliest and loveliest of boys." Judging by Homer I do not believe that Oedipus had children by Iocasta: his sons were born of Euryganeia as the writer of the Epic called the Story of Oedipus clearly shows. the Story of Oedipus by Cinaethon in six thousand six hundred verses. The author of the War of the Titans says that the apples (of the Hesperides) were guarded. Theolytus says that he (Heracles) sailed across the sea in a cauldron but the first to give this story is the author of the War of the Titans. Through this cause Cheiron was born a centaur: his wife was Chariclo. The author of the War of the Giants says that Cronos took the shape of a horse and lay with Philyra, the daughter of Ocean. The poet of the War of the Titans, whether Eumelus of Corinth or Arctinus, writes thus in his second book: "Upon the shield were dumb fish afloat, with golden faces, swimming and sporting through the heavenly water." FRAGMENT 5 - ZEUSĮumelus somewhere introduces Zeus dancing: he says - "In the midst of them danced the Father of men and gods." FRAGMENT 6 - CRONUS AND PHILYRA 1165:Įumelus says that Aegaeon was the son of Earth and Sea and, having his dwelling in the sea, was an ally of the Titans. FRAGMENT 2 - URANUSĪccording to the writer of the War of the Titans Heaven was the son of Aether. The Epic Cycle begins with the fabled union of Heaven and Earth, by which they make three hundred-handed sons and three Cyclopes to be born to him. Photius, Epitome of the Chrestomathy of Proclus: EVELYN-WHITE THE WAR OF THE TITANS FRAGMENT 1 - HECATONCHEIRES & CYCLOPES The Telegony EPIC CYCLE FRAGMENTS, TRANSLATED BY H. These, as well as several other more recent translations and academic commentaries, appear in the booklist (left below).ġ0. Loeb has now replaced this volume with three new translations-one containing the works Hesiod, another fragments of early Greek Epic and the third the Homeric Hymns and Homerica. In addition to fragments of the Epic Cylce, the volume also contains Hesiod's Theogony, Works and Days, Shield of Heracles, Hesiodic fragments, and the Homeric Hymns. The Evelyn-White volume is no longer in print but second-hand copies might be obtained from sellers (click on image right for details). Hesiod, Homeric Hymns, Epic Cycle, Homerica. The Telegony attributed to Cinaethon of Sparta C8th BC or Eugammon of Cyrene C6th B.C. The Returns or Nostoi attributed to Agias of Troezen C7th or C6th B.C. The Sack of Ilium or Iliupersis attributed to Arctinus C8th B.C.
The Little Iliad attributed to Lesches of Pyrrha C7th B.C. The Aethiopis attributed to Arctinus of Miletus C8th B.C. The Cypria attributed to Stasinus of Cyprus or Hegesias of Salamis or Cyprias of Halicarnassus, perhaps C6th B.C. The Epigoni also formerly attributed to Homer ĥ. The Thebaid once attributed by the Greeks to Homer Ĥ. The Story of Oedipus or Oedipodea attributed to Cinaethon of Sparta C8th B.C. The War of the Titans or Titanomachy attributed to either Eumelus of Corinth or Arctinus of Miletus C8th B.C.
Only fragments of the ten poems survive, one of which describes the Titan war, three the Theban saga, and six the Trojan War.ġ.
SFISO WHEN JESUS SAY YES SERIES
THE EPIC CYCLE was a series of old epic style poems composed between the C8th and 6th B.C.