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Characters. Mimes. Cercidas and the Choliambic Poets
This volume collects some of the
liveliest examples of Greek literary portraiture. The
Characters of Theophrastus sketches thirty hypothetical
men, each dominated by a single fault, such as rudeness,
superstitution, or greed. Unassuming in style, the sketches
nonetheless bear resemblance on the one hand to Aristotle's
account of faults and virtues and on the other to the vivid
figures of Menandrian New Comedy. This new text and
translation by Jeffrey Rusten is based on the most recent
scholarship. Herodas flourished in the 270s and 260s--the
high point of Hellenistic poetry. His poems are choliambic
mimes, dramatic dialogues that depict characters in everyday
urban settings and situations. I. C. Cunningham presents a
new translation of Herodas, based on his Teubner text.
Also included here, in a reprint of the earlier Loeb edition by A. D. Knox, are the fragments of Greek poetry in the choliambic meter--especially those which offer a tantalizing glimpse into the raucous and sordid world of Hipponax--and the lyric iambics on themes of Cynic philosophy by Cercidas. Series No. 225 / 584 pages / ISBN 0-674-99244-X |