Showing posts with label Antipater of Sidon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antipater of Sidon. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Lament for Orpheus

Death of Orpheus, Jean Delville, 1893


by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Antipater of Sidon, The Greek Anthology, vii, 8

Orpheus, who once
the very oaks, and
rocks they stood upon,
made stand upright
and dance, whose voice
called out wild beasts
no shepherds knew --
wolf, panther, and boar
as tame as lambs,
so long as his lyre
enchanted them,

who charmed to sleep
the howling winds,
sent back the hail
into the spiting clouds,
withheld the snow
with just a song,

who with a strum
of golden strings,
could silence waves
and still the roar
of breakered tide --

once, but no more!
Orpheus is dead!
Up the wails come
from Memnosyne's
bereft daughters,
and chief among
the mourners, his
mother Calliope,
the poets' Muse.

Mortal, sigh not
if your son is dead.
What is the use
of weeping, when
even the gods
are powerless
to save their sons
from pitiless death.

Gone to Hades
a second time,
harsh is his fate
and unforgiving.
Youth's glory twice
gone: can the earth
bear this much woe?

Eheu for Orpheus!
Eheu for the living!


Wednesday, January 18, 2023

A Tripod at Delphi





by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Antipater of Sidon, The Greek Anthology, vi, 46.


I am not just any tripod,
one among many at Delphi.
Consigned to Apollo at Troy --
there my flame burned
before the funeral pyre
of one, torch-lit by the hand
of the other. For whom?

By whom? For Patroclus dead,
by Achilles' hand. That's who!
Brought here this tripod was
by the hands of yet another,
the most perfect of warriors.

Touch me, and touch the hand
of him who won the races
at Hellespont, the one who saw
the gods full-faced and lived
— Diomedes!