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ARCHILOCHUS , See also: Greek lyric poet and writer of lampoons, was See also: born at See also: Paros, one of the See also: Cyclades islands
.
The date of his See also: birth is uncertain, but he probably flourished about 65o B.C.; according to some, about See also: forty years earlier but certainly not before the reign of See also: Gyges (687–652), whom he mentions in a well-known fragment
.
His See also: father, Telesicles, who was of See also: noble See also: family, had conducted a colony to See also: Thasos, in obedience to the command of the Delphic See also: oracle
.
To this See also: island Archilochus himself, hard pressed by poverty, afterwards removed
.
Another reason for leaving his native place was See also: personal disappointment and indignation at the treatment he had received from Lycambes, a citizen of Paros, who had promised him his daughter Neobule in See also: marriage, but had afterwards withdrawn his consent
.
Archilochus, taking See also: advantage of the licence allowed at the feasts of See also: Demeter, poured out his wounded feelings in unmerciful satire
.
He accused Lycambes of perjury, and his daughters of leading
the most abandoned lives
.
Such was the effect produced by his verses, that Lycambes and his daughters are said to have hanged themselves
.
At Thasos the poet passed some unhappy years; his hopes of See also: wealth were disappointed; according to him, Thasos was the meeting-place of the calamities of all Hellas
.
The inhabitants were frequently involved in quarrels with their neighbours, and in a war against the Saians—a Thracian tribe—he threw away his See also: shield and fled from the See also: field of
See also: battle
.
He does not seem to have felt the disgrace very keenly, for, like See also: Alcaeus and Horace, he commemorates the event in a fragment in which he congratulates himself on having saved his See also: life, and says he can easily procure another shield
.
After leaving Thasos, he is said to have visited See also: Sparta, but to have been at once banished from that city on account of his cowardice and the licentious character of his See also: works (See also: Valerius See also: Maximus vi
.
3, externa r) . He next visited Siris, in See also: lower See also: Italy, a city of which he speaks very favourably
.
He then returned to his native place, and was slain in a battle against the Naxians by one Calondas or Corm, who was cursed by the oracle for having slain a servant of the Muses
.
The writings of Archilochus consisted of elegies, hymns—one of which used to be sung by the victors in the Olympic See also: games (Pindar, See also: Olympia, ix
.
1)—and of poems in the See also: iambic and trochaic See also: measures
.
To him certainly we owe the invention of iambic See also: poetry and its application to the purposes of satire
.
The only previous measures in Greek poetry had been the epic See also: hexameter, and its offshoot the elegiac metre; but the slow measured structure of hexameter verse was utterly unsuited to express the See also: quick, See also: light motions of satire
.
Archilochus made use of the iambus and the trochee, and organized them into the two forms of metre known as the iambic trimeter and the trochaic tetra-See also: meter
.
The trochaic metre he generally used for subjects of a serious nature; the iambic for satires
.
He was also the first to make use of the arrangement of verses called the See also: epode
.
Horace in his metres to a See also: great extent follows Archilochus (Epistles, i
.
19
.
23-35) . All See also: ancient authorities unite in praising the poems of Archilochus, in terms which appear exaggerated (See also: Longinus xiii
.
3; Dio See also: Chrysostom, Orationes, xxxiii.; Quintilian x. i
.
6o; See also: Cicero, Orator, i.)
.
His verses seem certainly to have possessed strength, flexibility, See also: nervous vigour, and, beyond everything else, impetuous vehemence and energy
.
Horace (Ars Poetica, 79) speaks of the " rage " of Archilochus, and See also: Hadrian calls his verses "raging iambics." By his countrymen he was reverenced as the equal of See also: Homer, and statues of these two poets were dedicated on the same See also: day
.
His poems were written in the old Ionic dialect
.
Fragments in See also: Bergk, Poetae Lyrici Graeci; Liebel, Archilochi Reliquiae (1818); A
.
Hauvette-Besnault, Archiloque, sa See also: vie et ses poesies (19o5)
.
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