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STESICHORUS (c. 640–555 B.C.)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 903 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STESICHORUS (c. 640–555 B.C.)  , Greek lyric poet, a native of
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Himera in Sicily, or of Mataurus a Locrian colony in the south of Italy . According to Suidas, his name was originally Tisias, but was changed to Stesichorus (" organizer of choruses ") . His future eminence as a poet was foretold when a nightingale perched upon his lips and sang (Pliny, Nat . Hist., x . 43) . We are told that he warned his
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fellow-citizens against
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Phalaris, whom they had chosen as their general, by
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relating to them the well-known fable of the horse, which, in its eagerness to punish the stag for intruding upon its pastures, became the slave of man (Aristotle, Rhetoric, ii . 20) . But his warnings had no effect; he himself was obliged to flee to Catana, where he died and was buried before the
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gate called after him the Stesichorean . The story that he was struck blind for slandering
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Helen in a poem and afterwards recovered his sight when, in consequence of a dream, he had composed a palinode or recantation (in which he declared that only Helen's phantom had been carried off to Troy), is told by
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Plato (
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Phaedrus 243 A.),
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Pausanias (iii . 19, 13), and others . We possess about
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thirty fragments of his poems, none of them longer than six lines . They are written in the Doric dialect, with epic licences; the metre is dactylico-trochaic .

Brief as they are, they show us what

Longinus meant by calling Stesichorus " most like Homer "; they are full of epic grandeur, and have a stately sublimity that reminds us of Pindar . Stesichorus indeed made a new departure by using lyric
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poetry to celebrate gods and heroes rather than human feelings and passions; this is what Quintilian (Instil. x. i, 62) means by saying that he " sustained the burden of epic poetry with the lyre." Several of his poems sung of the adventures of Heracles; one dealt with the siege of Thebes, another with the
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sack of Troy.' The last is interesting as being the first poem containing that form of the story of
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Aeneas's
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flight to which Virgil afterwards
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ave currency in his Aeneid . The popular legends of Sicily also inspired his muse; he was the first to introduce the shepherd
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Daphnis who came to a miserable end after he had proved faith-less to the nymph who loved him . Stesichorus completed the form of the choral ode by adding the
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epode to the strophe and
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antistrophe; and " you do not even know Stesichorus's three " passed into a proverbial expression for unpardonable ignorance (unless the words simply mean, " you do not even know three lines, or poems, of Stesichorus ") . He was famed in antiquity for the richness and splendour of his
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imagination and his style, although Quintilian censures his redundancy and
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Hermogenes remarks on the excessive sweetness that results from his abundant use of epithets . Fragments in T . Bergk, Poetae lyrici graeci, iii . ; see also S . Bernage, De Stesichoro lyrico (188o); O . Crusius, " Stesichorus and die epodische Composition in der griechischen Lyrik," in Commentationes Philologicae, dedicated to 0 . Ribbeck (1888) .

End of Article: STESICHORUS (c. 640–555 B.C.)
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