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Search results for mu,1261 in Adler number:
Headword:
Morsimos
Adler number: mu,1261
Translated headword: Morsimos, Morsimus
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Morsimos] and Melanthios, tragic poets. Morsimos was a son of the tragedian Philokles and an insipid [
psychros] poet.[1] He was also a physician.[2]
Aristophanes [says of him]: "may I be taught to sing a tragedy by Morsimos".[3] This is [to say], may I be hauled away and hissed off, like that man; for since his poems were sorry things, [
Aristophanes] classified them as curses.[4] Melanthios was lampooned for a gluttonous lifestyle; and far more in the
Flatterers.[5] He was also a
kinaidos.[6]
Greek Original:Morsimos kai Melanthios, poiêtai tragikoi. Morsimos de Philokleous tou tragikou huios, poiêtês psuchros: ên de kai iatros. Aristophanês: didaskoimên prosaidein Morsimou tragôidian. toutestin eklaboimên kai surittoimên, hôs ekeinos: ponêrôn gar ontôn autou tôn poiêmatôn, en aras ethêke merei. Melanthios de ekômôideito eis opsophagian: kai polu mallon en tois Kolaxin. ên de kai kinaidos.
Notes:
For this pairing see already
mu 1260.
[1] For Philokles see
phi 378 and
psi 176. Morsimos had a son
Astydamas (
alpha 4264). For the adjective psychros, 'frigid', 'weak', see
psi 176.
[2] 'A physician of the eyes' (
mu 1262).
[3]
Aristophanes,
Knights 401 (Sommerstein); cf. next note.
[4] Similarly in the
scholia pleniora on
Aristophanes,
Knights 401 (where the poems are said to be
mochtheroi 'worthless'); cf. already at
alpha 3817.
[5] The
Flatterers, by the comedian
Eupolis (
epsilon 3657), was presented at the City Dionysia in 421 (hypothesis 1 on
Aristophanes,
Peace).
[6] For
kinaidos see under
kappa 1634 (and in addition to the bibliography cited there, Winkler, 45-47).
References:
Diehl, 'Morsimos' in RE 16, cols. 318-319
Modrze, 'Melanthios' in RE 16.1, col. 428-429
Sommerstein, Alan H. Knights. Warminster, Wilts, England: Aris and Phillips, 1981
Winkler, John J. The Constraints of Desire: The Anthropology of Gender in Ancient Greece. New York and London: Routledge, 1990
Keywords: biography; comedy; food; gender and sexuality; history; imagery; medicine; poetry; tragedy
Translated by: Wm. Blake Tyrrell on 20 January 2005@21:21:56.
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