Aulus Licinius Archias
Appearance
Aulus Licinius Archias (Greek: Ἀρχίας; fl. c. 120 – 61 BC) was a Graeco-Syrian poet.
Quotes
[edit]- Οὐκέτι παφλάζοντα διαΐσσων βυθὸν ἅλμης
δελφίς, πτοιήσεις εἰναλίων ἀγέλας,
οὐδὲ πολυτρήτοιο μέλος καλάμοιο χορεύων
ὑγρὸν ἀναρρίψεις ἅλμα παρὰ σκαφίσιν
οὐδὲ σὺ γ᾽, ἀφρηστά, Νηρηίδας ὡς πρὶν ἀείρων
νώτοις πορθμεύσεις Τηθύος εἰς πέρατα.
ἦ γὰρ ἴσον; πρηῶνι Μαλείης ὡς ἐκυκήθη,
κῦμα πολυψάμμους ὦσέ σ᾿ ἐπὶ ψαμάθους.- No more to plunge through depths of bubbling sea,
Startling the finny shoals that downward float
Nor gambol to the reed-pipe’s melody,
Breaking the billows round the fisher’s boat!
Child of the foam! fair mermaids clinging close
Shall cross on thee to ocean’s end no more:
Huge as the Southern Cape a wave arose,
And hurled thee high upon the sandy shore. - Anthologia Palatina, vii, 214; "A Stranded Dolphin", as translated by A. J. Butler, Amaranth and Asphodel (1922), p. 46
- No more to plunge through depths of bubbling sea,