ellauri058.html on line 799:   The twelfth book of  The Greek Anthology compiled at the  court of Hadrian in the second  century a.d. by a poetaster  Straton, who like most anthologists  included an immodest number of his  own poems, is itself a part of a  larger collection of short poems  dating from the dawn of Greek lyric  poetry (Alcaeus) down to its last  florescence, which survived two  Byzantine recensions to end up in a  single manuscript in the library of  the Count Palatine in Heidelberg  — hence its alternative title, The  Palatine Anthology, usually  abbreviated to Anth. Pal. This  particular, indeed special, collection contained in Book XII  subtitled The Musa Paedika or Musa  Puerilis, alternately from the  Greek word for a child of either  sex — and girls are not wholly  absent from these pages — or the  Latin for “boy,” consists of 258  epigrams on various aspects of Boy  Love or, to recur to the Greek  root, paederasty.
ellauri141.html on line 514: He wrote "Donec Gratus Eram" as a schoolboy, and a series of other 'echoes' of Horace in later life. He carried a copy of Horace’s four books of Odes around with him, in which he wrote original epigrams of his own.
ellauri152.html on line 77: Although for the most part The Songs of Bilitis is original work, many of the poems were reworked epigrams from the Palatine Anthology, and Louÿs even borrowed some verses from Sappho herself. The poems are a blend of mellow sensuality and polished style in the manner of Parnassianism, but underneath run subtle Gallic undertones that Louÿs could never escape.
ellauri247.html on line 370: The words "Tweedle-dee and Tweedle-dum" make their first appearance in print as names applied to the composers George Frideric Handel and Giovanni Bononcini in "one of the most celebrated and most frequently quoted (and sometimes misquoted) epigrams", satirising disagreements between Handel and Bononcini, written by John Byrom (1692–1763):in his satire, from 1725.
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