A further reason for the placement of epigram 9 (AB 29) in the second group can be found with regard to the quality of the omina involved.
The category of mantic quality provides us with further evidence for the suggested arrangement: Whereas the first group consists of six epigrams (AB 21–26) with positive
omina, the epigrams of the second group mostly depict negative ones.
[47] Looking at the position of AB 29 from this point of view, its placement amongst the military
omina is justified by the negative omen, which leads to the same outcome as the purely military
omina. Thus our suggested structure of the
Oiônoskopika is can be further established:
| First group: 1–6 (AB 21–26) positive omina and peaceful atmosphere |
| Second group: 8–13 (AB 28–33) negative omina in connection with war and crime |
II.4 Kinds of Omina
As a final criterion for structuring the
Oiônoskopika we will look at the kinds of
omina. Although the diversity of
omina (ten epigrams present bird-omina whereas five deal with human beings, statues, or dreams) does not seem to be very helpful in arranging the epigrams at first glance, an interesting constellation can be detected. Whereas in the first group (1–6 = AB 21–26) all epigrams except the fifth (AB 25) deal with bird-
omina, birds in the second group (8–13 = AB 28–33) either play no role at all
[48] or are subordinate to a different, more decisive sign,
[49] but again with one exception: epigram 9 (AB 29) is a pure bird-omen. We thus find a parallelism in regard to the absolute number of
omina, six of which are bird-
omina and six depict
omina of a different kind.
However, in composing the two groups according to the depicted situations and the quality of the
omina,
[50] the poet has avoided the creation of a strict symmetry in the kinds of
omina involved. Instead he has integrated a bird-
omen in the otherwise bird-free second group and the omen of an encounter with certain human beings (5 = AB 25) with the five bird-
omina depicted in the first group. This surprising inconsistency
[51] in the otherwise strictly parallel arrangement, however, is not only subordinated to the two structuring criteria of situations and quality— which both epigram 5 (AB 25) and epigram 9 (AB 29) share with the other epigrams of their groups
[52] —but also serves an important function with regard to the overall topic of the
Oiônoskopika. The unpredictable surprise in the otherwise parallel arrangement of the epigrams is a symbolic reminder by which the poet shows his audience that the material he is dealing with, i.e.
omina, is itself unpredictable, even if a well-ordered and ‘secure’ way of interpretation seems to have been established. Form and content thus comment on each other and the τέχνη of arranging the
Oiônoskopika mirrors the search for, as well as the difficulty in, finding a reliable τέχνη in dealing with mantic
omina.
It is exactly this search that leads the reader to the seers in the last two epigrams of the
Oiônoskopika, which form a third and final group (14–15 = AB 34–35). Having read thirteen examples of different
omina, the reader is not only reminded of the importance of consulting a seer. To a certain degree the reader has now been elevated to the position of a seer himself, insofar as he has read and learned about certain omina, of which some are important for everyday-life occurences, and for the ways of approaching them. The structure of the
Oiônoskopika can therefore be considered as didactic, as the reader is led from simple
omina in the first couple of epigrams, i.e.
omina which can be easily interpreted and are partly expressed in the form of country sayings,
[53] to more complicated and rare ones, which make it necessary to consult a seer. This didactic structure of the
Oiônoskopika (compare texts on cultural development or aitiological texts) reveals itself by way of the internal
Ergänzungsspiel. It could also lead the way to finding the generic models of the
Oiônoskopika, which might be regarded as the transformation of a technical prose text on mantic art into the poetry of epigrams.
[54] The question of intertextuality also opens a path towards reading the
Oiônoskopika as a kind of didactic poetry. However, as such a transformation cannot be achieved by a single epigram, our reading of the
Oiônoskopika as a collection of epigrams that are closely connected with each other becomes the
conditio sine qua non for such an assumption. On grounds of the Hellenistic play of genres
[55] it seems however possible that the
Oiônoskopika as a collection translated the characteristics of other literary forms into epigram. To take this idea a little further, we have to ask how far the
Oiônoskopika reflect the actual mantic practice, and how it can be placed in the literary tradition of transporting mantic knowledge, be it technical literature or didactic poetry.
III. Bird-augury and Mantic Practice
οὐ γάρ τι μικρὸν οὐδ᾿ ἄδοκον, ἀλλὰ πολὺ καὶ παμπάλαιον μαντικῆς μόριον οἰωνιστικὴ κέκληται· τὸ γὰρ ὀξὺ καὶ νοερὸν αὐτῶν καὶ δι᾿ εὐστροφίαν ὑπήκοον ἁπάσης φαντασίας ὥσπερ ὀργάνῳ τῷ θεῷ παρέχει χρῆσθαι καὶ τρέπειν ἐπί τε κίνησιν ἐπί τε φωνὰς καὶ γηρύματα καὶ σχήματα νῦν μὲν ἐνστατικὰ νῦν δὲ φορὰ καθάπερ πνεύματα ταῖς μὲν ἐπικό-πτοντα ταῖς δ᾿ ἐπευθύνοντα πράξεις καὶ ὁρμὰς εἰς τὸ τέλος. διὸ κοινῇ μὲν ὁ Εὐριπίδης θεῶν κήρυκας ὀνομάζει τοὺς ὄρνιθας.
It is, in fact, no small or ignoble division of divination, but a great and very ancient one, which takes its name from birds; for their quickness of apprehension and their habit of responding to any manifestation, so easily are they diverted, serves as an instrument for the god, who directs their movements, their calls or cries, and their formations which are sometimes contrary, sometimes favouring, as winds are; so that he uses some birds to cut short, others to speed enterprises and inceptions to the destined end. It is for that reason that Euripides calls birds in general “heralds of the gods”.
[56]
Plutarch’s criteria of movements, utterances and constellations, in which different birds collaborate, are particularly prominent for an interpretation of bird-
omina in Greek culture. However, his text does not provide an answer to the question whether these criteria have ever been integrated into a semantic system of bird-augury and considering our poor sources this will probably remain uncertain. Nevertheless, there is some literary evidence that contains certain patterns of (bird-)augury, which provide quite a detailed picture of the nature of Greek mantic. First of all, there is the coincidence of an extraordinary incident and a significant moment, which creates the symbolic value. On this occasion, against a backdrop of its habits, the behavior of a bird (or a number of birds) is understood as a symbolic code, which can be deciphered in regard to the situation in which it occurred. Beyond this basic assumption, however, material concurrences within Greek mantic are by no means guaranteed. The code is not fixed but flexible, and elements of arbitrariness not only arise from the situation in which a sign occurs but also from eclectic observation. Thus in bird-augury the following ways of behavior must be especially considered: the manner of flying, the direction of flight, the place of a possible landing, the food intake, and the interaction with other birds or animals in general.
[57]
Furthermore, a bird can get into contact with a human being on its own account and thus present itself as a messenger from the gods. Although specific birds are associated with specific deities (for instance the eagle with Zeus or the falcon with Apollo), the connection between the species and other factors remains significant particularly since Greek mantic does not seem to know any explicitly ‘lucky’ or ‘fateful’ birds/birds of good or bad tidings. If we take a look at the Alexander literature for instance, we find examples of both a positive and a negative interpretation of the raven
[58] and a similar ambivalence can be observed in the case of owls.
[59]
When applied, even the differentiation which had remained the only distinction in Greek mantic of signs that was generally acknowledged and being used since Homer, namely the ‘technical’ classification into right-promising and left-unfortunate, seems to be governed by a certain randomness. Either it might simply become redundant due to the symbolic property of the sign (for instance through the metaphoric implication of the ‘flying ahead’ or ‘flying over’) or it could be taken as an accidental statement merely confirming an assessment of a sign, which had already been established by means of symbolic configuration as favorable or unfortunate. The fact that there are only a few post-Homeric and pre-Hellenistic records of bird-
omina, in which the indication of direction becomes markedly significant for the interpretation,
[60] undoubtedly links with the trends of literary representation of such signs. In a reality in which symbolic explanations were not always at hand, the simple distinction between ‘right’ and ‘left’ presumably played a more important role. An ἀετὸς αἴσιος spotted by a seer during a sacrifice would simply have been seen as an eagle flying to the right.
[61] Yet there is no doubting that symbolic and metaphoric interpretations had a greater persuasiveness in Greek mantic.
Since in most cases bird-
omina were not especially sought for but occurred spontaneously, the simple classification of ‘right’ and ‘left’ cannot be taken as objective data but depends on the accidental standpoint of the spectator at the very moment he sees the unexpected bird. It would of course be possible to establish such an objective orientation in which ‘right’ and ‘left’ became connected to specific cardinal points, if we assume that the sky would be observed with the intention of gaining bird-
omina. However, concrete examples of such a particular method are not recorded in Greek literature, at least not in pre-Hellenistic times. Nonetheless, there is some evidence showing that also the Greeks enacted bird-augury as provoked mantic: in replying to the interpretation of a bird-omen by Polydamas, the Homeric Hector identifies ‘right’ with East and ‘left’ with West:
τύνη δ᾿ οἰωνοῖσι τανυπτερύγεσσι κελεύεις
πειθέσθαι, τῶν οὔ τι μετατρέπομ᾿ οὐδ᾿ ἀλεγίζω,
εἴ τ᾿ ἐπὶ δεξί᾿ ἴσωσι πρὸς ἠῶ τ᾿ ἠέλιόν τε,
εἴ τ᾿ ἐπ᾿ ἀριστερὰ τοί γε ποτὶ ζόφον ἠερόεντα.
But thou biddest us be obedient to birds long of wing, that I regarded not, nor take thought thereof, whether they fare to the right, towards the dawn and the sun, or to the left towards the murky darkness.
[62]
However, this identification is not universally applicable and it is valid for neither the concrete sign, which Hector reacts to, nor other bird-
omina in the epos, which always occur spontaneously or are semi-provoked but at any rate appear uncalled-for.
[63] Furthermore the reference to one side strongly depends on the present location of the receiver. To give an example, when Odysseus and Diomedes are prowling through the darkness of the night to the camp of the Trojans as spies, the following omen occurs:
τοῖσι δὲ δεξιὸν ἧκεν ἐρωδιὸν ἐγγὺς ὁδοῖο
Παλλὰς Ἀθηναίη· τοὶ δ᾿ οὐκ ἴδον ὀφθαλμοῖσι
νύκτα δι᾿ ὀρφναίην, ἀλλὰ κλάγξαντος ἄκουσαν.
And for them Pallas Athene sent forth on their right a heron, hard by the way and though they saw it not through the darkness of night, yet they heard its cry.
[64]
It seems very unlikely that the two heroes would determine a cardinal point for bird-watching in the darkness. Furthermore, since they were on their way from the Greek to the Trojan camp they were moving south and thus they must have heard the heron coming from the west. But how is Hector’s remark to be taken? He probably hints at a mantic habit, in which the observer of birds faces north and gathers bird-signs by observing and interpreting the movements of the heavenly messenger.
[65]
The literary texts do not provide any further first-hand reports of such a ‘technical’ mantic; at best speculations can be made. The warning transmitted by the only bird-sign in Hesiod’s
Works and Days, which cautions to beware of the cawing crow on the roof, does not exclude technical means. Furthermore, Hesiod’s lost
Ornithomanteia might have contained some rules for a stationary observation of birds.
[66] In tragedy, traces of mantic technique can be found in Aeschylus’
Seven Against Thebes when Eteocles, on ordering the Thebans to occupy and watchfully guard the walls, towers, and gates of the city, refers to the prophecy of a seer in order to justify his command:
νῦν δ᾿ ὡς ὁ μάντις φησίν, οἰωνῶν βοτήρ,
ἐν ὠσὶ νωμῶν καὶ φρεσίν, πυρὸς δίχα,
χρηστηρίους ὄρνιθας ἀψευδεῖ τέχνῃ·
οὗτος τοιῶνδε δεσπότης μαντευμάτων
λέγει μεγίστην προσβολὴν Ἀχαιίδα
νυκτηγορεῖσθαι κἀπιβούλευσιν πόλει.
But now, as the seer, the shepherd of birds, informs us, pondering in ears and mind, with no help from fire, the omens of prophecy with unerring skill—he, master that he is of such means of divination, declares that the fiercest assault of the Achaeans is proclaimed in nightly council, and that they will devise plans for the capture of our city.
[67]
The seer, who enjoys Eteocles’ trust, infers precise information from the bird-flight, which can hardly be gained from symbolic interpretation alone. Likewise characterizations such as ‘master of prophecies’ (δεσπότης μαντευμάτων) and ‘shepherd of birds’ (οἰωνῶν βοτήρ) imply an active part of the seer without however learning more about his ‘unerring art’ than the mere fact. The question remains whether Aeschylus and his contemporaries actually still knew anything at all about the methods and contents of such a mantic art (τέχνη).
[68]
Concerning the possible location of mantic art, the outcome is comparably meager. One of the few hints can be found in Sophocles’
Antigone, when Teiresias talks to Creon:
Γνώσῃ, τέχνης σημεῖα τῆς ἐμῆς κλύων.
Εἰς γὰρ παλαιὸν θᾶκον ὀρνιθοσκόπον
ἵζων, ἵν᾿ ἦν μοι παντὸς οἰωνοῦ λιμήν,
ἀγνῶτ᾿ ἀκούω φθόγγον ὀρνίθων, κακῷ
κλάζοντας οἴστρῳ καὶ βεβαρβαρωμένῳ·
καὶ σπῶντας ἐν χηλαῖσιν ἀλλήλους φοναῖς
ἔγνων· πτερῶν γὰρ ῥοῖβδος οὐκ ἄσημος ἦν.
You shall learn, when you hear the indications of my art! As I took my place on my ancient seat for observing birds, where I can mark every bird of omen, I heard a strange sound among them, since they were screeching with dire, incoherent frenzy; and I knew that they were tearing each other with bloody claws, for there was a whirring of wings that made it clear.
[69]
In the
Bacchae of Euripides the seat of the old bird-watcher is also referred to.
[70] In view of such patterns it is not surprising that in the second century CE the Thebans wanted to show their tourists this legendary place, which Pausanias mentions as the οἰωνοσκοπεῖον of Teiresias and locates between the sanctuaries of Ammon and Tyche.
[71]
Considering this exceedingly poor evidence one might indeed wonder whether the mantic ‘science’ in Greece is not just a fiction proposed by the literary sources, which has been re-projected into an idealized past. There is, however, one fragment of an inscription found in Ephesos and dated to the second half of the sixth or the beginning fifth century BCE, that strongly confirms the hypothesis of an elaborated mantic τέχνη in Greece. The inscription pins down in detail the significance of bird movement:
[ – – – – – ἐγ μὲν δεξι-]
[ῆς ἐς τὴν · ἀριστερὴν · πετ-]
[όμεν]ος · ἢμ μὲν · ἀποκρύψε-]
[ι, δε]ξιός · ἢν δὲ · ἐπάρει · τὴ[ν]
[ε]ὐώνυμον · πτέρυγα · κἂν
[ἀπά]ρει · κἂν ἀποκρύψει · ε
[ὐώ]νυμος · ἐγ δὲ · τῆς ἀριστ-
[ερῆ]ς · ἐς τὴν δεξιὴν · πετό-
[μ]ενος · ἢμ μὲν · ἰθὺς · ἀποκρ-
[ύ]ψει · εὐώνυμος · ἢν δὲ · τὴν
[δεξ]ιὴν πτέρυγα · ἐπάρας
[κἂν · ἀπάρας · ἀποκρύψει]
[δεξιός – – – – – – – – – – – – – -]
[72]
If [a bird] which is flying from right to left disappears [from sight], [the sign] is good; if it lifts his left wing, flies up and disappears, [the sign] is bad; if it disappears flying from left to right however, [the sign] is bad. But if it disappears after lifting the right wing, [the sign] is good.
In manner and content, the inscription is unique since here the criteria, which serve to analyze and evaluate bird-flight, are indeed technical and not symbolic. The common distinction of ‘right’ and ‘left’ exists and is connoted in the common manner, but it only becomes the crucial factor if the bird does not settle within the viewer’s field of vision. If it does, the movement of its wings becomes decisive. This relevance of wing movements lacks any parallel in the Greek mantic of birds, at least as far as we know from the descriptions in literary texts. In view of the fragmentary character of the inscription it remains uncertain whether the Ephesian rules also take into account the species of birds or might even refer to a very specific type. In any case, the regulations presuppose that the movements of birds were observed from a very particular viewpoint with a specific direction (probably northwards).
[73] Thus the inscription seems to confirm the poor literary evidence suggesting a tradition of active bird-augury in Greece.
The uniqueness of the inscription has raised doubts about its origin, and Wilamowitz for example regarded the rules of the inscription as hardly being Greek.
[74] For all we know, bird-augury indeed had so great a tradition in Old-Anatolia
[75] that the present regulations might have been transmitted from there to Ephesos. But this, of course, remains speculation and even if this was the case, the question remains whether and how such influences had any effect within a Greek context. A partial answer to this question might be given by the epigraphic context. The block of marble, which carries the inscription, probably belongs to an extensive collection of texts, which were apparently fastened to a wall in the Artemision. Of these texts a second block has been preserved showing a different inscription. It records an oath-offering, which a witness had to accomplish before the judges in a trial.
[76] This connection suggests that it is unlikely that the augury inscription can be taken as a consecration of an οἰωνοσκόπος as proposed by Jacoby.
[77] One could rather say that the Ephesian people apparently used to publish binding rules of sacral character at a wall of their main sanctuaries. Pritchett thus deduced a connection between the two preserved matters of law:
The auspices were taken for some official purpose. Since one fragment has to do with the taking of an oath before
dikastai by the use of a boar (οἰμύντα κάπρωι τὸν Ζῆνα ἐγμαρτυρεῖν), the augury text must presumably relate to the ritual of taking omens for some official body.
[78]
Such a connection is conceivable but by no means definite for numerous examples show that the spatial proximity of archaic inscriptions on a wall does not yet indicate a textual relation.
[79] Furthermore, following Pritchett’s hypothesis one might conclude that in Ephesus there existed an augury-tradition, which corresponded to the Roman pattern at least from a formal point of view. But as far as we know the Greek community did not know of any of this. The same, of course, applies to the more far-reaching finesse of Roman augury-tradition such as the differentiation of celestial areas or the fixation of a
templum.
[80] Hence, a standardized connection between the rules of assessing the bird-flight and political executions and institutions seems rather doubtful. But what does it mean if the rules, which apply to the gathering of bird-
omina, are displayed in public? On the one hand this guarantees that at least theoretically every Ephesian can learn and practice the art of augury if only in its outline. However, since possibly not all Ephesians had a cause, the time, or the desire for this, at least the inscription enabled them to control the specialists, whom they could consult in private or public matters equally, and check their interpretations. On the other hand, due to the fixation on the rules of interpretation contradictory explanations, at least if founded on the same observation, were ruled out. As a consequence we can say that the Ephesian inscription complies with the Greek trend to prevent exclusive specialization and secret knowledge in religious issues. Despite the existence of specialists in augury, in principle everyone can interpret bird-
omina provided he has the social status that allows him to take part in public discourse.
The setting up and publication of the inscription is a concomitant of the contemporary trend of depersonalizing and objectivizing norms that is clearly evident in archaic legislation. Although Greek signs owe their persuasiveness rather to situative and metaphorical interpretation than to abstract rules, the trace of an actually existent techne of bird augury within Greek civilization has thus been stabilized and solidified. Against this backdrop it seems perfectly justified to render Posidippus’ Oiônoskopika not only in the context of the literary tradition of augury but to look for traces of potential scholarly and technical references, which in the manner of the inscription mentioned above reflect poetically on the “technical” or rather the regulated dealing with mantic.
IV. Posidippus’ Oiônoskopika and Mantic Practice
Although bird-augury seems to have played only a minor role as a public mantic practice in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, it remained—and not only in poetic texts—the most respected and heroic branch of Greek mantic. Especially the ‘historical’ signs (i.e. signs that are embedded in a historical context) reveal the enormously striking continuity of the Homeric patterns. Thus it is no wonder that so vast an amount of bird-
omina transmitted in connection with Alexander’s warfare fit in perfectly with the Homeric self-image of the Macedonian king and the heroic stylization of his deeds by the historians, especially Callisthenes.
[81] By mentioning Alexander twice and presenting a collection of bird-
omina, Posidippus’
Oiônoskopika probably reflect this historical restoration of bird-augury in particular and augury in general.
Reading the
Oiônoskopika in the light of the literary and technical sources on (bird-)augury, we see a basic characteristic of Greek mantic, namely the predominance of symbolic interpretation. The following pattern emerges. The first three epigrams contain analogies, as can be seen for example in the first epigram (AB 21). If a ship is pulled into the sea and a falcon shows up flying high above, the ship will sail safely. If, on the other hand, a shearwater appears (a bird which being incapable of flying high dives into the sea), a shipwreck could be expected. Thus the fate of a ship is determined by the flight patterns of birds appearing at the moment of its departure. Similarly, in the second epigram (AB 22) a flying bird, a crane, stands for a successful sea voyage, whereas in the third epigram (AB 23) the diving shearwater augurs successful fishing.
[82] In the last two instances the signs (which are reminiscent of country sayings) also have an empiric dimension. The contradictory outcome that the shearwater portends in epigrams 1 and 3 (AB 21, 23) clearly indicates that the interpretation of a sign depends more on the situation in which it occurs than on the type of bird involved.
This “situative” character of
omina is further developed in epigrams 4 to 7 (AB 24–27) which display different coincidences that lead to the mantic significance of signs. Although the exact semantics of the
omina in epigrams 4 and 5 (AB 24, 25) remain dubious owing to the lack of parallels,
[83] in epigram 6 (AB 26) a bird appears at a sacrifice—a traditional constellation well exemplified in Greek literature.
[84] However, it is atypical that the seer Asterie demonstrates magical powers by calling a bird for help. We should take this unusual act as the poet’s attempt to underscore an exceptional event—the judgment of the seer who prays and sacrifices in order to achieve a client’s goal of buying a good slave is confirmed by a bird. However, it remains unclear what the link is between the πελλὸς ὄρνις and the buying of slaves. That the vulture is helpful with regard to offspring, as stated in epigram 7 (AB 27) can be concluded from his εὐτεκνία, as the editors have shown.
[85] With the notion that a vulture enables a child to become a good speaker and an agile soldier we find the variation of a Homeric and Hesiodic
topos.
[86]
Epigrams 8 and 9 (AB 28, 29) contain typical ἐνόδιοι σύμβουλοι which are constructed as analogies. In epigram 8 (AB 28) a soldier who sets out to war sees an old man crying at a crossroads.
[87] This omen reflects the death of the soldier symbolically as the old man resembles the father of the soldier who laments his dead son. The crossroads can also be interpreted symbolically because it offers a soldier the alternative of dying at war or cowardly retreating from it. Epigram 9 (AB 29) is subtle as the interpretation of the behavior of the birds is based on the knowledge and observation of their ways of life. Larks and goldfinches normally do not gather at the same place. However, if they do so, they warn the spectator that something terrible will happen. As a matter of fact, in Greek mantic irregular natural phenomena inherently have negative connotations: the addressee, whose identification may be disputed, has to face disaster.
[88]
Epigrams 10 and 11 (AB 30, 31) contain signs associated with the religious sphere, which is also a familiar motif in Greek literature, as the gods often deliver their messages in form of
omina at the place of religious communication, i.e. the sanctuaries.
[89] In this regard sweating statues were especially prominent and it is not astonishing that we find such an omen in Posidippus (10 = AB 30), although he presents the omen in an unusual way:
ξέϲματοϲ ἱδρώϲαντοϲ ὅϲοϲ πόνοϲ ἀνδρὶ πολίτηι
καὶ δοράτων ὅϲϲ<οϲ> προϲφέρεται νιφε̣τ̣ό̣ϲ̣·
ἀλλ̣ὰ̣ τὸν ἱδρ[ώϲα]ντα κάλει θεὸν ὅϲτιϲ, ἀπώϲε̣[ι
πῦρ ἐπὶ δυ[ϲμε]νέων αὔλια καὶ καλάμα[ϲ.
If a xoanon sweats what great trouble it spells for a citizen
and what a blizzard of spears it signifies!
But he who invokes a perspiring god, he will deflect
fire to the folds and crops of his unfortunate enemies. [90]
The sweating of the cult statue is a conventional sign that always indicates destruction or devastation in war.
[91] In Greek (and Roman) literature such an omen is symptomatic: it happens
before the actual catastrophe and is verified
ex eventu. The frequent use of this omen in literature can be explained by the narratological effect of symptomatic
omina in guiding the expectations of a reader and explaining the causality of an event. Coming back to Posidippus, however, it seems odd that he does not present the omen retrospectively (as he does in most of the other epigrams) but takes the view of the addressee whom he gives surprising advice on how to avert the predicted devastation. If we compare this treatment of the omen with an episode taken from the Alexander literature, an interesting observation can be made. The Alexander episode runs as follows. Before Alexander’s march against the Persians, a statue of Orpheus in a Prierian sanctuary was seen sweating. Whereas the other seers who were consulted gave the expected negative prediction, the Telmessian Aristandros gave a different answer. He not only took into account the sweating of a statue but related it to the person depicted in the statue (i.e. Orpheus). Aristandros, transferring the metaphorical meaning of Orpheus as a poet to the actual situation, explained the sweating by saying that the poets of his time would have a lot to do (i.e. to sweat) in order to praise Alexander and his future deeds.
[92]
The pattern of this story is a typical one in Greek mantic. In dealing with negative
omina the seers often tried to avert the most obvious reference of the divine message by way of creative reinterpretation.
[93] If we compare this pattern with Posidippus, we find that he achieves this, not by reinterpretation, but by ritual. The transference of the negative semantics to the enemy is achieved by the evocation of the sweating god. Such ritual methods in reaction to negative
omina, however, are found only sporadically in Greek literature and mantic. Posidippus’ epigram probably reflects an actual practice and we can assume that also in Greece people ‘answered’ to such negative
omina with prayers and sacrifices. The reliability of such averting means, however, was not valued as highly as it was, for example, in Rome.
[94] Whereas Posidippus in the other epigrams reflects the fixation of Greek mantic on questions of interpretation, epigram 10 (AB 30) introduced into literature a mantic practice which, hitherto, had been mostly sub-literary.
In epigram 11 (AB 31) we find a statue of Athena in front of her temple (which is unfortunately not further located by the poet) that moves her right foot, which is made of lead.
[95] This sign proves to be an auspicious τέρας for Alexander who is planning his war against the Persians. Compared with the conventional signs the previous Macedonian kings received, Alexander’s τέρας is superior and more specific. The movement of the right foot of the Athena-statue is a positive sign which becomes clear for three reasons: a) because it is the right, i.e. the better foot. b) The incident occurs while Alexander is planning his war. We thus have a clear situation to which the sign must refer. In this specific context the movement of the foot can only mean that Athena indicates she will march alongside Alexander against the Persians. c) The heaviness of the foot symbolizes that the undertaking will be difficult but nonetheless possible.
Epigrams 12 and 13 (AB 32, 33) concentrate on the reactions of the figures involved. In epigram 12 (AB 32), a servant, who is carrying the weapons of his master Antimachos, falls down. The incident anticipates Antimachos’ fate—that his weapons will be of no avail. Although Antimachos reacts to the sign with dismay and is puzzled, he takes part in the war and returns reduced to ashes. The protagonist of epigram 13 (AB 33), by point of contrast, reacts in exactly the opposite way. Aristoxeinos misinterprets his symbolic dream as being auspicious for his participation in the battle. But he ends up being killed. In both cases the result is the same but the cause of events is different. Antimachos interprets the sign correctly but does not draw the necessary consequences while Aristoxeinos, led by hubris or stupidity, interprets the sign wrongly but reacts consistently. In the two epigrams the poet suggests that the gods, whose will is indicated in omens and dreams, are always right and always achieve their goals.
The concluding epigrams 14 and 15 (AB 34, 35) celebrate the competence of two seers in interpretating the birds’ flight (14 = AB 34) as well as in understanding the birds’ language (15 = AB 35).
[96] Thus these epigrams ‘correct’ the wrong interpretation of the preceding one and pave the way for the overall and final success of bird-augury in the collection. In the latter epigram the raven functions as a carrier of divine messages which are associated with Alexander (apparently early in his war against the Persians) and which hint at the three battles of Granikos, Issos and Gaugamela. The seer who is able to translate the language of the raven
[97] is characterized as a hero: ἥρωϲ Θρηίξ ὀρνίθων ἀκρότατοϲ ταμίηϲ (AB 35.2). His competence is based on a τέχνη, which has been described as a family tradition in epigram 14 (AB 34.2): Δάμων Τελμηϲϲεὺϲ ἐκ πατέρων ἀγαθὸϲ οἰωνοϲκοπίαϲ. The Carian Telmessos is already praised by Herodotus for its mantic specialists
[98] and Alexander’s most important seer was born in Telmessos.
[99] Although the Telmessians are represented in Greek sources mostly through symbolic interpretation, they seem to have regularly practiced certain mantic techniques, such as extispicy, dream divination, and bird augury.
[100] In this regard epigram 14 (AB 34) confirms the use of a specific technique in Greek mantic as the seer operates from a specific location, a hill, where he meets his clients.
[101]
Summarizing these observations on mantic in the Oiônoskopika we get a two-fold picture. On the one hand, most epigrams display the patterns familiar from the literary sources (which we can describe as situative or figurative mantic). On the other hand, the epigrams contain traces of a technical mantic known to us especially from the Ephesian inscription mentioned above. Thus the Oiônoskopika seem to reflect both literary and technical approaches towards Greek mantic. This observation recommends that we should not search for one generic model alone.
V. Poetry and Didactics in the Oiônoskopika—the Literary Tradition
As stated in the beginning, bird-augury is an integral facet of epic poetry in which it often serves as a narratological device to motivate action, to connect episodes, and as a justification of specific events. Whereas bird-augury in epic as well as in other literary genres (such as historiography or tragedy) remains an isolated, episodic phenomenon, it is also—if only very schematically—a topic of whole works, a fact which reflects the profound interest in augury and its great significance in Greek civilization. First to be mentioned is the lost ὀρνιθομαντεία ascribed to Hesiod. This work, which was athetized by Apollonius Rhodius,
[102] might indeed have contained a complete bird-mantic. It probably followed the
Works and Days as the following lines suggest (826–828):
τάων εὐδαίμων τε καὶ ὄλβιος, ὃς τάδε πάντα
εἰδὼς ἐργάζηται ἀναίτιος ἀθανάτοισιν,
ὄρνιθας κρίνων καὶ ὑπερβασίας ἀλεείνων.
That man is happy and lucky in them who knows all these things and does his work without offending the deathless gods, who discerns the omens of birds and avoids transgressions.
[103]
One can only speculate on the structure and the mantic implication of this ὀρνιθομαντεία. Above all it seems possible that it might have been a kind of didactic poetry composed in the manner of the daily calendar of the
Works and Days (which also alludes to bird-signs)
[104] and could have included an anthology of the most important or the most frequent signs and their significance. At the same time one cannot rule out a treatment limited to the function of bird-
omina as—for example—weather indicators. In such a way bird-
omina are presented in the
Phaenomena of Aratus, who has imitated Hesiod’s didactic poetry
[105] and who has incorporated or transferred a prose text ‘On Signs’—be it Theophrastus’
De Signis or a more extended one
[106] —into his own didactic poem. Similarly Posidippus could have “translated” a (lost) technical prose text on (bird-)augury or a didactic poem—be it Hesiod’s ὀρνιθομαντεία, a lost poem or parts of Aratus’
Phaenomena—into his epigrammatic poetry. In any case, the example of Hesiod and Aratus show that bird-augury appears to have had its place also in didactic poetry as a potential topic of an individual work, which could have functioned as a model for the
Oiônoskopika.
Our assumption seems further justified in view of the Hellenistic renaissance, not only of didactic poetry in general, but also, as the example of Aratus indicates, of the poetical reception of bird-augury as a special topic of this genre. Even without being able to illustrate a direct reception of Aratus (let alone Hesiod) by Posidippus, comparison clarifies the following. Unlike Aratus, Posidippus tries to present the whole range of mantic augury in an exemplary study. In his epigrams we find both weather indicators and signs referring to everyday-life as well as political and ‘historical’ omina. This reflects the poet’s claim to present (with the brevity of the epigrammatic form) as complete a picture of (bird-)augury as possible. From this point of view we might say that Posidippus’ epigrams outgrow the limits of a didactic poem that is restricted in theme such as Aratus’s Phaenomena. Thus a potential double intention of the Oiônoskopika emerges, namely to integrate a new topic into the genre of the epigram and at the same time to establish and introduce the new epigrams as a rival to other genres that had previously dealt with this topic.
Such a breaking of genre-boundaries is particularly characteristic of the Hellenistic epigram,
[107] and in the case of the
Oiônoskopika a dialogue with at least four different genres takes place. Whereas the inner
Ergänzungsspiel of the
Oiônoskopika reveals the didactic structure of the section, single epigrams of the collection allude to and play with themes and motifs taken from didactic poetry, epic, historiography, and technical writings on augury. Thus we are familiar with the type of weather-indicator and country-saying (2–3 = AB 22–23) from didactic poetry (Hesiod, Aratus) and from the Homeric Epos; political and military
omina have their traditional place in historiography and epic; and the technical details concerning seers and their art which are presented in epigrams 14 and 15 (AB 34, 35) mirror the presentation of bird-augury in technical writings. With his
Oiônoskopika, Posidippus thus combines a scientific approach of (bird-)augury with a poetical combat of genre.
The intended appeal to different genres can be supported by three further observations. At the beginning of the
Oiônoskopika a striking allusion to Homer suggests itself in the language of epigram 1 (AB 21):
νηῒ κα̣θ̣ε̣λκο̣μένηι πά̣ντα π̣λέ̣ο̣<ϲ> ἰνὶ φανήτω
ἴρηξ, α̣ἰ̣θ̣υ̣ίη̣ϲ̣ οὐ καθαρ̣οπτέ̣ρυγο̣ϲ·
δύν̣ω̣ν εἰϲ βυθὸν ὄρ̣νιϲ ἀνάρϲιοϲ, ἀλλὰ
πετέϲθω ὑψ̣ο̣..[…..]..[….].[..].φ̣᾿ ὅ̣λ̣ω̣ϲ·
οἷοϲ ἀπ̣ὸ̣̓ δ̣ρυ̣ὸϲ̣
ὦρτ᾿ Ἰ̣α̣κῆ̣ϲ̣
ὠκύπτεροϲ ἴρηξ ἱ̣ρ̣ῆι, Τί̣μ̣ω̣ν̣, ϲ̣ῆ̣<ι> ν̣η̣ῒ καθελκομέν̣η<ι>.
[108]
In AB 21.3 and especially 21.5, Posidippus, at a prominent spot of his introductory epigram, quotes a Homeric description of a hawk or falcon,
[109] which appears, after Poseidon had transformed into the bird-interpreter Calchas (
Iliad XIII 45) and delivered his warnings to the two Aias (
Iliad XIII 62–70):
αὐτὸς δ᾿, ὣς ἴρηξ ὠκύπτερος ὦρτο πέτεσθαι,
ὅς ῥά τ᾿ ἀπ᾿ αἰγίλιπος πέτρης περιμήκεος ἀρθεὶς
ὁρμήσῃ πεδίοιο διώκειν ὄρνεον ἄλλο,
ὣς ἀπὸ τῶν ἤιξε Ποσειδάων ἐνοσίχθων.
τοῖιν δ᾿ ἔγνω πρόσθεν Ὀιλῆος ταχὺς Αἴας,
αἶψα δ᾿ ἄρ᾿ Αἴαντα προσέφη Τελαμώνιον υἱόν·
Αἶαν, ἐπεί τις νῶι θεῶν, οἳ Ὄλυμπον ἔχουσι,
μάντεϊ> εἰδόμενος κέλεται παρὰ νηυσὶ μάχεσθαι,
οὐδ᾿ ὅ γε Κάλχας ἐστί, θεοπρόπος οἰωνιστής·
And he himself, just like a hawk, swift of flight, rises to fly, and posing himself aloft above a high sheer rock, darts over the plain to chase some other bird; so from them sped Poseidon, the shaker of earth. And of the two swift Aias, son of Oïleus, was first to recognize the god, and immediately spoke to Aias, son of Telemon: “Aias, since it is one of the gods who hold Olympus who in the likeness of the seer tells the two of us to flight beside the ships—he is not Calchas, the prophet and reader of omens.”
[110]
The following aspects can be observed. Posidippus not only alludes to the Homeric passage by language, quoting from him almost word for word in line 62, but also establishes a connection to the context of the cited passage, thus inaugurating a dialogue between the two texts on different levels. First of all, as in Posidippus, the Homeric sign appears in connection with the topic ‘ship’. In contrast to Homer, where Poseidon joins the Greeks in order to prevent the impending destruction of their fleet, Posidippus refers to the far more general and peaceful situation of launching a ship.
[111] But in both cases it is nonetheless the falcon/hawk that is associated with the ship. Posidippus thus uses his quotation of a Homeric verse to transfer the Homeric context, i.e. the link of the falcon/hawk with Poseidon into his epigram, and thus lays the foundation of the mantic significance of this particular bird for navigation. Furthermore, from the viewpoint of the observer, the god and falcon/hawk become so closely bound up to each other in the Homeric omen that one could almost think of metamorphosis.
[112] This image impressively evokes the fundamental mantic theme of the
Oiônoskopika, which claims that in every observed (bird-)omen there is a divine message to be discovered.
A further important link between Posidippus’ epigram and the Homeric passage is that in Homer the previous appearance of Poseidon in the shape of the seer Calchas is closely connected to the topic of bird-augury since Calchas is characterised by Aias explicitly as θεοπρόπος οἰωνιστής, as an ‘interpreter of bird-flight’ (verse 70). In evoking this context Posidippus not only legitimizes his topic as Homeric but also raises the reader’s expectation that in the course of the epigrams an expert on bird augury such as Calchas will show up. This is indeed the case in the last two epigrams which thus end the dialogue with Homer. As a result Posidippus deliberately links his Oiônoskopika via the linguistic bonds (verse 62 of Iliad XIII is cited in AB 21.5), the resemblance of motives (ship, hawk/falcon), and thematic allusions (bird-augury) to the Iliad XIII 167–177, which thus can be seen as a classical, textual model for the οἰωνοσκοπικά (col. IV 7). This supplementary game with epic poetry is an important key for reading the Oiônoskopika and the discussion of its generic models.
A second intertextual dialogue can be found in epigram 7 (AB 27), where the
topos of inspiration, which a muse or a god bestows on poets and singers as well as their gift of eloquence,
[113] is taken up from the tradition of Homer and Hesiod (AB 27.5–6):
φήνη παῖδ᾿ ἀγαγο̣ῦϲα καὶ ἐν θώκοιϲ ἀγορητήν
ἡδυεπῆ θήϲει καὶ θοὸν ἐν πολέμωι.
The vulture makes a child a well-versed speaker
in public and agile in war.
[114]
One could say that Posidippus’ intention in evoking this
topos in such an untraditional way was simply to show his poetic creativity by way of variation. However, a metapoetical aspect cannot be ruled out. With the
topos of granting eloquence Posidippus is deliberately evoking the two
loci classici in Homer and Hesiod, but only in order to distance himself from both texts. By replacing the Homeric god and the Hesiodic muses with the vulture as the bestower of eloquence, Posidippus not only gives the
topos a new shape and a different context but also establishes his epigram(s) in an ironic way as a new and more appropriate medium than Homeric or Hesiodic epic. We might even say that Posidippus is correcting his predecessors by naming the real (i.e. mantically approved) bestower of eloquence, a bird, in the appropriate form, an epigram on bird-augury. And as the vulture needs no other bird or even god to express his message and to become a proper omen, Posidippus and his readers need no other text to understand the gift of eloquence correctly. As the Posidippan vulture competes with the Homeric god and the Hesiodic muses, so Posidippus competes with Homer and Hesiod in his presentation of it. Thus epigram 7 (AB 27) (which anyhow has an important function in the structure of the
Oiônoskopika and has a central position) can be seen as a poetological dialogue between epigram and epic, between the established, somehow
topos-forming poetry of Homer and Hesiod and the innovative poems of Posidippus. Furthermore the link to Hesiod could be taken as a further indication of the suggested reading of the
Oiônoskopika as a translation of didactic poetry (which Hesiod’s works represented) into the form of epigram.
[115]
Finally, the naming of Alexander the Great might raise a third point. As we have seen, two epigrams (11 and 15 = AB 31, 35) mention Alexander, the only name that is historically secure.
[116] In view of the new mantic revival both in literature and in actual practice, the naming of Alexander could be seen as a direct reflection of this renaissance and of the literary genre that transmitted this knowledge (i.e. historiography). The number of ‘historical’
omina within the
Oiônoskopika supports such a connection to the genre of historiography.
These observations of possible literary relations of the
Oiônoskopika and other genres such as epos, didactic poetry, historiography, as well as technical writings on mantic support the impression that the collection of epigrams as a whole can and wants to be read poetologically. We are dealing with a careful and thorough composition of epigrams, or rather their transmittance into a new work of art; it is based on a didactic structure through which mantic knowledge is transmitted in a poetical form.
[117] The appeal to different genres springs from the strife of authorization and combat with previous texts of mantic content. We may even say that Posidippus combined his didactic presentation of Greek mantic with a history of its literary sources which chronologically runs from Homer, who is alluded to in the first epigram (AB 21), to Alexander in the last epigram (AB 35).
VI. The Invention of Oiônoskopika as an Epigrammatic Subgenre
Posidippus’
Oiônoskopika do not deal with concrete (fictional or real) objects but with
omina, which completely lack the kind of referentiality traditionally linked to the form of epigram as a (stone)-inscription. Thus they are in accord with the Hellenistic tendency of systematic delapidarization of epigram which of course progressed with the ongoing transformation of epigram from stone to book.
[118] Poets such as Posidippus tried to explore new topics and integrated them into the epigrammatic genre, no matter where they emerged from or how established they were in terms of generic sense. The erotic and sympotic epigrams are typical examples of this development which translated the topics of love-elegy and sympotic literature into the form of an epigram. With the publication of the Milan papyrus further transformations have emerged. Among them are the
Oiônoskopika. They could well be an innovation by Posidippus, if he is indeed the author.
Transforming a genre into epigram is one thing, establishing the transformation another. As we have seen, Posidippus’
Oiônoskopika open up a poetological dialogue with a series of different genres in which (bird-)augury was at home, such as epic, didactic poetry, historiography, and technical writings. By way of inner
Ergänzungsspiel a carefully worked out structure emerged which serves a didactic purpose and although we do not possess a didactic poem on which Posidippus could have modeled his epigram-collection, didactic poetry seems to be a possible generic model for the
Oiônoskopika. One way to establish such an invention as a subgenre of epigram would be to integrate it among already established subgenres (and if we take a look at the structure of the whole epigram book this is what the poet might have intended). For the book seems to have an equally elaborate structure as the single sections and at least the
Oiônoskopika is harmonically embedded between the preceding
Lithika and the
Anathematika. The following observations can be made. On the one hand both
Lithika and
Oiônoskopika seem to be new epigrammatic subgenres, possibly invented by Posidippus.
[119] Placed at the beginning of a book, the
Lithika not only have a surprising effect on the reader but can be also taken programmatically as a title for the whole epigram book because of the analogy between the art of gem-working and of writing epigrams.
[120] And whereas this art is obviously revealed already in the first section, the following
Oiônoskopika have a share of this programmatic meaning. They become the first example of the art of the epigrammatist established in the
Lithika. Thus Posidippus introduces himself with two innovative subgenres, which also establish a generic sense of the art of the Posidippan epigram. We are to expect innovations as well as a creative treatment of established epigrammatic themes and subgenres. They can be as surprising as the opening sections of this Hellenistic epigram book.
Furthermore the close link between
Lithika and
Oiônoskopika is underscored by the harmonic, almost natural transition of the two sections; this is achieved linguistically as well as with regard to the content. At the end of the
Lithika the attention of the reader is more and more shifted away from stones towards the element of water, which is introduced in its superior powers over stone in the form of a prayer to Poseidon (AB 19.11–14, col. III 38–41):
[121]
ἴϲχε, Ποϲειδᾶον, μεγάλην χέρα καὶ βαρὺ κῦμα
ἐκ πόντου ψιλὴν μὴ φέρ᾿ ἐπ᾿ ἠϊόνα·
τετρακαιεικοϲίπηχυν ὅτ᾿ ἐ<κ> βυθοῦ ἤραο λᾶαν,
ῥεῖα καταμήϲειϲ εἰν ἁλὶ νῆϲον ὅλην.
Check, Poseidon, your mighty hand, and the heavy wave
Do not drive from the sea to the unprotected shore.
Since you lifted from the depth a twenty-four cubit rock,
You will easily mow down a whole island in the sea. [122]
The reader who has been looking at stones in the preceeding eighteen epigrams and has learned of their value, size, and origin is forced to change perspective. His glance shifts from the rock to the sea, the great power of which now gets into the focus of attention. Thus the reader is prepared to leave the
Lithika behind and turn to a new section, which again starts with the motif of water and sea: the first two epigrams (AB 21–22) of the
Oiônoskopika deal with shipping.
[123]
Similarly the
Oiônoskopika are linked with the following
Anathematika, as we can see from two final examples.
[124] Not only is the motif of shipping, which was the topic of the first two
Oiônoskopika (AB 21–22), taken up in the second epigram of the
Anathematika, but we also find that the sign (a bird), which was the decisive criterion for shipping in the
Oiônoskopika, has been replaced in the
Anathematika by the prayer to Arsinoe (AB 37, AB 39). This shift in focus on the one hand underscores the intended praising of Arsinoe, who is likewise elevated into the position of the gods as she gains the power of a protecting goddess for shipping.
[125] On the other hand the invoking of Arsinoe to protect shipping can be seen as a consequence of the lessons of the
Oiônoskopika:
omina are not always forthcoming when needed; and given that they admit various interpretations, ideally a seer should be consulted. A prayer to Arsinoe seems to be the more reliable and faster alternative.
A further link between both sections is established by the first epigram of the Anathematika, which is connected with two epigrams of the Oiônoskopika. First of all we find a link with AB 33 as in both epigrams a dream is reported. But whereas Hêgêsô interprets her vision of Arsinoe correctly, Aristoxeinos in the Oiônoskopika misinterprets his dream and gets killed. Thus Arsinoe is again praised for her much greater credibility compared with an omen, which is more likely to be misleading. Secondly epigram 1 of the Anathematika echoes epigram 10 (AB 30) of the Oiônoskopika in referring to the motive of a sweating cult statue. And in this case, too, the negative connotation of the omen in the Oiônoskopika is converted into the ‘sweet sweat’ (γλυκὺν ἰδρῶ, AB 36.3) of Arsinoe whose positive appearance is further stressed. Thus the Anathematika are in an ongoing dialogue with the preceding Oiônoskopika and both sections comment on each other in a playful manner. At the moment of leaving the Oiônoskopika and entering the ‘classical’ section of Anathematika, the reader recognizes familiar themes and motifs taken from the Oiônoskopika and picked up in the Anathematika. Thus the Oiônoskopika prove to be an important key for reading the Anathematika, which themselves become the starting point of re-reading and re-estimating the mantic messages of the Oiônoskopika.
To summarize these observations we can say that the Oiônoskopika are not only artfully structured as a section but also harmonically fit into the sequence of the epigram book. The first three sections build upon each other, so that the Lithika introduce the Oiônoskopika, which pave the way for the praise of Arsinoe in the Anathematika. Posidippus has introduced his ‘new’ Oiônoskopika into an epigram book and established it amidst the classical epigrammatic subgroups. Thus Posidippus has tried to establish his ‘new’ Oiônoskopika by way of Ergänzungsspiel with other and—in the case of the Anathematika—‘classical’ epigrammatical subgroups.
The fact that later anthologies did not include Oiônoskopika neither separately nor as a whole section reflects a certain conservatism towards the genre of epigram. Posidippus’ fascinating innovation thus remained an unchallenged poetic experiment.
VII. Topics and Structure of the Oiônoskopika (οἰωνοσκοπικά)*
| epigram |
kind of omen |
situation |
person |
quality |
| 1 (AB 21) |
ἴρηξ (αἴθυια) |
sea travel |
Timon |
positive |
| 2 (AB 22) |
γέρανος (ὄρνις βουκαῖος) |
sea travel |
— |
positive |
| 3 (AB 23) |
αἴθυια |
fishing |
— |
positive |
| 4 (AB 24) |
ὁ Θηβαῖος ὄρνις (αἴθυια) |
fishing |
Archytas |
positive |
| 5 (AB 25) |
(old man) priest/relatives |
(traveling) marriage |
— |
positive |
| 6 (AB 26) |
πελλὸς ὄρνις |
buying slaves |
Hieron/Asteria |
positive |
| 7 (AB 27) |
φήνη |
childbirth |
— |
positive |
| 8 (AB 28) |
crying old man at a crossroads |
warfare |
Timoleon |
negative |
| 9 (AB 29) |
κορυδός/ἀκανθίς |
(traveling) |
Euelthon |
negative |
| 10 (AB 30) |
sweating statue |
warfare |
— |
negative |
| 11 (AB 31) |
(ἀετός/στεροπή) moving bronze statue of Athena |
warfare |
Alexander |
(negative) positive |
| 12 (AB 32) |
servant falling down with armor |
warfare |
Antimachos |
negative |
| 13 (AB 33) |
dream of being a suitor of Athena |
warfare |
Aristoxeinos |
negative |
| 14 (AB 34) |
seer |
mantic art |
Damon |
open |
| 15 (AB 35) |
seer/κόραξ |
mantic art |
Strymon/Alexander |
positive |
Footnotes
[ back ] *. We are grateful to Markus Asper, Helga Köhler, Ivana and Andrej Petrovic for their suggestions and helpful criticism.
[ back ] 1. “Many birds there are that pass to and fro under the rays of the sun, and not all are fateful.” Murray 1995: I 59.
[ back ] 2. Hesiod
Works and Days 826–828. Also see below V: ‘Poetry and Didactics in the
Oiônoskopika.’
[ back ] 3. Cf. for instance Homer
Iliad XXIV 315–16, Xenophon
Memorabilia I 3 and Porphyrius
De Abstinentia III 5.3. For further discussion and reference see Pollard 1977:116–129; for bird-augury in general cf. Bouché-Leclerq 1879–1882: I 127–145, Dillon 1996, Pritchett 1979:101–108, and Stengel 1920:57–59.
[ back ] 4. Cf. Stengel 1920:57–58.
[ back ] 5. Cf. Bouché-Leclerq 1879–1882: I 129 and Pollard 1977:121–126.
[ back ] 6. Homer
Odyssey ii 158–159: … ὁ γὰρ οἶος ὁμηλικίην ἐκέκαστο | ὄρνιθας γνῶναι καὶ ἐναίσιμα μυθήσασθαι· (“… for he [Halitherses] surpassed all men of his day in knowledge of birds and uttering words of fate.”) Murray 1995: I 57–59. The seer interprets the flight of two birds, which were spotted fighting against each other during an assembly of the Ithacians, as a negative omen for Penelope’s suitors. For his expertise in prediction also cf.
Odyssey xxiv 452: ὁ [Ἁλιθέρσης] γὰρ οἶος ὅρα πρόσσω καὶ ὀπίσσω (“For he alone saw before and after”) Murray 1995: II 445.
[ back ] 7. The only comparable example is epigram XI 186, in which the song of a night-raven is taken as a prediction of death and destruction: Νυκτικόραξ ᾄδει θανατηφόρον; ἀλλ᾿ ὅταν ᾄση | Δημόφιλος, θνῄσκει καὐτὸς ὁ νυκτικόραξ (“The night-raven’s song bodes death, but when Demophilus sings the night-raven itself dies”) Paton 1999: IV 161. Other epigrams, in which birds appear, are mostly grave-epigrams like VII 191 (magpie), VII 199 (unknown bird), VII 202 (cock), 203–206 (partridge), 210 (swallow). The oracle-epigrams of book XIV in the
Greek Anthology do not deal with bird-
omina/-oracles.
[ back ] 8. Cf. Käppel’s analysis of the
Paian (1992:17–21).
[ back ] 9. Up to this point the question of authenticity cannot be finally solved. However, the lack of distinguished linguistic and stylistic differences amongst the epigrams as well as the careful composition of the whole epigram-book and its single sections, in which the epigrams are thoroughly interrelated not only in regard to their contents but also linguistically (see below section II), strongly suggests one poet as author and probably also as anthologist of the epigram book. Thus we follow BG:22–24 in associating the papyrus with Posidippus of Pella.
[ back ] 10. The different sections of the book are: [λιθ]ικά, οἰωνοϲκοπικά, ἀναθηματικά, [ἐπιτύμβια], ἀνδριαντοποιϊκά, ἱππικά, ναυαγικά, ἰαματικά, τρόποι followed by two fragments of epigrams from an unspecified tenth section. For the composition of the epigram book, see BG:24–27 and Gutzwiller (this volume).
[ back ] 11. Translated by B. Acosta-Hughes and E. Kosmetatou.
[ back ] 12. See
LSJ s.v. οἰωνός and ὄρνις. Also cf. Stengel 1920:59 and Pollard 1977:120 for the
termini technici of bird-augury. The common terms for (bird-)augury are οἰωνοσκοπική, οἰωνοσκοπία and ὀρνιθομαντεία (Proclus
ad Hes.
Op. 824). The verbs οἰωνίζομαι and (the more seldom used) ὀρνιθεύομαι bare exclusively the mantic meaning ‘to foretell from birds’ or ‘to prophesy’ in general; the specialists for bird-augury in Homer are οἰωνισταί or οἰωνοπόλοι, later attested terms are ὀρνιθόμαντις and οἰωνόμαντις. Pausanias (IX 16,1) calls the place of bird-augury οἰωνοσκοπεῖον.
[ back ] 13. Aristophanes
Birds 719–722. Translation by Henderson 2000:121. Also cf. Dunbar 1995:456f.
[ back ] 14. Epigrams 5, 8, 10, 12, 13 (AB 25, 28, 30, 32, 33). For the interpretation of πρέσβυς in epigram 8 (AB 28) see below II.4.
[ back ] 15. The term is used by Aeschylus
Prom. 487; σύμβουλοι of this kind are also mentioned by Pindar
Olympian 12.8 (with scholia), Aristophanes
Birds 721 (with scholia) and Xenophon
Memorabilia I 1.3; cf. McCartney 1935:97–112.
[ back ] 16. One could even say that the structure of the
Oiônoskopika mirrors the linguistic development, as we find ‘pure’ bird-
omina in the first couple of epigrams, which give way to other signs the more the section proceeds. See below II.4. Hunter (this volume) derives a ‘generic sense’ from the fact that the first four epigrams depict bird-
omina.
[ back ] 17. For the order of epigrams in anthologies cf. Cameron 1993:19–48 and Gutzwiller 1998:277–321 with a discussion of verbal linkage between epigrams.
[ back ] 18. Cf. Bing 1995:116 and Ludwig 1968 for the intertextuality of epigrams by different authors.
[ back ] 19. Cf. Gutzwiller (this volume).
[ back ] 20. BG:25: “Nella sezione οἰωνοσκοπικά (IV 7–VI 8) la disposizione interna dei testi non è altrettanto evidente ed articolata come nella serie dei λιθικά.”
[ back ] 21. Cf. Hunter and Stephens in this volume. Also the
Hippika and
Iamatika are artfully arranged as Fantuzzi and Bing (both this volume) can show.
[ back ] 22. Cf. also Bing 1998:38. Such a literary contextualization of course reflects the increasing transition of epigram from stone to book in the Hellenistic period.
[ back ] 24. Cf. Gutzwiller 2002b:5: “The tenth through thirteenth poems involve military omens.”
[ back ] 25. Gutzwiller 2002b:5. Cf. also Gutzwiller (this volume).
[ back ] 26. Petrain 2002:10–11: “IV. 8–29: bird omens pertaining to maritime occupations; IV. 30–35: advice on finding a husband; IV.36 – V.15: omens pertaining to domestic affairs and land travel; V. 16–39: other types of omens (not birds); VI. 1–8: noteworthy interpreters of omens.”
[ back ] 27. Petrain takes πρέσβυς as referring to a ‘wren’ and integrates the epigram amongst the bird-
omina; for further discussion of Petrain’s suggestion and the interpretation of the epigram, cf. below II.4.
[ back ] 28. Petrain 2002:11.
[ back ] 29. Petrain 2002:11.
[ back ] 30. Gutzwiller 2002b:5 and Gutzwiller (this volume).
[ back ] 31. For ways of interaction between poetry and readership in the Hellenistic period, cf. Asper 2001:94–116.
[ back ] 32. Marks of origin are found in epigram 8 (AB 28), where Timoleon from Phocis is mentioned, as well as in epigrams 13–15 (AB 33–35), which introduce the Arcadean Aristoxenos, Damon from Telmessus and the Thracian hero Strymon. Historical events are presented in epigrams 11 and 15 (AB 31, 35), which refer to Alexander’s war against the Persians and in epigram 12 (AB 32), where the Illyrian army is mentioned.
[ back ] 33. The fact that we do not know anything about the persons presented and the described events except for Alexander and the Argead kings might be caused by the loss of texts especially from the Hellenistic era.
[ back ] 34. See also III below. We just want to mention the temporal coincidence of the increased occurrence of bird-augury and mantic practice in the Alexander literature and Posidippus’ epigrams. From this point of view the reference to Alexander in Posidippus could be read as his homage to the very person who helped to make bird-augury popular again.
[ back ] 35. We can of course not rule out the possibility that the poet alludes to events that were familiar to the Alexandrians of the third century BCE whose reports disappeared in the course of later transmission.
[ back ] 36. A similar ironic use of speaking names can be found in Callimachus, for instance in the cases of Callignotos (11 GP = 25 Pf.), Euaenetus (25 GP = 56 Pf.), or Conopion (63 GP = 63 Pf.).
[ back ] 37. Neither a clear historical reference nor a clear functionalization as a speaking name can be detected in the case of the Arcadian Aristoxeinus (13 = AB 33). The name together with the mark of origin might however characterize him—like the Phocean Timoleon in epigram 8 (AB 28)—as a mercenary. Similarly Timon (1 = AB 21) and Archytas (4 = 24) do not show clear references. The Thracian seer Strymon (15 = AB 35), who is also characterized as a hero, has the name of a Thracian river (and river-god), which at its lower stretches forms the traditional border between Thrace and Macedon. This could perhaps be taken as a poetic attempt to align the seer with Alexander.
[ back ] 38. The only explicit mark of origin can be found in epigram 9 (AB 29), where the city Sidene in Aeolia is mentioned (cf. Strabo XIII 1.11, 42). Perhaps the author intended to ‘prove’ the tragic irony indicated by the name by evoking an historical background.
[ back ] 39. Translation by B. Acosta-Hughes and E. Kosmetatou.
[ back ] 40. For further discussion of this omen, cf. below II.4.
[ back ] 41. The punctuation (colon) should be behind φήνη and not at the end of the first verse (cf. BG:51 and AB:48).
[ back ] 42. Translation by the authors.
[ back ] 43. Epigram 8 (AB 28): ἢν ἀνδρὸϲ μέλλοντοϲ ἐπ᾿ Ἄρεα δήϊον ἕρπειν | ἀντήϲη<ι> κλαίων πρέϲβυϲ ἐπὶ τριόδου, | οὐκέτι νοϲτήϲει κεῖνοϲ βροτόϲ· ἀλλ᾿ ἀναθέϲθω | τὴν τόθ᾿ ὁδοιπορίην
εἰϲ ἕτερον πόλεμον· | καὶ γὰρ Τιμολέων κεκλαυμένοϲ ἦλθεν ὁ Φωκεύϲ |
ἐκ πολέμου τούτωι ϲήματι μεμψάμενοϲ.
[ back ] 44. Translation by C. Austin and G. Bastianini, AB:51.
[ back ] 45. The term ὁδίτης is not restricted to a ‘peaceful’ traveler, but can be used with a negative and even hostile connotation (cf. Sophocles
Philoctetes 147: δεινὸς ὁδίτης).
[ back ] 46. AB 21: νηῒ καθελκομένηι πάντα πλέο<ϲ> ἰνὶ φανήτω ἴρηξ, αἰθυίηϲ οὐ καθαροπτέρυγοϲ. (‘At the launching of a ship may a hawk appear all full of strength | as the shearwater’s wings are not of good omen.’) Translation by C. Austin and G. Bastianini, AB:43. The ἴρηξ which can be a hawk or a falcon (cf. Pollard 1977:144), was frequently regarded as a bird of omen and is linked to Apollo in Aristophanes’
Birds 516 (cf. Dunbar 1995:354–355). As such, the occurrence of a falcon/hawk in the first epigram can be seen as programmatic as the bird evokes the god and the mantic art traditionally associated with Apollo, which is also the topic of the
Oiônoskopika. For the different types of falcons/hawks and their characteristic features, cf. Thompson 1966:114–118.
[ back ] 47. A possible exception is epigram 11 (AB 31), which contains a positive omen for Alexander that is, however, negative for his enemies, the Persian army, as it indicates fire and destruction for them (AB 31.6).
[ back ] 48. From this angle Petrain’s (2002) interpretation of πρέϲβυϲ as a bird in epigram 8 (AB 28) seems unlikely as it would spoil the proposed arrangement of the epigrams, which revealed itself with regard to the quality of
omina and situations in which they occur. Thus it seems more plausible to assume that also the criterion of the kind of
omina follows this grouping, which it does if we take πρέϲβυϲ (like in epigram 5, AB 25) as referring to an ‘old man’. We might, however, accept Petrain’s notion that the name contains a deliberate ambiguity by which the author could underline the point that different
omina could have similar meanings, such as a crying wren and a crying old man.
[ back ] 49. As in epigram 11 (AB 31), where the focus is not on the eagle as a sign but on the statue of Athena.
[ back ] 50. Cf. II.2 and II.3 above.
[ back ] 51. Which itself shows a parallel structure as epigrams 5 and 9 ‘circle’ around the transitional epigram 7, of which they both are separated by only one other epigram.
[ back ] 52. Epigram 5 (AB 25) deals with marriage and has a positive outcome, whereas epigram 9 has a nega-tive outcome and integrates itself among the military
omina (cf. II.2 above).
[ back ] 53. Country sayings can be found in epigram 2 (AB 22) and epigram 3 (AB 23), in which the diving shearwater indicates successful fishing. A straightforward interpretation by analogy can be found in the first epigram (AB 21), where a diving bird is depicted as a negative omen for launching a ship that will most likely sink.
[ back ] 54. The same can be said for the structure of the
Andriantopoiika, which reflect prose works on art-historical theory. See Kosmetatou (this volume).
[ back ] 55. For different aspects of the Hellenistic ‘genre-crossing’ cf. the volume on
Genre in Hellenistic Poetry (for example Harder’s [1998:95–113] study on ‘Generic Games’ in Callimachus’
Aetia) as well as Taran 1979 and Ludwig 1968 (with emphasize on the erotic epigram).
[ back ] 56. Plutarch
De sollertia animalium 975 A. (Translation by Helmbold 1957:413).
[ back ] 57. Cf. Aeschylus
Prometheus 488–492:
γαμψωνύχων τε πτῆσιν οἰωνῶν σκεθρῶς
διώρισ᾿, οἵτινές τε δεξιοὶ φύσιν
εὐωνύμους τε, καὶ δίαιταν ἥντινα
ἔχουσ᾿ ἕκαστοι, καὶ πρὸς ἀλλήλους τίνες
ἔχθραι τε καὶ στέργηθρα καὶ συνεδρίαι·
“The flight of crook-taloned birds I distinguished clearly—which by nature are auspicious, which sinister—their various modes of life, their mutual feuds and loves, and their consortings.” (Translation by Weir Smyth 1922:I 259).
[ back ] 58. Plutarch tells us (according to the general knowledge that a raven is eating carrions, cf. Bouché-Leclerq 1879:133 and Pollard 1977:127f.) about some ravens, which appeared as symbols of death when Alexander arrived at Babylon (
Alexander 73.1). On the other hand we hear of helpful ravens that led Alexander and his followers through the desert to the Ammoneion. Cf. Callisthenes (
FGrHist 124) F 14 (= Strab. XVII 1.43; Plutarch
Alexander 27.2); Arrian
Anabasis III 3.6; Diodorus XVII 49.5; Curt. IV 7.15. For the motive of birds leading the way also cf. Plutarch
Theseus 36.1 and Pausanias IX 38.3–4. See Dillon 1996:115n56 with further bibliography.
[ back ] 59. The owl was regarded as a bird of death (cf. Wellmann 1909:1065f. and 1069f. with sources), but was also associated with Athena and thus regarded as a bearer of positive messages (especially for the people of Athens), cf. Plutarch
Themistocles 12.1 and Diodorus XX 11.3.
[ back ] 60. An exception is Xenophon
Anabasis VI 1.23.
[ back ] 61. Cf. Xenophon
Anabasis VI 5.2; VI 5.21.
[ back ] 62. Homer
Iliad XII 237–240 (Translation by Murray 1988: I 561).
[ back ] 63. Cf. Stengel 1920:58 and Pollard 1977:120f. Semi-provoked signs are signs that occur during or shortly after a prayer or sacrifice and can thus be regarded as an “answer” of the gods.
[ back ] 64. Homer
Iliad X 274–276 (Translation by Murray 1988: I 457). Also cf.
Iliad XXIV 315f. and Pollard 1977:121.
[ back ] 65. In this case, the east is of course always on the right hand side.
[ back ] 66. For a possible influence of this work on texts like Posidippus’
Oiônoskopika, cf. V below.
[ back ] 67. Aeschylus
Seven against Thebes 24–29. (Translation by Weir Smyth 1922:I 325).
[ back ] 68. Cf. Bouché-Leclerq 1879–1882: I 142: “La science augurale des Tirésias et de Calchas était dejà une science morte pour les anciens historiens eux-mêmes.”
[ back ] 69. Sophocles
Antigone 998–1004. (Translation by Lloyd-Jones 1994: II 95). The interpretation of the blind seer, who is told the events by a young boy, is by no means a “technical” one but again symbolic: Teiresias learns about the situation of Thebes by the unusual behavior of the birds, as the croaking noise of the birds, which are tearing each other apart, tells him that something is wrong.
[ back ] 70. Euripides
Bacchae 346–351: Pentheus demands to destroy the seat from which Teiresias watched the birds.
[ back ] 71. Pausanias IX 16.1.
[ back ] 72. The most important editions are:
LSAM 30 A;
CIG II 2953; Syll.
3 1167;
SGDI 5600;
DGE 708;
IvEphesos V 1678 A.
[ back ] 73. Cf. Dillon 1996:107.
[ back ] 74. Wilamowitz 1931:148: “wohl schwerlich griechisch.”
[ back ] 75. Haas 1994:27, 691; cf. Cicero
De Div. I 25–26.
[ back ] 76. LSAM 30 B; Koerner 1993: nr. 82.
[ back ] 77. FGrHist 3b (Suppl.) 2, 261 Anm. 6.
[ back ] 78. Pritchett 1979:103.
[ back ] 79. Cf. Hölkeskamp 1999:114 and Dillon 1996:106.
[ back ] 80. Cf. Wissowa 1896:2313–2344 and Rübke 2001:77, 180–82.
[ back ] 81. Cf. Pearson 1960:9, 48.
ἠερίην αἴθυιαν ἰδὼ[ν ὑπ]ὸ κῦμ[α] θαλάϲ[ϲηϲ]
δυομένην, ἁλιεῦ, ϲῆ[μα φ]ύλα[ϲ]ϲ᾿ ἀγαθ[όν·]
καὶ πολυάγκιϲτρον κ[αθίει] καὶ βάλλε ϲαγ[ήνην]
κ]αὶ κύρτουϲ ἄγρηϲ οὔ[ποτ᾿ ἄ]πε[ι] κενεόϲ.
When you see the shearwater diving from high in the air
under the wave of the sea, consider it, fisherman, a good sign.
[Send down] your line with its many hooks and throw the drag [net]
and traps: you’ll never come home without a good catch.
(Translation C. Austin)
[ back ] 83. For the interpretation of epigram 5 (AB 25) cf. Lapini 2002.
[ back ] 84. Cf. For instance Xenophon
Anabasis VI 5.2 and 21;
SEG 36, 1986, nr. 351. Callisthenes (
FGrHist 124) F 22a (= Cicero
De Div. I 74).
[ back ] 85. BG:141. Also cf. Pollard 1977:79.
[ back ] 86. Cf. below V.
[ back ] 87. For a discussion of Petrain’s reading of πρέϲβυϲ as a bird, cf. II.4 above.
[ back ] 88. As a consequence, in times of conflict such occurrences have positive significance for the addressee’s enemies. Cf. Chaniotis 1998.
[ back ] 89. Special attention in this context was not only given to catastrophes like fire, lightning strikes, or flooding but also accidents of visitors and the unusual behavior of priests and animals living in the sanctuary (cf. Herodotus VIII 41.2–3, Xenophon
Hell. I 3.1; I 6.1;V 4.58; Pausanias III 9.2; Diodorus XV 48.1, 49.4; Plutarch
Alexander 3.4). Furthermore, miraculous signs (
terata) happened very often in sanctuaries, such as the sweating of a cult statue or other
peculiari on statues, the disappear-ance of sacred weapons and their reappearance at different places in the sanctuary, and the ‘automatic’ opening of doors (cf. Herodotus VI 82; VIII 37.1–2; Xenophon
Hell. VI 4.7 and Plutarch
Timoleon 12.9).
[ back ] 90. Translation by B. Acosta-Hughes and E. Kosmetatou.
[ back ] 91. Cf. the evidence collected by BG:143. Also cf.
AP IX 534 (anonymous), which regards a sweating Artemis statue as messenger of a devastating war: Ἄρτεμις ἰδρώουσα προάγγελός ἐστι κυδοιμοῦ. Similarly
AP XIV 92 gives an example of a sweating statue as harbinger of destruction in war.
[ back ] 92. Plutarch
Alexander 14.5 and Arrian
Anabasis I 11.2. Also cf. BG:143–144.
[ back ] 93. Cf. Herodotus VII 37.2–3; Plutarch
Nik. 23.5 = Philochorus (
FGrHist 328) F 135b; Xenophon
Hell. IV 7.4; Plutarch
Dion 24.1–3 and with regard to the Alexander history: Arrian
Anabasis I 18.6–9; III 7.6; Plutarch
Alexander 26.5–6 and Curt. IV 8.6; IV 10.1–7. Also cf. Bearzot 1993:102–110. The pattern is frequently used in reaction to oracles too.
[ back ] 94. The Romans reacted to
prodigia with
procurationes, which (if performed correctly) could avert the negative prediction and reestablish the
pax deorum. In Greece no comparable way of communication with the gods is known. Even in Posidippus the ritual does not aim to undo the message. As always in Greek mantic, the prediction of an omen will fulfill itself (in this case only upon a different addressee).
[ back ] 95. For a somewhat different reading of the epigram, cf. Schröder 2002:28–29.
[ back ] 96. A seer (Asterie) is also mentioned in epigram 6 (AB 26), which, however, does not put the focus on mantic practice or the competence of the seer, but on the πελλὸς ὄρνις as a specific omen.
[ back ] 97. Schröder’s (2002:27–28) observation that the epigram starts with the description of a gravestone that depicts a raven (AB 35.1) does not alter the mantic significance of the raven and the use of him as a means of prediction by Strymon and Alexander: τῶι τούτου χρηϲάμενοϲ κόρακι (AB 35.4).
[ back ] 98. According to Herodotus I 78.84 the Lydian king Croesus consulted the Telmessians.
[ back ] 99. Cf. Berve 1926:I, nr. 117 (s.v. Ἀρίστανδρος).
[ back ] 100. Cf. Cicero
De Div. I 91 and the commentary of Pease 1920–1923:256f.
[ back ] 101. A similar place to that of Posidippus is mentioned by a Pergamene inscription of the Imperial period (cf. Habicht 1969, no.115).
[ back ] 102. Cf. Pausanias IX 31, 4f. Also see Schwartz 1960:29–31.
[ back ] 103. Translation by Evelyn-White 1982:65
[ back ] 104. Verses 747 and 801. Also cf. West 1978:364f.
[ back ] 105. Cf. Kidd 1997:8–10 and Hutchinson 1988:216.
[ back ] 106. Cf. Hutchinson 1988:214f. and Kidd: 1997:21–23.
[ back ] 107. Compare for example the erotic and sympotic epigrams, which take over topics from love-elegy and sympotic literature and transform them—although in a highly selective way—to the genre of epigram. Cf. Giangrande 1968. For the sympotic and erotic epigram in Hellenistic period also cf. Gutzwiller 1998:117 and—with regard to Asclepiades 25 GP—Bettenworth 2002.
At the launching of a ship may a hawk appear all full of strength,
as the shearwater’s wings are not of good omen.
A bird that dives to the deep is unpropitious, but let it fly
on high … completely.
So from an Ionian oak soared a swift-winged hawk
At the launching, Timon, of your sacred ship.
[ back ] 109. For the term and meaning of ἴρηξ, cf. below n. 46.
[ back ] 110. Translation by Murray 1999: II 7.
[ back ] 111. The contrast between the situation of war in Homer and Posidippus’ peaceful launching of a ship may be taken as a poetic game Posidippus is playing with his model.
[ back ] 112. Cf. Pollard 1977:158: “Poseidon did take bird form or rather the two Ajaxes imagined that he had done so when, as they were listening to Calchas, they suddenly spied a falcon taking wing.” Against the assumption of an actual metamorphosis cf. Janko 1992:50: “Poseidon leaves with the speed of a hawk, not in the shape of one …”
[ back ] 113. The
loci classici for this motive are Homer
Odyssey viii 167–177 and Hesiod
Theogony 91–97. Also cf. Solmsen 1954:1–15.
[ back ] 114. Translation by the authors.
[ back ] 115. It might be also noted that the
topos of inspiration in Hesiod is part of the proem of the
Theogony, so that Posidippus’ epigram is alluding to a text which deliberately establishes and discusses the didactics of the specific poem and poetry in general, i.e. of how knowledge is perceived and transmitted.
[ back ] 116. Cf. above II.1.
[ back ] 117. The transformation of technical texts into poetry of epigrams might also be connected with the intention of presenting the material in a more memorable form. This aspect can be found in some epigrams which have been used in schools. Cf. Wißmann 2002.
[ back ] 118. An early example (fifth century BCE) of an epigram playing with the conventions of inscription by asking the passerby to start the process of delapidarization and to transfer it from its inscribed place into different (con)texts can be found in Simonides’ famous epigram ὦ ξεῖν᾿ ἀγγέλλειν … Cf. Baumbach 2000.
[ back ] 119. For the
Lithika, cf. Bing 2002 and Hunter (this volume).
[ back ] 120. Cf. Bing 2002:1f.
[ back ] 121. For a detailed interpretation of the epigram as a whole, cf. Hunter (this volume) and Bernsdorff 2002.
[ back ] 122. Translation by C. Austin and G. Bastianini, AB:41.
[ back ] 123. In regard to the underlying topics of the two sections, the transition is visualized in AB 19; the epigrams move away from hard and in the case of the rock also static objects of stones to the flying (birds) and changing omens of the
Oiônoskopika. Furthermore the reader is asked to raise his glance from the stones on the ground to the birds in the sky.
[ back ] 124. Also cf. Stephens (this volume), who discusses further evidence for the intertextuality between the
Oiônoskopika and the
Anathematika.
[ back ] 125. Cf. Stephens (this volume).