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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg129.perseus-eng3:36</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg129.perseus-eng3:36</urn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg129.perseus-eng3"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="36"><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">Furthermore, many of the Greeks have temples and altars to Artemis Dictynna<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">As though <q>Artemis of the Net</q>; see Callimachus, <title rend="italic">Hymn</title> iii. 198.</note> and Apollo Delphinios; and that place which the god had chosen for himself the poet<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Homer, <title rend="italic">Hymn to Apollo</title>, iii. 393 ff. (as restored by van Herwerden). For Delphinian Apollo see lines 495 f.</note> says was settled by Cretans under the guidance of a dolphin. It was not, however, the god who changed his shape and swam in front of the expedition, as tellers of tales relate; instead, he sent a dolphin to guide the men and bring them to Cirrha.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">The port of Delphi.</note> They also relate that Soteles and Dionysius, the men sent by Ptolemy Soter<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf. <title>Mor</title>.</foreign> 361 f; Tacitus, <title rend="italic">Histories</title>, iv. 83-84.</note> to Sinope to bring back Serapis, were driven against their will by a violent wind out of their course beyond Malea, with the Peloponnesus on their right. When they were lost and discouraged, a dolphin appeared by the <pb xml:id="v.12.p.471"/> prow and, as it were, invited them to follow and led them into such parts as had safe roadsteads with but a gentle swell until, by conducting and escorting the vessel in this manner, it brought them to Cirrha. Whence it carne about that when they had offered thanksgiving for their safe landing, they carne to see that of the two statues they should take away the one of Pluto, but should merely take an impress of that of Persephone and leave it behind.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">That is, in Sinope.</note> </said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">Well might the god be fond of the music-loving character of the dolphin,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf. <title>Mor</title>.</foreign> 162 f; Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> xi. 137.</note> to which Pindar<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Page 597, ed. Sandys (L.C.L.); frag. 125, line 69-71 ed. Bowra (O.C.T.); frag. 222. 14-17, ed. Turyn. The quotation is found also in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Mor.</title> 704 f - 705 a. The lines were partially recovered in <title rend="italic">Oxyrhynchus Papyri</title>, iii. 408 b (1903); for the critical difficulties see Turyn’s edition.</note> likens himself, saying that he is roused <quote rend="blockquote"><l>Like a dolphin of the sea </l><l>Who on the waveless deep of ocean </l><l>Is moved by the lovely sound of flutes.</l></quote> Yet it is even more likely that its affection for men<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> x. 24. For Dionysus and the pirate-dolphins see the seventh <title rend="italic">Homeric Hymn</title> and Frazer on Apollodorus, iii. 5. 3 (L.C.L., vol. i, p. 332).</note> renders it dear to the gods; for it is the only creature who loves man for his own sake.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><q>The hunting of dolphins is immoral</q>: Oppian, <title rend="italic">Hal.</title> v. 416 (see the whole passage).</note> Of the land animals, some avoid man altogether, others, the tamest kind, pay court for utilitarian reasons only to those who feed them, as do dogs and horses and elephants to their familiars. Martins take to houses to get what they need, darkness and a minimum of security, but <pb xml:id="v.12.p.473"/> avoid and fear man as a dangerous wild beast.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf. <title>Mor</title>.</foreign> 728 a; but see Aelian, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">De Natura Animal.</title> i. 52; Arrian, <title rend="italic">Anabasis</title>, i. 25. 8.</note> To the dolphin alone, beyond all others, nature has granted what the best philosophers seek: friendship for no advantage. Though it has no need at all of any man, yet it is a genial friend to all and has helped many. The story of Arion<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Herodotus, i. 24; Mair on Oppian, <title rend="italic">Hal.</title> v. 448. In <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">Mor.</title> 161 a ff. the story is told by an eye-witness at the banquet of the Seven Wise Men.</note> is familiar to everyone and widely known; and you, my friend, opportunely put us in mind of the tale of Hesiod,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign> 969 e <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>.</note> <quote rend="blockquote">But you failed to reach the end of the tale.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Homer, <title rend="italic">Iliad</title>, ix. 56.</note> </quote> When you told of the dog, you should not have left out the dolphins, for the information of the dog that barked and rushed with a snarl on the murderers would have been meaningless if the dolphins had not taken up the corpse as it was floating on the sea near the Nemeon<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">The shrine of Zeus at Oeneon in Locris.</note> and zealously passed it from group to group until they put it ashore at Rhium and so made it clear that the man had been stabbed. </said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">Myrsilus<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Müller, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">Frag. Hist. Graec.</title> iv, p. 459; Jacoby, <title xml:lang="deu" rend="italic">Frag. d. griech. Hist.</title> ii, frag. 12; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf. <title>Mor</title>.</foreign> 163 b-d; Athenaeus, 466 c gives as his authority Anticleides.</note> of Lesbos tells the tale of Enalus the Aeolian who was in love with that daughter of Smintheus who, in accordance with the oracle of Amphitrite, was cast into the sea by the Penthilidae, whereupon Enalus himself leaped into the sea and was brought out safe on Lesbos by a dolphin.</said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">And the goodwill and friendship of the dolphin for <pb xml:id="v.12.p.475"/> the lad of Iasus<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Aelian, <title rend="italic">De Natura Animal.</title> vi. 15 (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> viii. 11), tells the story in great detail and with several differences; <foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign> also the younger Pliny’s famous letter (ix. 33) on the dolphin of Hippo and the vaguer accounts in Aelian, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">De Natura Animal.</title> ii. 6; Antigonus, 55; Philo, 67 (p. 132). Gulick on Athenaeus, 606 c-d collects the authorities; see also the dolphin stories in Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> ix. 25 ff. and Mair on Oppian, <title rend="italic">Hal.</title> v. 458; Thompson, <title rend="italic">Glossary</title>, pp. 54 f. Iasus is a city in Ionian Caris on the gulf of the same name.</note> was thought by reason of its greatness to be true love. For it used to swim and play with him during the day, allowing itself to be touched; and when the boy mounted upon its back, it was not reluctant, but used to carry him with pleasure wherever he directed it to go, while all the inhabitants of Iasus flocked to the shore each time this happened. Once a violent storm of rain and hail occurred and the boy slipped off and was drowned. The dolphin took the body and threw both it and itself together on the land and would not leave until it too had died, thinking it right to share a death for which it imagined that it shared the responsibility. And in memory of this calamity the inhabitants of Iasus have minted their coins with the figure of a boy riding a dolphin.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">The story has a happier ending in one version found in Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> ix. 27: the dolphin dies, but Alexander the Great makes the boy head of the priesthood of Poseidon in Babylon.</note> </said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">From this the wild tales about Coeranus<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Aelian, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">De Natura Animal.</title> viii. 3; Athenaeus, 606 e-f cites from Phylarchus, Book XII (Jacoby, <title xml:lang="deu" rend="italic">Frag. d. griech. Hist.</title> i, p. 340). There are many other examples of dolphins rescuing people, such as the fragment of Euphorion in Page, <title rend="italic">Greek Literary Papyri</title>, i, p. 497 (L.C.L.).</note> gained credence. He was a Parian by birth who, at Byzantium, bought a draught of dolphins which had been caught in a net and were in danger of slaughter, and set them all free. A little later he was on a sea voyage in a penteconter, so they say, with fifty pirates aboard; in the strait between Naxos and Paros the ship capsized and all the others were lost, while Coeranus, they relate, because a dolphin sped beneath him and buoyed him up, was put ashore at <pb xml:id="v.12.p.477"/> Sicinus,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">An island south of Paros.</note> near a cave which is pointed out to this day and bears the name of Coeraneum.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign> Edmonds, <title rend="italic">Elegy and Iambus</title>, ii, p. 321 (L.C.L.).</note> It is on this man that Archilochus is said to have written the line <quote rend="blockquote">Out of fifty, kindly Poseidon left only Coeranus.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Edmonds, <foreign xml:lang="lat">op. cit.</foreign> ii, p. 164; Diehl, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">Anth. Lyrica</title>, i, p. 243. frag. 117.</note> </quote> When later he died, his relatives were burning the body near the sea when a large shoal of dolphins appeared off shore as though they were making it plain that they had come for the funeral, and they waited until it was completed.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">On the grief of dolphins see Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> ix. 25, 33.</note> </said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">That the shield of Odysseus had a dolphin emblazoned on it, Stesichorus<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Edmonds, <title xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">Lyra Graeca</title>, ii, p. 66, frag. 71.</note> also has related; and the Zacynthians perpetuate the reason for it, as Critheus<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Nothing whatever is known about this author, whose name may be given incorrectly in our mss.</note> testifies. For when Telemachus was a small boy, so they say, he fell into the deep inshore water and was saved by dolphins who came to his aid and swam with him to the beach; and that was the reason why his father had a dolphin engraved on his ring and emblazoned on his shield, making this requital to the animal.</said></p><p rend="indent"><said rend="merge" who="#Phaedimus">Yet since I began by saying that I would not tell you any tall tales and since, without observing what I was up to, I have now, besides the dolphins, run aground on both Odysseus and Coeranus to a point beyond belief, I lay this penalty upon myself: to conclude here and now.</said></p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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