Echoing Hylas: A Study in Hellenistic and Roman Metapoetics

Echoing Hylas: A Study in Hellenistic and Roman Metapoetics

by Mark Heerink
Echoing Hylas: A Study in Hellenistic and Roman Metapoetics

Echoing Hylas: A Study in Hellenistic and Roman Metapoetics

by Mark Heerink

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Overview

During a stopover of the Argo in Mysia, the boy Hylas sets out to fetch water for his companion Hercules. Wandering into the woods, he arrives at a secluded spring, inhabited by nymphs who fall in love with him and pull him into the water. Mad with worry, Hercules stays in Mysia to look for the boy, but he will never find him again . . .

In Echoing Hylas, Mark Heerink argues that the story of Hylas-a famous episode of the Argonauts' voyage-was used by poets throughout classical antiquity to reflect symbolically on the position of their poetry in the literary tradition. Certain elements of the story, including the characters of Hylas and Hercules themselves, functioned as metaphors of the art of poetry. In the Hellenistic age, for example, the poet Theocritus employed Hylas as an emblem of his innovative

bucolic verse, contrasting the boy with Hercules, who symbolized an older, heroic-epic tradition. The Roman poet Propertius further developed and transformed Theocritus's metapoetical allegory by turning Heracles into an elegiac lover in pursuit of an unattainable object of affection. In this way, the myth of Hylas became the subject of a dialogue among poets across time, from the Hellenistic age to the Flavian era. Each poet, Heerink demonstrates, used elements of the myth to claim his own place in a developing literary tradition.

With this innovative diachronic approach, Heerink opens a new dimension of ancient metapoetics and offers many insights into the works of Apollonius of Rhodes, Theocritus, Virgil, Ovid, Valerius Flaccus, and Statius.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299305406
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 12/15/2015
Series: Wisconsin Studies in Classics
Edition description: 1
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Mark Heerink is an associate professor in Latin literature at the University of Amsterdam and VU University Amsterdam. He is the author of Brill's Companion to Valerius Flaccus.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments                 
Abbreviations            
 
Introduction               
1 The Dilemma of Libertas in Epistles 1.1                
2 Horace the Student: Inconsistency and Sickness in Epistles 1.1, 1.8, and 1.15                  
3 Horace the Teacher: Poetry and Philosophy in Epistles 1.1 and 1.2                      
4 Nil Admirari: The Moral Adviser of Epistles 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, and 1.12                     
5 Otia Liberrima: Horace, Maecenas, and the Sabine Farm in Epistles 1.7 and 1.16            
6 The Limits of Rural Libertas: Epistles 1.10, 1.11, and 1.14                       
7 Moderate Freedom and Friendship: Epistles 1.17 and 1.18                       
8 Moderate Freedom and Poetry: Epistles 1.3 and 1.19                    
Conclusion: Freedom and Publication in Epistles 1.13 and 1.20                   
 
Notes             
Bibliography              
Index   
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