ΠΑΝΥΑΣΙΣ
118[2 a.d.]ΗΡΑΚΛΗΙΣ
Ed. pr. *Grenfell-Hunt, P. Oxy.ii. 1899, no. 221, col. ix. πῶς δ᾿ ἐπορεύθης ῥεῦμ᾿ Ἀχελωίου ἀργυροδίνα, Ὠκεανοῦ ποταμοῖο δι᾿ εὐρέος ὑγρὰ κέλευθα;
. . . . . .Anonymous
119[2–1 b.c.]Fragment
Ed. pr. Aly, Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, v. 1914, Abh. 2, p. 1. See *Powell, Collectanea Alexandrina, 251; Maas, Gnomon, 1927, 692.
Fragment of an hexameter poem of uncertain date and subject. The Epic Cycle is probably excluded by reason of
ὡς δ᾿ ἁλιεὺς ἀκτῆι ἐν ἁλιρράντωι ἐπὶ πέτρηι ἀγ(κ)ίστρου ἕλικος δελεουχίδα μάστακ᾿ ἀείρας
. . . . . .(Fragments of two more lines)
- 2δ᾿ ἕλικος Π. τελιουχίδα Π, corr. Powell.
Erinna
Panyasis
Heracles [2 a.d.]
8–11, p. 64. See Wilamowitz, G.G.A. 1900, 42; *Powell, Collect. Alexandr. p. 248.
How did you come to the stream of Achelous’s silver eddies, through the watery ways of the broad river Ocean?
. . . . .Anonymous
Fragment [2–1 b.c.]
such a word as δελεουχίδα (or τελιουχίδα): the relation to Homer is closer than would be expected in an Hellenistic poem. Antimachus and his 4th-century posterity are possible authors: but the evidence is too meagre to permit a definite conclusion.
Like a fisherman on a rock on the sea-washed shore, lifting the enticing bait of his curved hook . . .
. . . . .(Fragments of two more lines)