Lesches
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- For the town in France, see Lesches, Seine-et-Marne.
Lesches ("Lescheos the son of Aeschylinus of Pyrrha" in Pausanias x. 25. 5; also in x. 26. 4 and .8 and x. 27. 1) is a semi-legendary early Greek poet and the reputed author of the Little Iliad. According to the usually accepted tradition, he was a native of Pyrrha in Lesbos, and flourished about 660 BC (others place him about 50 years earlier). He may have spent part of his career at Mytilene, for Proclus (Chrestomathia, ii) refers to him as "Lesches of Mytilene".
The lost epic Little Iliad, in four books, took up the story of the Homeric Iliad, and, beginning with the contest between Telamonian Ajax and Odysseus for the arms of Achilles, carried it down to the feast of the Trojans over the captured Trojan Horse, according to the epitome in Proclus, Chrestomathy ii, or to the fall of Troy, according to Aristotle, Poetics, 23. Some ancient authorities ascribe the work to a Spartan named Cinaethon, and even to Homer.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
- Georg Heinrich Bode, Geschichte der Hellenischen Dichtkunst, i.
- Karl Otfried Müller and John William Donaldson, History of Greek Literature, i. ch. 6
- Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker, Der epische Cyclus (1865-1882)