{"url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/texts/14965/?format=json","language":{"code":"eng","iso_name":"English","url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/languages/eng/?format=json"},"edition":null,"unique_id":100005249,"created_at":"2024-09-06T22:38:40.182245Z","updated_at":"2024-09-06T22:38:40.212013Z","validation":0,"status":1,"text":"Who art thou and whence, O Dionysus? By the true Bacchus I recognise thee not; I know only the son of Zeus. He smells of nectar, but you smell of goat. Truly it was in their lack of grapes that the Celts brewed thee from corn-ears. So we should call thee Demetrius, not Dionysus, wheat-born not fire-born, barley god not boisterous god.\r\n\r\n— Wright, Emily Wilmer Cave (1868–1951), The Works of the Emperor Julian (1913)","comments":[],"alignments":[],"passages":["https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/passages/urn:cts:greekLit:tlg7000.tlg001.ag:9.368/?format=json"]}