{"url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/texts/2660/?format=json","language":{"code":"eng","iso_name":"English","url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/languages/eng/?format=json"},"edition":{"url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/editions/1/?format=json","descriptions":[{"url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/descriptions/424/?format=json","language":{"code":"eng","iso_name":"English","url":"https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/languages/eng/?format=json"},"created_at":"2021-05-06T21:10:04.033306Z","updated_at":"2021-05-06T21:10:04.033317Z","description":"Paton edition"}],"edition_type":0,"metadata":{},"created_at":"2021-04-08T21:27:25.406000Z","updated_at":"2021-04-08T21:27:25.406000Z"},"unique_id":99992580,"created_at":"2020-07-08T00:05:49Z","updated_at":"2020-07-08T00:05:50Z","validation":0,"status":1,"text":"Thou with the wings, what pleasure hast thou in \nthe hunting spear and boar-skin ? Who art thou, \nand the emblem of whose tomb? For Love I \ncannot call thee. What I doth Desire dwell next the \ndead ? No ! the bold boy never learnt to wail. Nor \nyet art thou swift-footed Cronos ; on the contrary, \nhe is as old as old can be, and thy limbs are in the \nbloom of youth. Then — yes, I think I am right — \nhe beneath the earth was a sophist, and thou art the \nwinged word for which he was famed. The double- \nedged attribute of Artemis thou bearest in allusion \nto his laughter mixed with gravity and perhaps to the \nmetre of his love verses. Yea, in truth, these symbols \nof boar-slaying point to his name-sake, Meleager, son \nof Oeneus. Hail, even among the dead, thou who \ndidst fit together into one work of wisdom, Love, \nthe Muses and the Graces.","comments":[],"alignments":[],"passages":["https://anthologiagraeca.org/api/passages/urn:cts:greekLit:tlg7000.tlg001.ag:7.421/?format=json"]}