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Charis is a concept and a power of paramount significance in Pindar's poetry and 'ars poetica'. This analysis is less concerned with the semantics of Charis, than with her dynamics. In the 14. and 7. Olympian ode Charis appears surrounded by a cluster of metaphors of blossoming, love and eye-glance. These motifs permeat the whole Pindaric epinician corpus. The author sets out to scrutinize the vast scale of variations on this theme, in order to illuminate from a new vista the relationship of the Charis and the Muse, then to explain the foregrounded motif of the divine eye-glance.
EN
Present-day knowledge about Philetas, the first 'poietes-grammatikos' is extremely scant. According to the only information, which seems rather irrelevant, and which was transmitted by late authors, the poet was extremely thin as a result of his laborious poetical activity. In certain sources (Ailian, Athenaeus) the motif of thinness is completed by a bizarre note: the artist, a 'leptoteros', had to wear lead weights on his feet against the force of winds. The adjective describing his figure cannot be separated of the primordial aesthetical notion of 'lepton and it may suggest a poetological interpretation. In order to support this possibility, the article sheds light on a zoological paradox of Aelian which mentions the peculiar habit of bees, light and musical animals and strenuous gleaners of flowers, who carry stones as counterweight against the winds. The implicit image of a poet as a bee is a traditional metaphor with sacral connotations in the Greek literature, which reappears in the Hellenism. The association of the Coan poet with the bees would fit well into the tradition about the poetry and the creative style of Philetas. He was known to have an ardent interest in the natural sciences ('periergos'), therefore among his poetical and glossographical fragments more than one item concerning hive, bougony, honey can be found. According to reconstructions, the 'melissa' could have had an important role in his 'Demeter'. On the other hand, the critical announcements of Callimachus and Theocritus on Philetas' poetry employ the same metapoetical imagery of nature (see the rivalry of the locust and the frog in the 7 'Idyll', the opposition of the ear and the oak in the 'Prologue' of the 'Aetia'). The best known work of Philetas, the poem of the alder which is considered as a selfportrait, is based on this as well. Accordingly, the representation of the poet in the anecdote has poetological allusions through the motifs of the slenderness and the counterweights.
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