Oh how does my dear Aeschines oh how
- DMI number:
- 3947
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- First Line:
- Oh how does my dear Aeschines oh how
- Last Line:
- From a less barbarous foe to tempt a nobler fall
- Poem Genre / Form:
- Dialogue, Pastoral, Imitation / translation / paraphrase, and Couplet
- Themes:
- Anger, Love, Sex / relations between the sexes, and War
- Translated from:
- Theocritus
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Title:
- A select collection of poems with notes biographical and historical [T93622] [ecco]
- Page No(s):
- pp.107-19
- Poem Title:
- Cynisca's Love. Theocritus, Idyll. XIV.
- Attribution:
- By The Same [i.e. Bowles]
- Attributed To:
- William Bowles
- Title:
- Sylvae: or the second part of poetical miscellanies [T116469]
- Page No(s):
- pp.276-280
- Poem Title:
- Cynisca: Or, The Fourteenth Idyllium of Theocritus Imitated.
- Attribution:
- By W. Bowles, Fellow of Kings-Coll. Cambr.
- Attributed To:
- William Bowles
- Title:
- The second part of miscellany poems [N70161]
- Page No(s):
- pp.337-339
- Poem Title:
- Cynisca: Or, the Fourteenth Idyllium of Theocritus imitated.
- Attribution:
- By W. Bowles, Fellow of Kings-Coll. Cambr.
- Attributed To:
- William Bowles
- Title:
- The second part of miscellany poems [T117014] [ECCO]
- Page No(s):
- pp.333-335
- Poem Title:
- Cynisca: Or, the Fourteenth Idyllium of Theocritus imitated.
- Attribution:
- By W. Bowles, Fellow of Kings-Coll. Cambr.
- Attributed To:
- William Bowles
Poem Aliases
Theocritus. Idyll 14.
Related People
Content/Publication