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Callimachus: Critical Essay by Alfred Körte

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About 51 pages (15,366 words)
Callimachus Summary

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SOURCE: "The Elegy," "The Epic," and "The Epigram," in Hellenistic Poetry, translated by Jacob Hammer and Moses Hadas, Columbia University Press, 1929, pp. 94-150, 150-257, 350-406.

The following excerpt, drawn from his Hellenistic Poetry, presents Körte's summation of Callimachus as a writer of elegy, epic, and epigram. Examining Callimachus' work largely in the context of his biography and the social and political environment in Alexandria, Korte finds certain qualities constant in Callimachus across the genres. Korte emphasizes especially the poet's aptitude for originality and novelty, remarking that "precisely what was obscure, untouched and neglected had the greatest attraction for Callimachus." The excerpt also includes extended quotations in translation.

This is a free excerpt of 107 words. There are 15,366 words (approx. 51 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Callimachus: Critical Essay by Alfred Körte from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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