
Amicitia etiam post mor-
tem durans.[1]
Friendship lasting even beyond death
Arentem senio, nudam quoque frondibus ulmum,
Complexa est viridi vitis opaca coma.[2]
Agnoscitque vices naturae, & grata parenti
Officii reddit mutua iura suo.
Exemploque monet, tales nos quaerere amicos,
Quos neque disiungat foedere summa dies.
A vine shady with green foliage embraced an elm tree that was dried up with age and bare of leaves. The vine recognises the changes wrought by nature and, ever grateful, renders to the one that reared it the duty it owes in return. By the example it offers, the vine tells us to seek friends of such a sort that not even our final day will uncouple them from the bond of friendship.
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Iconclass Keywords
Relating to the image:
- trees: elm (+ stem, trunk) [25G3(ELM)(+21)] Search | Browse Iconclass
- trees: elm (+ dead, withered plant) [25G3(ELM)(+371)] Search | Browse Iconclass
- vine [47I422] Search | Browse Iconclass
- vine-tendril, leaf [47I4221] Search | Browse Iconclass
- bunch of grapes [47I4222] Search | Browse Iconclass
Relating to the text:
- young versus old age; young and old [31D5] Search | Browse Iconclass
- life versus death [31E5] Search | Browse Iconclass
- Necessity of Mutual Co-operation [54E11] Search | Browse Iconclass
- Fidelity in Friendship; 'Confermatione dell'Amicitia', 'Fede nell'Amicitia' (Ripa) (+ emblematical representation of concept) [56F231(+4):31E] Search | Browse Iconclass
- Mortality, Extinction of Life [58BB1] Search | Browse Iconclass
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